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- Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!bloom-beacon.mit.edu!news.kei.com!travelers.mail.cornell.edu!newstand.syr.edu!forbin.syr.edu!jmwobus
- From: jmwobus@mailbox.syr.edu (John Wobus)
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.big-lan,comp.dcom.lans.misc,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: BIG-LAN/bit.listserv.big-lan FAQ
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 5 Jul 1995 15:08:37 GMT
- Organization: Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY
- Lines: 1815
- Approved: jmwobus@mailbox.syr.edu
- Message-ID: <3te9tl$mhi@newstand.syr.edu>
- Reply-To: big-lan-request@suvm.syr.edu
- NNTP-Posting-Host: forbin.syr.edu
- Originator: jmwobus@forbin.syr.edu
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu bit.listserv.big-lan:225 comp.dcom.lans.misc:6093 comp.answers:12886 news.answers:47756
-
- Archive-name: LANs/big-lan-faq
-
- BIG-LAN Frequently Asked Questions
-
- Last Updated: March 14, 1995
-
- Acknowledgements: A lot of people provided information for me and I
- freely admit that I have not recorded the list of names. Thanks
- to all.
-
- Contents
- --------
- I. About BIG-LAN
- II. Explanation of this Memo
- III. Sources of Information on Campus Networks
- 1. Must-Read Sources
- 2. A Few General Sources
- 3. LISTSERV Mailing Lists
- 4. Internet Mailing Lists
- 5. Internet Mailing Lists with automatic subscription
- 6. USENET/Netnews Groups
- 7. Anonymous FTP-based Archive Sites
- 8. LISTSERV-based Archive Sites
- 9. RFCs (Internet "Request For Comments")
- 10. Other Useful Online Papers
- 11. Sources of Protocol Documents
- 12. Useful Free Software
- 13. Books
- 14. Periodicals
- 15. Training Courses
- 16. Conferences
- IV. Basic Glossary on Campus Networks
- V. Frequently Asked Questions on Campus Networks
- 1. What is the difference between Ethernet and IEEE 802.3?
- 2. What is encapsulation? What do I have to know about it?
- 3. How do I know whether to use a router or a bridge?
- 4. How do I know whether to use a bridge or a repeater? How many
- repeaters may I put on an Ethernet?
- 5. Should I use "manageable" hubs, concentrators, etc on my LAN?
- 6. Which LAN technology should I use? Arcnet? FDDI? Token Ring?
- 10BASE-T?
- 7. What is the ideal cable to install in a new building?
- 8. What is the ideal cable to install between buildings on a campus?
- 9. Whose routers are recommended?
- 10. Whose bridges are recommended?
- 11. Whose Ethernet equipment are recommended?
- 12. Whose Token Ring equipment are recommended?
- 13. Whose FDDI equipment are recommended?
- 14. What PC network software is recommended?
- 15. What protocols should run on a campus-wide LAN?
- 16. What software is recommended for managing a campus-wide LAN?
- 17. What terminal server is recommended?
- 18. Whose troubleshooting equipment are recommended?
- 19. What security products should I buy?
- 20. Should the names of devices on my campus LAN have subdomains?
- 21. Should client stations use POP? Should they use just SMTP?
- Should I use some non-TCP/IP protocol for mail to/from client
- stations?
- 22. Should I enable SQE/heartbeat?
- 23. If I have a thinwire network interface card, how do I connect it
- to a 10BASE-T concentrator?
- 24. How much does a collision slow down an Ethernet packet?
- 25. Should I worry about Ethernet tailgating?
-
- I. About BIG-LAN
-
- BIG-LAN is a mailing list for discussion of issues in designing and
- operating Campus-Size Local Area Networks, especially complex
- nes utilizing multiple technologies and supporting multiple
- protocols. Topics include repeaters, bridges, routers and
- gateways; how to incorporate smaller Personal-Computer type LANs
- into the campus-wide LAN; how to unify the mail systems, etc.
- This is an ideal list in which to debate the relative merits of
- bridges vs routers.
