Title: ITEC 275 Computer Networks
1ITEC 275 Computer Networks Switching, Routing,
and WANs
- Week Seven 2017
- Robert DAndrea
2Agenda
- Learning Activities
- Domain Name Server (DNS)
- Summarization
- Root Owner DNS
- Routing tables
- Spanning Tree Protocol
- Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol
- Static versus Dynamic Routing
- Routing Protocols and Characteristics
3DNS Domain Names
4Interpreting a DNS domain names
- DNS has a method of noting and interpreting the
fully qualified path to a DNS domain name similar
to the way full paths to files or directories are
noted or displayed at a command prompt. - For example, a directory tree path helps point
to the exact location of a file stored on your
computer. For Windows computers, the back slash
(\) indicates each new directory that leads to
the exact location of a file. For DNS, the
equivalent is a period (.) indicating each new
domain level used in a name.
5Interpreting File Names
- UNIX uses the concept of relative and absolute
file names. If a file name is preceded by a
forward slash (e.g. /bin), the name is absolute.
If the name is without a leading slash, it is
considered relative to your current working
directory. - Example1 Present location is /abc/xyz, I am want
to remove /abc/xyz/read/hello.txt file. - Using relative path
- rm read/hello.txt
6Interpreting a DNS domain names
- For DNS, an example of a domain name with
multiple levels is the following, a fully
qualified domain name (FQDN) - host-a.example.microsoft.com.
- Unlike the file name example, a DNS FQDN, when
read from left to right (/proc/bus/usb), moves
from its most specific information (the DNS name
for a computer called "host-a") to its highest or
most general piece of information (the trailing
period (.) that indicates the root of the DNS
name tree). This example shows the four separate
DNS domain levels that lead away from the
specific host location of "host-a"
7Interpreting a DNS domain names
- 1. The "example" domain, which corresponds to a
subdomain where the computer name "host-a" is
registered for use. - 2. The "microsoft" domain, which corresponds to
the parent domain that roots the "example"
subdomain. - 3. The "com" domain, which corresponds to the
top-level domain designated for use by business
or commercial organizations that roots the
"microsoft" domain. - 4. The trailing period (.), which is a standard
separator character used to qualify the full DNS
domain name to the root level of the DNS
namespace tree.
8Root Servers
- When a computer on the Internet needs to resolve
a domain name, it uses resolver software to do
the lookup. A resolver breaks the name up into
its labels from right to left. The first
component is queried using a root server to
obtain the responsible authoritative server.
Queries for each name are performed until a name
server returns the answer of the original query.
9Interpreting a DNS domain names
- As of 2013, there are 13 root name servers, with
names in the form letter.root-server.net. This
does not mean that there are only 13 physical
servers each site uses redundant computer
equipment to provide reliable service when
hardware and software fail.
10Interpreting a DNS domain names
11Route Summarization
12Classful Boundary Summarization
13Routing Tables
14Bridge Protocol Data Unit (BPDU)
- What are BPDUs?
- BPDUs are data messages that are exchanged
across the switches within an extended LAN that
uses a spanning tree protocol topology. BPDU
packets contain information on ports, addresses,
priorities and costs and ensure that the data
ends up where it was intended to go. BPDU
messages are exchanged across bridges to detect
loops in a network topology. The loops are then
removed by shutting down selected bridge
interfaces and placing redundant switch ports in
a backup, or blocked, state.
15Bridge Protocol Data Unit (BPDU)
16Stateless Auto-configuration
17Stateless Auto-configuration
- Stateless Auto Configuration is an important
feature offered by the IPv6 protocol. It allows
the various devices attached to an IPv6 network
to connect to the Internet using the Stateless
Auto Configuration without requiring any
intermediate IP support in the form of a Dynamic
Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) server. A DHCP
server holds a pool of IP addresses that are
dynamically assigned for a specified amount of
time to the requesting node in a Local Area
Network (LAN).
