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Networks Week 2 LBSC 690 Information Technology

Networks

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Networks. Week 2 LBSC 690 Information Technology. Computer Systems. Hardware Types of hardware Storage hierarchy Moore’s law Software Types of software Types of interfaces. Types of Software. Application programs (e.g., Internet Explorer) What you normally think of as a “program” - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Networks

Networks

Week 2LBSC 690

Information Technology

Page 2: Networks

Computer Systems• Hardware

– Types of hardware– Storage hierarchy– Moore’s law

• Software– Types of software– Types of interfaces

Page 3: Networks

Types of Software

• Application programs (e.g., Internet Explorer)– What you normally think of as a “program”

• Compilers and interpreters (e.g., JavaScript)– Allow programmers to create new behavior

• Operating system (e.g., Windows XP)– Moves data between disk and RAM (+lots more!)

• Embedded program (e.g., BIOS)– Permanent software inside some device

Page 4: Networks

Installing Applications• Copy to a permanent place on your hard drive

– From a CD, the Internet, …• Installs any other required programs

– “DLL” files can be shared by several applications• Register the program’s location

– Associates icons/start menu items with it– Configures the uninstaller for later removal

• Configure it for your system– Where to find data files and other programs

Page 5: Networks

Discussion Point: What’s a Virus?

• Characteristics– Initiation– Behavior– Propagation

• Spyware

• Detection

Page 6: Networks

Network

• Computers and devices connected via – Communication devices– Transmission media

Page 7: Networks

Why Network?

• Sharing data• Sharing information• Sharing hardware• Sharing software• Increasing robustness• Facilitating communications• Facilitating commerce

Page 8: Networks

Packet vs. Circuit Networks

• Telephone system (“circuit-switched”)– Fixed connection between caller and called– High network load results in busy signals

• Internet (“packet-switched”)– Each transmission is routed separately– High network load results in long delays

Page 9: Networks

Packet Switching

• Break long messages into short “packets”– Keeps one user from hogging a line

• Route each packet separately– Number them for easy reconstruction

• Request retransmission for lost packets– Unless the first packet is lost!

Page 10: Networks

Networks of Networks

• Local Area Networks (LAN)– Connections within a room, or perhaps a building

• Wide Area Networks (WAN)– Provide connections between LANs

• Internet– Collection of WANs across multiple organizations

Page 11: Networks

Local Area Networks• Within a campus or an office complex

– Short-distance lines are fast and cheap– Fast communications makes routing simple

• Ethernet is a common LAN technology– All computers are connected to the same cable

• Ordinary phone lines can carry 10 Mb/sec• 100 Mb/s connections require special cables• 1 Gb/s connections require special switches

– Every host broadcasts everything to all others• Collisions limit throughput to about 50% utilization

Page 12: Networks

Shared Network• All attach to the same cable

– Ethernet and “cable modems”• Transmit anytime

– Collision detection– Automatic retransmission

• Inexpensive and flexible– Easy to add new machines– Robust to computer failure

• Practical for short distances– Half the bandwidth is wasted

Page 13: Networks

Switched (“Star”) Network

• All attach directly to a hub– Switched Ethernet– Digital Subscriber Lines (DSL)

• Higher cost– Line from hub to each machine– Hub must handle every packet– Hub requires backup power

• Much higher bandwidth– No sharing, no collisions– Allows disks to be centralized

Page 14: Networks

Local Area Networks

sam

kim

joe

ann

dove

rac4rac3www rac2 ttclass

HBK

PLS

CSS

Page 15: Networks

Wireless Networks

• Radio-based Ethernet– Effective for a few rooms within buildings

• “Access Point” gateways to wired networks– Available throughout most of the Maryland campus– Commercial providers offer “hot spots” in airports, etc.

• Available in two speeds– IEEE 802.11b: 10Mbps (good enough for most uses)– IEEE 802.11g: 54Mbps (required for wireless video)

Page 16: Networks

http://www.tss.northwestern.edu/wireless/faq_wir.html

Page 17: Networks

Wide Area Networks

• Campus, regional, national, or global scale– Expensive communications must be used well

• Limiting to two hosts allows 100% utilization– Routing is complex with point-to-point circuits

• Which path is shortest? Which is least busy? …

• Internet routers exchange “routing tables”– Which routes seem fast, which seem slow?

Page 18: Networks

Between a LAN and a WAN

Page 19: Networks

Ring Network

• Unidirectional transmission– Used mostly for WANs

• Very high bandwidth– No collisions– Simple routing policies

• Complex management– Changes must be coordinated

Page 20: Networks

Maryland’s Campus Network

sam

kim

joe

ann

dove

rac4rac3www rac2 ttclass

HBK

CSS 1410

Elsewhere in CSS

Page 21: Networks

The Internet

• Global collection of public “IP” networks– Private networks are often called “intranets”

• Independent– Each organization maintains its own network

• Cooperating– Internet Protocol (IP) address blocks– Domain names– World-Wide Web Consortium (W3C)– Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT)

Page 22: Networks

A Short History of the Internet

• 1969: Origins in government research – Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPAnet)– Key standards: UDP, TCP, DNS

