Navneet Khatri: Introduction To Computer Networks
Navneet Khatri: Introduction To Computer Networks
Navneet Khatri
Course Content
Course Content
Lecture 1: Overview of the Course and Network Fundamentals: 2 Hour Lecture 2: OSI Model& TCP/IP Model : 2 Hour Lecture 3: Physical Media (Copper, Fiber Optic and Wireless) : 2 Hour
Course Content
Course Content
Lecture 7: WAN Technologies (Dialup, Leased Line, ISDN, ADSL, Cable Modem, VSAT) : 2 Hour Lab 3: Demo and Practice of Ethernet & Wireless LAN Setup : 2 Hour Lecture 8: WAN Technologies (contd.) : 2 Hour
Course Content
Course Content
Lecture 13: Cisco Basics: 2 Hour
Lab 7: Demo and Practice of DNS and Web Server Setup : 2 Hour
Lecture 16: Enterprise Network Implementation: 2 Hour
Course Content
Course Content
Lecture 17: Mail Server, Proxy Server & Firewall Setup on Linux : 2 Hour Lab 8: Demo and Practice of Mail Server , Proxy Server and Firewall Setup : 2 Hour
Books
References
Andrew S. Tanenbaum, Computer Network, PrenticeHall
Doughlas Internet E. Comer, Computer Networks and
http://www.cisco.com/public/support/tac/documenta tion.html
http://www.redhat.com/docs http://home.iitk.ac.in/~navi/sidbinetworkcourse
Grading
Grading Guidelines
Two Exams: 40% each
Lab Assignments: 20% Minimum 80% attendance and minimum 60% marks are necessary to clear the course.
Computer Networks
Computer network connects two or more autonomous computers.
Network spread geographically (Country or across Globe) is called WAN (Wide Area Network)
Applications of Networks
Resource Sharing Hardware (computing resources, disks, printers) Software (application software)
Information Sharing Easy accessibility from anywhere (files, databases) Search Capability (WWW) Communication Email Message broadcast Remote computing Distributed processing (GRID Computing)
Network Topology
The network topology defines the way in which computers, printers, and other devices are connected. A network topology describes the layout of the wire and devices as well as the paths used by data transmissions.
Bus Topology
Commonly referred to as a linear bus, all the devices on a bus topology are connected by one single cable.
Larger networks use the extended star topology also called tree topology. When used with network devices that filter frames or packets, like bridges, switches, and routers, this topology significantly reduces the traffic on the wires by sending packets only to the wires of the destination host.
Ring Topology
A frame travels around the ring, stopping at each node. If a node wants to transmit data, it adds the data as well as the destination address to the frame. The frame then continues around the ring until it finds the destination node, which takes the data out of the frame.
Single ring All the devices on the network share a single cable
Dual ring The dual ring topology allows data to be sent in both directions.
Mesh Topology
The mesh topology connects all devices (nodes) to each other for redundancy and fault tolerance.
It is used in WANs to interconnect LANs and for mission critical networks like those used by banks and financial institutions.
Implementing the mesh topology is expensive and difficult.
Network Components
Physical Media
Interconnecting Devices Computers
Networking Software
Applications
Networking Media
Networking media can be defined simply as the means by which signals (data) are sent from one computer to another (either by cable or wireless means).
Networking Devices
HUB, Switches, Routers, Wireless Access Points, Modems etc.
Applications
E-mail Searchable Data (Web Sites) E-Commerce News Groups Internet Telephony (VoIP) Video Conferencing Chat Groups Instant Messengers Internet Radio