18Stateless Auto-configuration
- Stateless Auto Configuration is a boom for the
Network Administrators since it has automated the
IP address configuration of individual network
devices. Earlier, configuration of the IP
addresses was a manual process requiring support
of a DHCP server. However, IPv6 allows the
network devices to automatically acquire IP
addresses and also has provision for
renumbering/reallocation of the IP addresses en
masse. With a rapid increase in the number of
network devices connected to the Internet, this
feature was long overdue. It simplifies the
process of IP address allocation by doing away
with the need of DHCP servers and also allows a
more streamlined assignment of network addresses
there by facilitating unique identification of
network devices over the Internet.
19Switching and Routing Choices
- Switching
- Layer 2 transparent bridging (switching)
- Multilayer switching
- Spanning Tree Protocol enhancements
- VLAN technologies
- Routing
- Static or dynamic
- Distance-vector and link-state protocols
- Interior and exterior
20Selection Criteria for Switching and Routing
Protocols
- Network traffic characteristics
- Bandwidth, memory, and CPU usage
- The number of peers supported
- The capability to adapt to changes quickly
- Support for authentication
21Making Decisions
- Goals must be established
- Many options should be explored
- The consequences of the decision should be
investigated - Contingency plans should be made
- A decision table can be used. Decision tables are
composed of rows and columns. Each row
corresponds to a single rule, with the columns
defining the conditions and actions of the rules.
22Example Decision Table
23Transparent Bridging (Switching) Tasks
- What is Transparent Bridging?
- A transparent bridge is a common type of bridge
that observes incoming network traffic to
identify media access control (MAC) addresses.
These bridges operate in a way that is
transparent to all the network's connected hosts.
A transparent bridge records MAC addresses in a
table that is much like a routing table and
evaluates that information whenever a packet is
routed toward its location. A transparent bridge
may also combine several different bridges to
better inspect incoming traffic. Transparent
bridges are used primarily in Ethernet networks.
24Transparent Bridging (Switching) Tasks
- Example of how transparent bridging works
- Transparent bridges save and maintain the
source-route addresses of incoming frames by
listening to all the connected bridges and hosts.
They use a transparent bridging algorithm to a
accomplish this. The algorithm has five
components - Learning
- Flooding
- Filtering
- Forwarding
- Avoiding loops
25Transparent Bridging (Switching) Tasks
- Example of how transparent bridging works
- Consider three hosts, A, B and C, and a bridge
with three ports. Host A is connected to Bridge
Port 1, Host B is connected to Bridge Port 2 and
Host C is connected to Bridge Port 3. Host A
sends a frame to the bridge that is addressed to
Host B. The bridge checks the frame's source
address and creates an address and port number
entry for Host A in its forwarding table. The
bridge then examines the frame's destination
address, but does not find it in its forwarding
table. As a result, the bridge sends the frame to
all the other ports (2 and 3). This is called
flooding. The frame is then received by Host B
and Host C, which also check the destination
address. Host B recognizes a destination address
match and sends a response to Host A.Â
26Transparent Bridging (Switching) Tasks
- Example of how transparent bridging works
- On the return path, the bridge adds an address
and port number entry for Host B to its
forwarding table. The bridge already has Host A's
address in its forwarding table so it forwards
the response only to Port 1. In this way, none of
the Port 3 hosts are burdened with response
requirements. Through this process, two-way
communication between Host A and Host B is
facilitated without the need for further flooding.
27Transparent Bridging (Switching) Tasks
- Ethernet switches and bridges use transparent
bridging. - A transparent bridge connects one or more LAN
segments so that end systems on different
segments can communicate with each other
transparently. An end system sends a frame to a
destination without knowing whether the
destination is local or on the other side of the
bridge.
28Transparent Bridging (Switching) Tasks
- Forward frames transparently
- Learn which port to use for each MAC address
- Flood frames when the destination unicast address
hasnt been learned yet - Filter frames from going out ports that dont
include the destination address - Flood broadcasts and multicasts
29STP Definitions
- STP is a bridge protocol that uses the STA
(Spanning Tree Algorithm) to find redundant links
dynamically and create a spanning-tree topology
database. Bridges exchange BPDU (Bridge Protocol
Data Unit) messages with other bridges to detect
loops. - BPDU STP hello packet that is sent out at
configurable intervals to exchange information
among bridges in the network.
