Title: Module 2
1Module 2
2WAN Technology
- A Wide Area Network (WAN) is used to interconnect
Local Area Networks (LANs) that are separated by
a large geographical distance. - A Wide Area Network predominately operates at the
OSI physical and data link layers. - The WAN provides a data path between routers and
the LANs that each router supports.
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4- MAJOR CHARACTERISTICS OF WANS
- The network operates beyond the local LANs
geographic scope. It uses the services of
carriers such as Regional Bell Operating
Companies (RBOCs). - WANs use serial connections of various types to
access bandwidth over wide-area geographies. - By definition, the WAN connects devices separated
by wide areas.
5- WAN DEVICES INCLUDE
- Routers that offer many services including
internetworking and WAN interface ports. - Switches that connect to WAN bandwidth for voice,
data, and video communication. - Modems that interface voice-grade services
Include channel service units/digital service
units (CSU/DSU) that interface T1/E1 services
Terminal Adapters/Network Termination 1 (TA/NT1)
that interface Integrated Services Digital
Network (ISDN) services. - Communication servers that concentrate dial-in
and dial-out user communication. - WANS use the OSI layered approach for
encapsulation just like LAN's but are mainly
focused on the physical and data link layers.
6WAN Physical Layer
- WAN physical layer protocols describe how to
provide electrical, mechanical, operational, and
functional connections for wide-area networking
services. - These services are most often obtained from WAN
service providers such as Regional Bell Operating
Companies (RBOCs), alternate carriers, and Post,
Telephone, and Telegraph (PTT) agencies.
7WAN Data Link Protocols
- WAN data link protocols describe how frames are
carried between systems on a single data path. - They include protocols designed to operate over
dedicated point-to-point, multipoint, and
multi-access switched services such as Frame
Relay.
8WAN Standards
- WAN standards typically describe both physical
layer delivery methods and data link layer
requirements including addressing and flow
control encapsulation
9describes the interface between the data terminal
equipment (DTE) and the data circuit-terminating
equipment (DCE).
10DTE DCE
- DTE - data terminal equipment. Device at the user
end of a user-network interface that serves as a
data source, destination, or both. DTE connects
to a data network through a DCE device (for
example, a modem) and typically uses clocking
signals generated by the DCE. - DTE includes such devices as computers, routers,
and multiplexers. - DCE - Data communications equipment (EIA) or data
circuit-terminating equipment (ITU-T). The
devices and connections of a communications
network that comprise the network end of the
user-to-network interface. The DCE provides a
physical connection to the network, forwards
traffic, and provides a clocking signal used to
synchronize data transmission between DCE and DTE
devices. Ex Modems and interface cards
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12The WAN data-link protocols describe how frames
are carried between systems on a single path
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14The Data Link Layer WAN Protocols
- High-Level Data Link Control (HDLC)HDLC is an
IEEE standard. It might not be compatible between
different vendors because of the way each vendor
has chosen to implement it. - HDLC supports both point-to-point and multipoint
configurations with minimal overhead - Frame Relay - Frame Relay uses high-quality
digital facilities. - By using a simplified framing with no error
correction mechanisms, Frame Relay can send Layer
2 information much more rapidly than these other
WAN protocols. - Point-to-Point Protocol - Described by RFC 1661.
PPP contains a protocol field to identify the
network-layer protocol. - Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN) - ISDN
is a set of digital services that transmits voice
and data over existing phone lines.
15Wide Area Networking
16The WAN Cloud
- An overview of the WAN cloud organizes WAN
provider services into - Call setup serviceSets up and clears calls
between telephone users. - Also called signaling, call setup uses a separate
telephone channel not used for other traffic. - The most commonly used call setup is Signaling
System number 7 (SS7). SS7 is an out-of-band
signaling system for the exchange of call control
information between network switching offices, in
support of voice and nonvoice services
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18Time-division multiplexing (TDM)
- Information from many sources has bandwidth
allocation on a single media. - Circuit switching uses signaling to determine the
call route, which is a dedicated path between the
sender and the receiver. - By multiplexing traffic into fixed time slots,
TDM avoids congested facilities and variable
delays. - Basic telephone service and ISDN services use TDM
circuits.
19Time-division multiplexing (TDM)
- Transmits multiple signals simultaneously over a
single transmission path. Each lower-speed signal
is time sliced into one high-speed transmission. - Example Three incoming 1,000 bps signals (A, B
and C) can be interleaved into one 3,000 bps
signal (AABBCCAABBCCAABBCC). - The receiving end divides the single stream back
into its original signals.
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22- When your organization subscribes to an outside
WAN provider for network connections, the
provider assigns your organization the rules for
connecting WAN calls. - Your organization makes connections to
destinations as point-to-point calls.