-
- All requests to be added to or deleted from this list, problems,
- questions, etc., should be sent to BIG-LAN-REQUEST@SUVM.SYR.EDU
- (Internet) or BIG-REQ@SUVM (Bitnet). Those familiar with LISTSERV
- can subscribe with LISTSERV@SUVM.SYR.EDU (Internet) or
- LISTSERV@SUVM (Bitnet).
-
- Archives are available through LISTSERV and anonymous ftp.
-
- Coordinator: John Wobus <JMWOBUS@SYR.EDU>
-
- II. Explanation of this Memo
-
- Since BIG-LAN is not specific to any protocol family, it will
- not cover any particular protocol family in detail, e.g. this
- is not a TCP/IP/Internet FAQ Memo. Fortunately, there are some
- good TCP/IP FAQ Memos which are listed in the sources of
- information below.
-
- Suggestions, corrections, and contributions welcome. Please
- send them to:
-
- jmwobus@syr.edu
-
- An up-to-date copy of this memo may be retrieved via URL:
-
- http://web.syr.edu/~jmwobus/comfaqs/big-lan.faq
-
- III. Sources of Information on Campus Networks
-
- This list favors "network" sources of information: available on
- the Internet and/or BITNET and other similar networks; if you
- have access to BIG-LAN then you have access to one of these
- networks; and these sources are not the kind which you can
- discover through vendors, books, bookstores, or libraries.
-
- 1. Must-Read Sources
-
- These are documents that you definitely should get and read if you
- have questions about Campus Networks.
-
- a. Charles Spurgeon's reading list (see below under "Other Useful
- Online Papers").
- b. RFCs 1175, 1594, 1207, and 1392 (see below under "RFCs").
-
- 2. A Few General Sources
-
- These are network resources & mechanisms for getting all kinds
- of information--not just on Networking; thus we can't cover them
- very thoroughly in this memo.
-
- a. LISTSERV - mailing list servers & file servers on BITNET,
- accessible via e-mail. Can be reached and used from a lot of
- networks. Mail the command INFO to any LISTSERV for help.
- Also have database commands (i.e. search commands) for archives
- they store.
- b. Usenet News/Netnews: distributed bulletin board with discussions
- on lots of topics. Distributed through the Internet and through
- UUCP.
- c. Anonymous ftp: the main way to make files available on the
- Internet. ftp to a site using username "anonymous". A
- password is always demanded--sometimes a banner tells you what
- to use--otherwise "guest" almost always works.
- d. Archie servers - network-accessible databases of where to get
- files via anonymous ftp. Access is through telnet, rlogin,
- mail, or a special "archie" protocol. To use via telnet,
- enter username archie. Some servers: archie.ans.net,
- archie.sura.net, archie.mcgill.edu, archie.unl.edu.
- e. WAIS - Internet-accessible databases on different topics.
- Available via WAIS protocol (basically Z39.50). Client
- (and server) software is collected on quake.think.com as
- well as a WAIS database of WAIS servers.
- f. ftplist.txt - collected list of anonymous ftp sites.
- Stored lots of places in anonymous ftp including syr.edu.
- g. Internet gopher - something like anonymous ftp only more
- advanced: to get started, I suggest ftping
- boombox.micro.umn.edu and getting information on gopher. A
- number of sites have servers.
- h. Internet List of lists: available by anonymous ftp from
- ftp.nisc.sri.com, or through a mail-based file server
- at mailserver@nisc.sri.com.
- i. LISTSERV internal list of lists. Available by mailing the
- command LIST GLOBAL to any LISTSERV.
- j. news.answers - newsgroup that distributes Frequently Asked
- Questions memos for lots of Netnews groups.
- k. FAQ archive available via anonymous ftp on rtfm.mit.edu
- From the archives of news.answers, Frequently Asked Question
- memos for lots of Netnews groups.
- l. news.announce.newusers - has periodic postings about how to
- use Usenet/Netnews and also a lot about mailing lists.
- m. BITFTP. A BITNET server that allows BITNET sites to use the
- Internet's File Transfer Protocol to send/receive files to
- ftpable Internet sites. For more information, send mail
- to BITFTP@PUCC with HELP as the message body.