30Transparent Bridging
- Connectivity to different segments
31Switching Table on a Bridge or Switch
MAC Address
Port
1
08-00-07-06-41-B9
2
00-00-0C-60-7C-01
3
00-80-24-07-8C-02
32Cisco Spanning Tree Protocol Enhancements
- PortFast is a Cisco product feature. It supports
the concept of a switch edge port. - UplinkFast and Backbone Fast. UpLinkFast is a
Cisco product feature that is configured on
access layer switches. Improves the convergence
time of STP. - Unidirectional link detection is a hardware
failure detection between switches. - Loop Guard is a Cisco product feature. Supports
the prevention of loops caused by blocking port
erroneously moving to the forwarding state.
33Redundant Uplinks
Core Layer
X
Distribution Layer
Switch B
Switch C
X
Primary Uplink
Secondary Uplink
Access Layer
X blocked by STP
Switch A
- If a link fails, how long will STP take to
recover? - Use UplinkFast to speed convergence
34Protocols for Transporting VLAN Information
- Inter-Switch Link (ISL)
- Tagging protocol
- Cisco proprietary
- IEEE 802.1Q
- Tagging protocol
- IEEE standard
- VLAN Trunk Protocol (VTP)
- VLAN management protocol is a switch-to-switch
and switch-to-router configuration.
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36Protocols for Transporting VLAN Information
- VLAN Trunk Protocol (VTP)
- The VLAN management protocol exchanges VLAN
configuration changes as they are made to the
network. VTP manages additions, deletions, and
renaming of VLANs on a campus network without
requiring manual intervention at each switch.
37Selecting Routing Protocols
- They all have the same general goal
- To share network reachability information among
routers - They differ in many ways
- Interior versus exterior
- Metrics supported hop count or bandwidth.
- Dynamic versus static and default
- Distance-vector versus link-sate
- Classful versus classless
- Scalability
38Interior Versus Exterior Routing Protocols
- Interior routing protocols are used within an
autonomous system - Exterior routing protocols are used between
autonomous systems
Autonomous system definitions A set of routers
that presents a common routing policy to the
internetwork A network or set of networks that
are under the administrative control of a single
entity
39Routing Protocol Metrics
- A metric is the determining factor used by a
routing algorithm to decide which route to a
network is better than another - Examples of metrics
- Bandwidth - capacity
- Delay - time
- Load - amount of network traffic
- Reliability - error rate
- Hop count - number of routers that a packet must
travel through before reaching the destination
network - Cost - arbitrary value defined by the protocol or
administrator
40Routing Algorithms
- Static routing
- Calculated before hand, offline
- Default routing
- If I dont recognize the destination, just send
the packet to Router X - Ciscos On-Demand Routing
- Routing for stub networks
- Uses Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP)
- Dynamic routing protocol
- Distance-vector algorithms
- Link-state algorithms
41Routing Algorithms
- Stub network has only one default path to
non-local hosts and no outside network knowledge.
Non-local stub network traffic uses a single
logical path when traveling in and out of the
network. - A good example would be an individual or group
that uses only one router to link to an internet
service provider (ISP). The individual or group
are considered stub networks by the ISP.
42Routing Algorithms
43Routing Algorithms
44Routing Algorithms
- The default route is the IP address of the next
hop when no other routes are known. - To configure the default route to be
192.168.1.1 - config ter ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 192.168.1.1
- An interface can be used as an alternative to and
IP address. To use serial0/0 for destinations not
in the routing table, use - ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 serial 0/0
45Routing Algorithms
- A default route of a computer that is
participating in computer networking is
the packet forwarding rule (route) taking effect
when no other route can be determined for a
given Internet Protocol (IP) destination address.
All packets for destinations not established in
the routing table are sent via the default route.
