Wednesday 4 March 2020

internet on switch

Essentially, switches are the traffic cops of a simple local area network.
Techopedia explains Switch
A switch in an Ethernet-based LAN reads incoming TCP/IP data packets/frames containing destination information as they pass into one or more input ports. The destination information in the packets is used to determine which output ports will be used to send the data on to its intended destination.

Switches are similar to hubs, only smarter. A hub simply connects all the nodes on the network -- communication is essentially in a haphazard manner with any device trying to communicate at any time, resulting in many collisions. A switch, on the other hand, creates an electronic tunnel between source and destination ports for a split second that no other traffic can enter. This results in communication without collisions.

Switches are similar to routers as well, but a router has the additional ability to forward packets between different networks, whereas a switch is limited to node-to-node communication on the same network.
 
Contributor(s): John Burke, Dominique Brazziel
A network switch is a hardware device that channels incoming data from multiple input ports to a specific output port that will take it toward its intended destination. It is a small device that transfers data packets between multiple network devices such as computers, routers, servers or other switches.

In a local area network (LAN) using Ethernet, a network switch determines where to send each incoming message frame by looking at the physical device address (also known as the Media Access Control address or MAC address). Switches maintain tables that match each MAC address to the port which the MAC address is received.
internet on switch

A network switch operates on the network layer, called layer 2 of the OSI model.

Network device layers
Network devices can be separated by the layer they operate on, defined by the OSI model. The OSI model conceptualizes networks separating protocols by layers. Control is typically passed from one layer to the next. Some layers include:

Layer 1- or the physical layer or below, which can transfer data but cannot manage the traffic coming through it. An example would be Ethernet hubs or cables.
Layer 2- or the data link layer, which uses hardware addresses to receive and forward data. A network switch is an example of what type of device is on layer 2.
Layer 3- or the network layer, which performs similar functions to a router and also supports multiple kinds of physical networks on different ports. Examples include routers or layer 3 switches.
Other layers include layer 4 (the transport layer), layer 5 (the session layer), layer 6 (the presentation layer) and layer 7 (the application layer).

2 comments:

  1. As reported by Stanford Medical, It's in fact the ONLY reason women in this country live 10 years longer and weigh an average of 19 KG lighter than we do.

    (And by the way, it really has NOTHING to do with genetics or some hard exercise and absolutely EVERYTHING to do with "HOW" they are eating.)

    BTW, I said "HOW", not "what"...

    TAP on this link to reveal if this short quiz can help you unlock your real weight loss possibility

    ReplyDelete
  2. the Telecom Corner blogs are so amazing to read web development dubai your blog post provides so many information. thanks for sharing it with us

    ReplyDelete

network equipment provider

Enterprises recognize that all of the new technologies they want to deploy – IoT, edge computing, serverless, containers, hybrid cloud, an...