- n. Database of lists managed by LISTSERV@VM1.NODAK.EDU. Use through
- LISTSERV's database interface.
- o. Maas files--Indexes & abstracts about various services available
- via Internet & BITNET including some related to campus networks.
- Available via anonymous ftp from ftp.unt.edu.
- p. NETSCOUT@VMTECMEX.BITNET mailing list. A list to exchange
- information on the location of network resources.
- LISTSERV-based so use instructions below to subscribe, etc.
- q. World Wide Web servers. You need WWW or Mosaic software to
- access them. A good server to start with is www.ncsa.uiuc.edu.
- Mosaic is available from ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu.
-
-
- 3. LISTSERV Mailing Lists
-
- Send a "SUBSCRIBE" command to LISTSERV@foo, e.g.
- SUBSCRIBE BIG-LAN John Doe
-
- a. BIG-LAN@SUVM.BITNET/SUVM.ACS.SYR.EDU
- b. NOVELL@SUVM.BITNET/SUVM.ACS.SYR.EDU
- c. CDROMLAN@IDBSU.BITNET/IDBSU.IDBSU.EDU
- d. BANYAN-L@AKRONVM.BITNET
- e. CW-EMAIL@TECMTYVM.BITNET (Campus Wide E-mail)
- f. CWIS-L@WUVMD.BITNET (Campus Wide Information Systems)
- g. IBM-NETS@BITNIC.BITNET
- h. LWUSERS@NDSUVM1.BITNET (LANWatch User List)
- i. TN3270-L@RUTVM1.BITNET
- j. 3COM-L@NUSVM.BITNET
- h. HELP-NET@TEMPLEVM.BITNET (Help re networking software)
- i. LANWORKS@MIAMIU.BITNET (LanWorks PCSA stuff)
- j. LANMAN-L@NIHLIST.BITNET (MS LAN MAN stuff)
-
- 4. Internet Mailing Lists
-
- Send a subscription request for list foo to foo-request@blah
-
- a. big-lan@suvm.acs.syr.edu (gives you 2 ways)
- b. cisco@spot.colorado.edu
- c. p4200@comet.cit.cornell.edu (Proteon routers)
- d. tcp-ip@nic.ddn.mil
- e. netblazer-users@telebit.com
- f. info-appletalk@andrew.cmu.edu
- g. net-ops@nsl.dec.com
- h. nfs@tmc.edu
- i. wellfleet-l@nstn.ns.ca
- j. ospf@trantor.umd.edu (OSPF IP routing protocol)
- k. pop@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu
- l. bind@ucbarpa.berkeley.edu
- m. pc-ip@udel.edu
- n. drivers@sun.soe.clarkson.edu (Packet Drivers)
- o. cell-relay@indiana.edu gatewayed to comp.dcom.cell-relay)
-
- 5. Internet Mailing Lists with automatic subscription
-
- Send a "SUBSCRIBE" command to the listed server.
-
- a. firewalls@greatcircle.com majordomo@greatcircle.com
- (about firewall routers)
- b. firewalls-digest@greatcircle.com majordomo@greatcircle.com
- (same list in digested form)
-
- 6. USENET/Netnews Groups
-
- a. comp.dcom.* lans.*, modems, sys.cisco, telecom, ...
- b. comp.protocols.* appletalk, tcp-ip.*, ibm, ppp, ...
- c. comp.sys.proteon
- d. comp.sys.novell
- e. comp.sys.mac.comm
- f. bit.listserv.big-lan (Note: these groups give Netnews
- g. bit.listserv.novell readers a way to read the corresponding
- h. bit.listserv.cwis-l LISTSERV lists)
- i. bit.listserv.cw-mail
- j. bit.listserv.3com-l
- k. alt.dcom.* catv, telecom, ...
-
- 7. Anonymous FTP-based Archive Sites
-
- a. syr.edu: BIG-LAN mailing list; NOVELL mailing list; a collection
- of network-oriented papers & faq memos.
- b. spot.colorado.edu: cisco mailing list & some other network stuff
- c. hsdndev.harvard.edu: (in ndtl/results) Results of Scott
- Bradner's router benchmarks.