23- Demarcation (or demarc)
- The point at which the CPE ends and the local
loop portion of the service begins. - Often occurs at the Point of Presence (POP) of a
building. - Local loop (or last-mile)
- Cabling (usually copper wiring) that extends from
the demarc into the WAN service providers
central office.
24- Central office (CO) switch
- A switching facility that provides the nearest
point of presence for the providers WAN service.
25- Toll network
- The collective switches and facilities (called
trunks) inside the WAN providers cloud. - The callers traffic may cross a trunk to a
primary center, then go to a sectional center,
and then to a regional- or international-carrier
center as the call goes the long distance to its
destination. - Switches operate in provider offices with toll
charges based on tariffs or authorized rates.
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27- A key interface in the customer site occurs
between the data terminal equipment (DTE) and the
data circuit-terminating equipment (DCE). - Typically, DTE is the router.
28- DCE is the device used to convert the user data
from the DTE into a form acceptable to the WAN
services facility. - In the graphic, the DCE is the attached modem,
channel service unit/data service unit (CSU/DSU)
or Terminal Adapter/Network Termination 1
(TA/NT1).
29- Data communication over WANs interconnects DTEs
so they can share resources over a wide area. - The WAN path between the DTEs is called the link,
circuit, channel, or line. - The DCE primarily provides an interface for the
DTE into the communication link in the WAN cloud.
- The DTE/DCE interface acts as a boundary where
responsibility for the traffic passes between the
WAN subscriber and the WAN provider.
30DSU/CSU
- A pair of communicating devices that connect an
in-house line to an external digital circuit
(T1). It is similar to a modem, but connects a
digital circuit rather than an analog one.
31CSU
- Terminates the external line at the customer
premises. - Provides diagnostics and allows for remote
testing. - If the customer's communications devices are T1
ready and have the proper interface, then the CSU
is not required, only the DSU.
32DSU
- Does the actual transmission and receiving of the
signal and provides buffering and flow control. - DSU and CSU can be in the same unit.
- DSU may also be built into the multiplexor,
(combines digital signals for high-speed lines).
33- Forms of WAN services with routers.
- The most common are
- Switched or relayed services.
- Frame Relay
- ISDN (Integrated Services Digital Network)
- ATM (Asynchronous Transfer Mode)
- X.25
- Peer Devices
- HDLC (High-level Data Link Control)
- PPP (Point-to-Point Protocol)
- DDR (Dial on Demand Routing)
- LAPB - point to point and X.25
34Both Frame Rely and X.25 use the concept of
virtual circuits
35X.25
- The first packet switched networks
- X.25 provides a connection-oriented technology
for transmission over highly-error prone
facilities. - Error checking is performed at each node, which
can slow overall throughput and and therefore
would not make X.25 a choice for voice and video - X.25 can be very cost effective because tariffs
are based on the amount of data delivered rather
than connection time or distance
36Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM)
- Lower latency at higher bandwidths
- Data rates beyond 155 Mbps
- Cell-based rather than frame-based
- Cell are a fixed length of 53 bytes
- Also uses PVCs
- Less efficient because of the small size
37Digital Subscriber Line (DSL)
- Uses existing telephone lines
- Uses multiple frequencies within the same
physical medium to transmit data - Bandwidth can vary
- Distance of the local loop is a factor must be
less than 3.5 miles
38Cable Modem
- Two-way, high-speed data transmissions using the
same coaxial lines that transmit cable
television. - Always on
39WAN Frame Encapsulation Formats
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45- Layer 2 Encapsulation
- Each WAN connection type uses a Layer 2 protocol
to encapsulate traffic while it is crossing the
WAN link. - To ensure that the correct encapsulation protocol
is used, you will need to configure the Layer 2
encapsulation type to use. - The choice of encapsulation protocol depends on
the WAN technology and the communicating
equipment.
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47- PPP
- Common for dialup single-user-to-LAN (dialup and
ISDN) or LAN-to-LAN (router-to-router) access. - PPP is standardized, so it supports vendor
interoperability. - It also supports the encapsulation of multiple
upper-layer protocols including IP and IPX.
48- HDLC
- The Cisco default encapsulation type on
point-to-point links. - It is used typically when communicating with
another Cisco device. - If communicating with a non-Cisco device,
synchronous PPP is a viable option. - HDLC is normally proprietary between vendors.
49- LAPB (layer 2 of the X.25 protocol stack)
- For packet-switched networks, the LAPB protocol
is used to encapsulate X.25 packets. - It can also be used over point-to-point links, if
the link is unreliable or there is an inherent
delay associated with the link, such as in a
satellite link. - LAPB provides reliability and flow control on a
point-to-point basis.
