Data Communication Lecture 1
Data Communication Lecture 1
Introduction
1.1 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
1-1 DATA COMMUNICATIONS
The term telecommunication means communication at a
distance. The word data refers to information presented
in whatever form is agreed upon by the parties creating
and using the data. Data communications are the
exchange of data between two devices via some form of
transmission medium such as a wire cable.
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Figure 1.1 Components of a data communication system
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Figure 1.2 Data flow (simplex, half-duplex, and full-duplex)
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1-2 NETWORKS
■ Performance
■ Depends on Network Elements
■ Measured in terms of Delay and Throughput
■ Reliability
■ Failure rate of network components
■ Measured in terms of availability/robustness
■ Security
■ Data protection against corruption/loss of data due to:
■ Errors
■ Malicious users
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Physical Structures
■ Type of Connection
■ Point to Point - single transmitter and receiver
■ Multipoint - multiple recipients of single transmission
■ Physical Topology
■ Connection of devices
■ Type of transmission - unicast, mulitcast, broadcast
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Figure 1.3 Types of connections: point-to-point and multipoint
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Figure 1.4 Categories of topology
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Figure 1.5 A fully connected mesh topology (five devices)
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Figure 1.6 A star topology connecting four stations
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Figure 1.7 A bus topology connecting three stations
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Figure 1.8 A ring topology connecting six stations
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Figure 1.9 A hybrid topology: a star backbone with three bus networks
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Categories of Networks
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Figure 1.10 An isolated LAN connecting 12 computers to a hub in a closet
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Figure 1.11 WANs: a switched WAN and a point-to-point WAN
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Figure 1.12 A heterogeneous network made of four WANs and two LANs
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1-3 THE INTERNET
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Figure 1.13 Hierarchical organization of the Internet
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1-4 PROTOCOLS
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Elements of a Protocol
■ Syntax
■ Structure or format of the data
■ Indicates how to read the bits - field delineation
■ Semantics
■ Interprets the meaning of the bits
■ Knows which fields define what action
■ Timing
■ When data should be sent and what
■ Speed at which data should be sent or speed at which it is being
received.
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