- d. ftp.uu.net: a treasure trove of software.
- e. wuarchive.wustl.edu: a treasure trove of software.
- f. vax.ftp.com: packet drivers, some Unix software, other stuff.
- g. ftp.utexas.edu: collection of networking info & software--
- a lot of good information about Ethernet.
- h. ftp.novell.com: files Novell makes available. Mirrored at
- netlab2.usu.edu, bnug.proteon.com, ftp.rg.nl, tui.lincoln.ac.nz.
- i. ftp.cisco.com: files Cisco makes available & some interesting
- applications.
- j. gatekeeper.dec.com: a treasure trove of software & stuff
- (the stuff that was on decwrl.dec.com).
- k. lux.levels.unisa.edu.au: files that 3Com distributes via
- Compuserve.
- l. ftp.unt.edu: Maas files and other goodies.
- m. oak.oakland.edu: "the simtel collection, formerly at
- simtel20.army.mil"; a treasure trove of software, including
- packet drivers (pd1:<msdos.pktdrvr>). Mirrored on ftp.uu.net
- and wuarchive.wustl.edu.
- n. osi.ncsl.nist.gov: online copies of GOSIP & related documents.
-
- 8. LISTSERV-based Archive Sites
-
- The brave can mail the command "INFO FILES" and/or the command
- "INFO DATABASE" to the LISTSERV for instructions.
-
- a. LISTSERV@SUVM.BITNET: BIG-LAN & NOVELL mailing list archives.
-
- 9. RFCs (Internet "Request For Comments")
-
- Some anonymous ftp sites for RFCs: nic.ddn.mil, ftp.nisc.sri.com,
- nis.nsf.net, nisc.jvnc.net, venera.isi.edu, wuarchive.wustl.edu,
- ftp.salford.ac.uk.
- There are also some mail-based file servers:
- mailserver@nisc.sri.com, info-server@nnsc.nsf.net, and
- sendrfc@jvnc.net.
-
- a. RFC1470: FYI on a network management tool catalog: Tools for
- monitoring and debugging TCP/IP internets and interconnected
- devices
- b. RFC1175: FYI on where to start: A bibliography of
- internetworking information
- c. RFC1594: FYI on Questions and Answers: Answers to Commonly asked
- "New Internet User" Questions
- d. RFC1178: Choosing a name for your computer
- e. RFC1207: FYI on Questions and Answers: Answers to commonly
- asked "experienced Internet user" questions
- f. RFC1244: Site Security Handbook
- g. RFC1118: Hitchhiker's Guide to the Internet
- h. RFC1122 & RFC1123: Requirements for Internet Hosts
- i. RFC1208: A Glossary of Networking Terms
- j. RFC1180: A TCP/IP Tutorial
- k. RFC1173: Responsibilities of Host and Network Managers: A
- Summary of the Oral Tradition of the Internet
- l. IAB Official Protocol Standards (Currently RFC1540 but it is
- periodically updated & given a new RFC number)
- m. Assigned Numbers (Currently RFC1340 but it is periodically
- updated & given a new RFC number; Includes field-values for
- protocols in the TCP/IP family as well as some others)
- n. RFC1392: Internet User's Glossary
-
-
- 10. Other Useful Online Papers
-
- a. Charles Spurgeon. "Network Reading List: TCP/IP, UNIX, and
- Ethernet". Available via anonymous ftp from ftp.utexas.edu
- in directory pub/netinfo/docs as net-read.txt and netread-ps.
- Also available via electronic-mail-based archive server. Send
- the word "help" in the subject header or body of a message
- to archive-server@ftp.utexas.edu for more information.
- Also available via www.
- b. Charles Hedrick. "Introduction to the Administration of an
- Internet-based Local Network". Available via anonymous ftp
- from cs.rutgers.edu as runet/tcp-ip-admin.doc (also .ps).
- c. Charles Hedrick. "Introduction to Internet Protocols."
- Available via anonymous ftp from cs.rutgers.edu as
- runet/tcp-ip-intro.doc (also .ps).