This route generally points to another router,
which treats the packet the same way. If a route
matches, the packet is forwarded accordingly,
otherwise the packet is forwarded to the default
route of that router. The process repeats until a
packet is delivered to the destination. Each
router traversal counts as one hop in the
distance calculation for the transmission path.
46Routing Algorithms
47Routing Algorithms
- Ciscos On- Demand Routing
- The Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP) is a Cisco
proprietary protocol that, among other things, is
used to discover other Cisco devices on either
broadcast or non-broadcast media. CDP provides
administrators with information that includes the
IP address, software version, as well as the
capabilities of the neighbor device. - On-Demand Routing (ODR) is an enhancement to
Cisco Discovery Protocol that advertises the
connected IP prefix or prefixes of a stub router
via CDP. ODR also supports VLSM (Variable Length
Subnet Mask), which means that it can be used in
just about any network.
48Routing Algorithms
- Ciscos On- Demand Routing
- ODR is a feature that provides IP routing for
stub sites with minimum overhead. The overhead of
a general, dynamic routing protocol is avoided
without incurring the configuration and
management overhead of static routing. - A stub router can be thought of as a spoke
router in a hub-and-spoke network topology where
the only router to which the spoke is adjacent is
the hub router. In such a network topology, the
IP routing information required to represent this
topology is fairly simple. These stub routers
commonly have a WAN connection to the hub router,
and a small number of LAN network segments (stub
networks) are directly connected to the stub
router.
49Routing Algorithms
- Ciscos On- Demand Routing (ODR)
- It is important to know that ODR is not a
routing protocol. Instead, it is simply an
enhancement/feature to CDP that is used to
dynamically propagate routing information at
Layer 2. The primary reasons ODR is often
incorrectly referred to as a routing protocol is
because it allows routers to dynamically exchange
routing information. The second reason is because
ODR is enabled using the router odr global
configuration command.
50Routing Algorithms
-
- ODR (On Demand Routing) allows routing
information from hub/spoke topology to be
exchanged with hub and entered into hub routing
table without running any standard routing
protocol. - ODR is designed to be used in a partially meshed
environment (e.g. Frame Relay networks) where a
hub router maintains one link each to multiple
stub routers (spokes routers). Therefore, for any
spoke to communicate with another spoke, such
traffic must pass through the hub. - If each stub network is simply made up of the
stub router and multiple hosts (much like remote
location of a corporate organization). There is
no need to run any routing protocols on the stub
since all host are connected and the routes can
be exchanged with hub router using ODR. Hub
routing will install the routes in
routing/forwarding tables as connected routes
with next-hop address of each stub respectively. -
51Routing Algorithms
- ODR uses CDP protocol that runs by default on
all Cisco devices. CDP is used by Cisco devices
to learn and retrieve basic information about
their connected neighbors. Therefore, disabling
CDP on a router will also disable propagation of
ODR traffic. - The primary benefit of using ODR is that it is
not CPU intensive and it consumes very little
bandwidth.Â
52Routing Algorithms
53Routing Algorithms
- Ciscos On- Demand Routing
54Static Routing Example
172.16.20.1
172.16.40.1
172.16.20.2
172.16.40.2
Router A
Router B
Router C
s0
s0
s0
s1
e0
e0
e0
172.16.10.1
172.16.30.1
172.16.50.1
Host A
Host C
Host B
172.16.10.2
172.16.30.2
172.16.50.2
RouterA(config)ip route 172.16.50.0
255.255.255.0 172.16.20.2 Send packets for
subnet 50 to 172.16.20.2 (Router B)
55Default Routing Example
- Interior Routing Protocols
- RIPv1 classful
- RIPv2 classless
- OSPF Build an entire topology
- ISIS
- IGRP older CISCO protocol
- EIGRP Enhanced Interior CISCO protocol
- Exterior Routing Protocol
- BGP
56Default Routing Example
- Routing Protocols Provide
- Discovery of new networks
- Automatic route updating
- Best path determination
- Failover load balancing
- Eliminates human error
57Default Routing Example
- Distance Vector Routing Protocols
- Neighboring routers communicate with each other
to keep their routing tables updated. A view of
the entire network is through all routers
connected together. - Link State Routing Protocols
- Share link information (up or down) build a
routing table based on the topology that has been
built.