• 1983: Design adopted by other agencies– Created a need for inter-network connections– Key standards: IP

• 1991: World-Wide Web added point-and-click– Now 150 million Internet “hosts”– Key standards: HTTP, URL, HTML, XML

Page 23: Networks

Overview

Page 24: Networks

http://www.geog.ucl.ac.uk/casa/martin/atlas/isp_maps.html

Page 25: Networks

Types of Internet “Nodes”• Hosts

– Computers that use the network to do something

• Routers– Specialized computers that route packets

• Gateway– Routers that connect two networks

• Firewall– Gateways that pass packets selectively

Page 26: Networks

An Internet Protocol (IP) Address

IP address: 216.183.103.150

Identifies a LAN

Identifies a specific computer

Page 27: Networks

Routing Tables

IP Prefix Next Router Estimated Delay

216.141.xxx.xxx 120.0.0.0 18 ms

216.xxx.xxx.xxx 121.0.0.0 34 ms

101.42.224.xxx 120.0.0.0 21 ms

xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx 121.0.0.0 250 ms

45.0.2.10120.0.0.0 121.0.0.0

Page 28: Networks

Domain Name Service (DNS)• “Domain names” improve usability

– Easier to remember than numeric IP addresses– DNS coverts between names and numbers– Written like a postal address: general-to-specific

• Each name server knows one level of names– “Top level” name server knows .edu, .com, .mil, …– .edu name server knows umd, umbc, stanford, …– .umd.edu name server knows wam, glue, ttclass, …– .wam.umd.edu name server knows rac1, rac2, …

Page 29: Networks

IP Addresses and Domain Names

Domain Name: www.howstuffworks.com

IP address: 216.183.103.150

Page 30: Networks

Hands-on: Learn About Your IP Address

• Find your IP address– Select “start” on the taskbar, then “Run”– Type in “cmd” and click “OK”– Type “ipconfig /all” (and press enter)

• See who “owns” that address– Use http://whois.godaddy.com

• See how packets get to your computer– Use http://www.traceroute.org

Page 31: Networks

The TCP/IP “Protocol Stack”

• Link layer moves bits – Ethernet, cable modem, DSL

• Network layer moves packets– IP

• Transport layer provides services to applications– UDP, TCP

• Application layer uses those services– DNS, SFTP, SSH, …

Page 32: Networks

User Datagram Protocol (UDP)

• The Internet’s basic transport service– Sends every packet immediately– Passes received packets to the application

• No delivery guarantee– Collisions can result in packet loss

• Example: sending clicks on web browser

Page 33: Networks

Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)

• Built on the network-layer version of UDP

• Guarantees delivery all data– Retransmits missing data

• Guarantees data will be delivered in order– “Buffers” subsequent packets if necessary

• No guarantee of delivery time– Long delays may occur without warning

Page 34: Networks

Telnet

• Simulates a dial-up connection– Read data from another machine

• VT-100 protocol allows only text– The pine email program is designed for VT-100– X Windows extension adds graphics

Page 35: Networks

File Transfer Program (FTP)• Used to move files between machines

– Upload (put) moves from client to server– Download (get) moves files from server to client

• Available using command line and GUI interfaces

• Normally requires an account on the server– Userid “anonymous” provides public access– Web browsers incorporate anonymous FTP

• Automatically converts end-of-line conventions– Unless you select “binary”

Page 36: Networks

Hands On: FTP• Start a cmd window• Type “ftp ftp.umiacs.umd.edu”• Login in anonymously with

– User: anonymous– Password: your email address

• Go download a file– Type “cd pub/gina/lbsc690/”– Type “binary”– Type “get hwOne.ppt”

• Exit– Type “quit”

• Try it again with a graphical FTP program– WS_FTP, for example

Page 37: Networks

HyperText Transfer Protocol (HTTP)• Send request

GET /path/file.html HTTP/1.0 From: [email protected] User-Agent: HTTPTool/1.0

• Server responseHTTP/1.0 200 OK Date: Fri, 31 Dec 1999 23:59:59 GMT Content-Type: text/html Content-Length: 1354 <html><body> <h1>Happy New Millennium!</h1> …

</body> </html>

Page 38: Networks

Encryption

• Secret-key systems (e.g., DES)– Use the same key to encrypt and decrypt

• Public-key systems (e.g., PGP)– Public key: open, for encryption– Private key: secret, for decryption

• Digital signatures– Encrypt with private key, decrypt with public key

Page 39: Networks

Encrypted Standards

• Secure Shell (SSH)– Replaces Telnet

• Secure FTP (SFTP)/Secure Copy (SCP)– Replaces FTP

• Secure HTTP (HTTPS)– Used for financial and other private data

• Wired Equivalent Protocol (WEP)– Used on wireless networks

Page 40: Networks

Network Abuse

• Flooding– Excessive activity, intended to prevent valid activity

• Worms– Like a virus, but self-propagating

• Sniffing– Monitoring network traffic (e.g., for passwords)

Page 41: Networks

Before You Go

On a sheet of paper, answer the following (ungraded) question (no names, please):

What was the muddiest point in today’s class?