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52HDLC
- HDLC is Ciscos default encapsulation for serial
lines. - This implementation is very streamlined.
- There is no windowing or flow control and only
point-to-point connections are allowed (no
multipoint). - 2-byte proprietary type code is inserted after
the control field, which means that HDLC framing
is not interoperable with other vendors
equipment.
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54WAN Design Basics
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59- When leased line connections are made
- a router port is required for each connection,
- along with a CSU/DSU and
- the actual circuit from the service provider.
- The cost of dedicated line solutions can become
significant when deployed to connect many sites
60Dedicated connectivity, also referred to as
leased lines, provides full-time synchronous
connections. Dedicated, full-time connectivity
is provided by point-to-point serial links.
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62Network Design
- Network designs tend to follow one of two general
design strategies - mesh
- hierarchical
63- Mesh structure
- Net topology is flat
- All routers perform essentially the same
functions - Usually no clear definition of where specific
functions are performed. - Expansion of the network tends to proceed in a
haphazard, arbitrary manner.
64- Hierarchical structure the network is organized
in layers that each have one or more specific
functions. - Benefits to using a hierarchical model include
the following - Scalability
- Ease of implementation
- Ease of troubleshooting
- Predictability
- Protocol support
- Manageability
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66- The three-layer model consists of
- core
- distribution
- access layers
67- Core layer -
- Provides fast wide-area connections between
geographically remote sites, tying a number of
campus networks together in a corporate or
enterprise WAN. - Core links are usually point-to-point, and there
are rarely any hosts in the core layer. - Core services are typically leased from a telecom
service provider (for example, T1/T3, Frame
Relay, SMDS, and so on).
68- Distribution layer -
- Refers to the distribution of network services to
multiple LANs within a campus network
environment. - This layer is where the campus backbone network
is found, typically based on Fast Ethernet. - This layer is implemented on sites that are large
and is used to interconnect buildings.
69- Access layer -
- Usually a LAN or a group of LANs, typically
Ethernet or Token Ring, that provide users with
frontline access to network services. - The access layer is where almost all hosts are
attached to the network, including servers of all
kinds and user workstations.
70- The three layers are bounded by Layer 3 devices
or other devices that provide separation into
broadcast domains. - Note A three-layer model can usually meet the
needs of most enterprise networks. - However, not all environments require a full
three-layer hierarchya one- or two-layer design
may be adequate. - Even in these cases, however, a hierarchical
structure should be maintained.
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72- The distribution layer would include the campus
backbone with all its connecting routers. - Because policy is typically implemented at this
level, we can say that the distribution layer
provides policy-based connectivity. - Policy-based connectivity means that the layer 3
routers are programmed to only allow traffic on
the campus backbone that the network manager has
determined acceptable.
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74- The access layer connects users into LANs, and
LANs into campus backbones or WAN links. - This approach enables designers to distribute
services across the CPUs of devices operating at
this layer. - The access layer allows logical segmentation of
the network and the grouping of users based on a
function.
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76- The one-layer design is typically implemented
where - Only a few remote locations in the company
- access to applications are mainly done via the
local LAN to the site file server. - Each site is its own broadcast domain.
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78- In a two-layer design, a WAN link is used to
interconnect separate sites. - VLANs may be implemented to create separate
logical networks without requiring additional
routers. - Inside the site multiple LANs may be implemented
with each LAN segment being its own broadcast
domain. - Router becomes a concentration point for WAN
links.
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80- Remote sites can access the WAN core network
using WAN technologies other than dedicated
links. - Frame Relay or ISDN are two such alternatives.
- If a remote site is small and has low demand for
access to services in the corporate network, ISDN
would be a logical choice for this
implementation. - Perhaps another remote site cannot get access to
dedicate WAN links from their service provider
but has access to Frame Relay. - In either case an entry point needs to be
established for these types of WAN connections in
to the WAN core.
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82- One of the advantages of hierarchical WAN design
is it provides a method for controlling data
traffic patterns by putting Layer 3 routing
points throughout the network. - Since routers have the ability to determine paths
from the source host to destination hosts based
on Layer 3 addressing, data traffic will flow up
the hierarchy only as far as it needs to to find
the destination host.
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84- If Host A were to establish a connection to Host
B, the traffic from this connection would travel
to Router 1 and be forwarded back down to Host B.
- Notice that this connection did not require any
traffic be placed on the link between Router 1
and Router 2, thus conserving the bandwidth on
that link.
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86- In a two-layer WAN hierarchy, the traffic
patterns are still governed by host source and
destination addresses and path determinations of
the router. - In this model again the traffic will only travel
up the hierarchy as far as needed to get to the
destination thus conserving bandwidth on other
WAN links.
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91Module 2