58Default Routing
59Default Routing Example
172.16.20.1
172.16.40.1
172.16.20.2
172.16.40.2
Router A
Router B
Router C
s0
s0
s0
s1
e0
e0
e0
172.16.30.1
172.16.50.1
172.16.10.1
Host A
Host C
Host B
172.16.10.2
172.16.30.2
172.16.50.2
RouterA(config)ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0
172.16.20.2 If its not local, send it to
172.16.20.2 (Router B)
60Distance-Vector Routing
- Router maintains a routing table that lists known
networks, direction (vector) to each network, and
the distance to each network - Router periodically (every 30 seconds, for
example) transmits the routing table via a
broadcast packet that reaches all other routers
on the local segments - Routers update their routing table, if necessary,
based on received broadcasts
61Distance-Vector Routing Tables
Router A
Router B
172.16.0.0
192.168.2.0
Router As Routing Table
Router Bs Routing Table
Network Distance Send To 172.16.0.0
0 Port 1 192.168.2.0 1 Router B
Network Distance Send To 192.168.2.0
0 Port 1 172.16.0.0 1 Router A
62Link-State Routing
- Routers send updates only when theres a change
- Router that detects change creates a link-state
advertisement (LSA) and sends it to neighbors - Neighbors propagate the change to their neighbors
- Routers update their topological database if
necessary
63Distance-Vector Vs. Link-State
- Distance-vector algorithms keep a list of
networks, with next hop and distance (metric)
information - Link-state algorithms keep a database of routers
and links between them - Link-state algorithms think of the internetwork
as a graph instead of a list - When changes occur, link-state algorithms apply
Dijkstras shortest-path algorithm to find the
shortest path between any two nodes
64Link-State Routing Protocol
65Choosing Between Distance-Vector and Link-State
- Choose Distance-Vector
- Simple, flat topology
- Hub-and-spoke topology
- Junior network administrators
- Convergence time not a big concern
- Choose Link-State
- Hierarchical topology
- More senior network administrators
- Fast convergence is critical
66Choosing between Distance Vector and Link State
Protocols
- Distance-Vector
- Routing Information Protocol (RIP) Version 1 and
2 - Interior Gateway Routing Protocol (IGRP)
- Enhanced IGRP
- Border Gateway Protocol (BGP)
- Link-State
- Open Shortest Path First (OSPF)
- Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS)
67Routing Protocols
- Routers talk to routers on the network, sharing
information with each other. - Routed protocol IP
- Routing protocol A protocol used by a router.
- Distance Vector routing protocols include
- RIP, RIPv1, RIPv2, IGRP, and EIGRP
- Routers communicate with neighboring routers.
- Distance Metric
68Routing Protocols
- Link State routing protocols include OSPF and
ISIS - Routers communicate with all other routers. They
exchange link state information to build a
topology of the entire network. - What direction of interface are you going out of?
- Link State refers to the interface connections or
links to other routers and networks.
69Routing Protocols
- What is convergence?
- Convergence is when all routers in the network
have the same picture of the network.
70Routing Information Protocol (RIP)
- First standard routing protocol developed for
TCP/IP environments - RIP Version 1 is documented in RFC 1058 (1988)
- RIP Version 2 is documented in RFC 2453 (1998)
- Easy to configure and troubleshoot
- Broadcasts its routing table every 30 seconds 25
routes per packet - Uses a single routing metric (hop count) to
measure the distance to a destination network
max hop count is 15
71RIP V2 Features
- Includes the subnet mask with route updates
- Supports prefix routing (classless routing, super
netting) - Supports variable-length subnet masking (VLSM)
- Includes simple authentication to foil crackers
from sending routing updates.
72IGRP Solved Problems with RIP
- 15-hop limitation in RIP
- IGRP supports 255 hops
- Reliance on just one metric (hop count)
- IGRP uses bandwidth, delay, reliability, load
- (By default just uses bandwidth and delay)
- RIP's 30-second update timer
- IGRP uses 90 seconds
73EIGRP
- Adjusts to changes in internetwork very quickly
- Incremental updates contain only changes, not
full routing table - Updates are delivered reliably
- Router keeps track of neighbors routing tables
and uses them as feasible successor - Same metric as IGRP, but more granularity (32
bits instead of 24 bits)
74Open Shortest Path First (OSPF)
- Open standard, defined in RFC 2328
- Adjusts to changes quickly
- Supports very large internetworks
- Does not use a lot of bandwidth
- Authenticates protocol exchanges to meet security
goals - Is an IP routing protocol that is completely link
state.
75OSPF Metric
- A single dimensionless value called cost. A
network administrator assigns an OSPF cost to
each router interface on the path to a network.
The lower the cost, the more likely the interface
is to be used to forward data traffic. - On a Cisco router, the cost of an interface
defaults to 100,000,000 divided by the bandwidth
for the interface. For example, a 100-Mbps
Ethernet interface has a cost of 1.
76OSPF Areas Connected via Area Border Routers
(ABRs)
Area 0 (Backbone)
ABR
ABR
ABR
Area 1
Area 3
Area 2
77IS-IS
- Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System.
- Link-state routing protocol.
- Designed by the ISO for the OSI protocols.
- Integrated IS-IS handles IP also.
78IS-IS
- The IS-IS routing protocol is a link state
protocol for interior routing. It is an ISO
standard and is completely defined in
ISO/IEC-10589. The ES-IS neighbor greeting
protocol is used in conjunction with IS-IS. For
its hierarchical routing, IS-IS divides the
network into non-overlapping IS-IS areas and its
routers are categorized as Level 1 or Level 2
routers, or both. Level 1 routers are responsible
for routing packets between LANs within an IS-IS
area, and Level 2 routers forward packets between
IS-IS areas.Â
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80IS-IS
-  IS-IS is a routing protocol designed to move
information efficiently within a computer
network, a group of physically connected
computers or similar devices. It accomplishes
this by determining the best route for datagrams
through a packet-switched network. The protocol
was defined as an international standard within
the Open Systems Interconnections (OSI) reference
design
81Border Gateway Protocol (BGP)
- Allows routers in different autonomous systems to
exchange routing information - Exterior routing protocol
- Used on the Internet among large ISPs and major
companies - Supports route aggregation
- Main metric is the length of the list of
autonomous system numbers, but BGP also supports
routing based on policies
82Border Gateway Protocol (BGP)
83Internet Protocol (EGP)
- During the early days of the Internet, an
EGPversion 3 (EGP3) was used to
interconnect Autonomous Systems.
Currently, BGP version 4 is the accepted
standard for Internet routing and has essentially
replaced the more limited EGP3.
84Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP)
- ICMP works at the Network layer and is used by
IP for many different services. ICMP is a
management protocol and messaging service for IP.
Its messages are carried as IP datagrams.
85Routing Protocols Summary
- Distant vector
- RIP and IGRP
- Link-state
- OSPF
- Hybrid
- EIGRP
86Summary
- The selection of switching and routing protocols
should be based on an analysis of - Goals
- Scalability and performance characteristics of
the protocols - Transparent bridging is used on modern switches
- But other choices involve enhancements to STP and
protocols for transporting VLAN information - There are many types of routing protocols and
many choices within each type
87Review Questions
- What are some options for enhancing the Spanning
Tree Protocol? - What factors will help you decide whether
distance-vector or link-state routing is best for
your design customer? - What factors will help you select a specific
routing protocol? - Why do static and default routing still play a
role in many modern network designs?
88This Weeks Outcomes
- Spanning Tree Protocol
- Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol
- Static versus Dynamic Routing
- Routing Protocols and Characteristics
89Due this week
90Q A
- Questions, comments, concerns?