- d. Unofficial lists of codes used on 802.3 & Ethernet networks.
- Portions of the official list are not released, so various
- people compile unofficial lists. One that is available via
- anonymous ftp is Michael Patton's pub/map/EtherNet-Codes
- on ftp.lcs.mit.edu. See also RFC: "Assigned Numbers".
- e. Arthur Green: "Frequently Asked Questions for NOVELL@SUVM
- Mailing List." Available via anonymous ftp from
- midir.ucd.ie.
- f. Brendan Kehoe: "Zen and the Art of the Internet: A Beginner's
- Guide to the Internet." Available via anonymous ftp from
- ftp.cs.widener.edu in the pub/zen directory.
- g. ATM Bibliography. Available via anonymous ftp from
- mythos.ucs.indiana.edu.
- h. John Wobus. "Lan Mail Protocols". Available via anonymous ftp
- from syr.edu under information/faqs/lan-mail-protocols
- i. John Wobus. "Lan Technology". Available via anonymous ftp from
- syr.edu under information/faqs/lan-technology
- j. Charles Spurgeon. "Guide to Ethernet". Available via anonymous
- ftp from ftp.utexas.edu in pub/netinfo/ethernet as ethernet-guide.ps.
- See a above.
- k. Charles Spurgeon. "Guide to Ethernet Configuration". Available via
- anonymous ftp from ftp.utexas.edu in pub/netinfo/ethernet as
- ethernet-config.ps.
-
-
- 11. Sources of Protocol Documents
-
- a. Ethernet V2 DEC-Direct; 1-800-344-4825; DEC Part Number
- AA-K759B-TK.
-
- b. IEEE 802 (802.3, Token Ring, 10BASE-T, etc) IEEE;
- 1-800-678-IEEE.
- c. TCP/IP RFCs. See RFCs (above).
- d. AppleTalk APDA; 1-800-282-APDA. Now a book in the
- "Inside" series.
- e. OSI Omnicom Inc.; 1-800-666-4266.
- f. DECNet DEC.
- g. SNA IBM.
- h. Novell(IPX) Built on XNS; rest is designed by Novell.
- i. FDDI ANSI; 1-212-642-4900.
- Also Global Engineering Documents; 1-800-854-7179.
- 2805 McGaw Avenue; PO Box 19539; Irvine, CA 92714;
- 1-714-261-1455.
- j. CCITT United Nations book shop in New York
- Some of the documents are available via ftp from
- world.std.com & ftp.uu.net & other sites.
- k. GOSIP NTIS Sales Dept; (703)487-4650; Document
- FIPS 146-1; See also Anonymous FTP-based Archive
- Sites
- l. XNS Xerox.
-
- 12. Useful Free Software
- (see also RFC1470; listed above)
-
- a. CUTCP (TCP/IP client for PCs) sun.soe.clarkson.edu,
- omnigate.clarkson.edu
- b. NCSA Telnet (Telnet clients for PCs & Macs) ftp.nsca.uiuc.edu
- c. Eudora (POP3 Client for Macs) ux1.cso.uiuc.edu
- d. POPmail (POP3 Client for PCs & Macs)
- boombox.micro.umn.edu
- e. PCROUTE (Makes IP router out of PC) accuvax.nwu.edu
- f. PCBRIDGE (Makes bridge out of PC) accuvax.nwu.edu
- g. Packet Drivers (Drivers for various PC LAN cards)
- oak.oakland.edu
-
- h. WinQVT (IP clients for Windows) ftp.cica.indiana.edu
- i. ka9q (TCP/IP for PCs and Macs) ucsd.edu
- j. PC/IP (TCP/IP client for MS-DOS) husc6.harvard.edu
- k. charon (Pegasus/smtp gateway) omnigate.clarkson.edu
- l. CAP (AppleTalk for Unix systems) rutgers.edu,
- munnari.oz.au, gatekeeper.dec.com
- m. Popper (POP3 server for Unix systems)
- ftp.cc.berkeley.edu
- n. Trumpet (PC Newsreader) oak.oakland.edu
- o. bootpd (Bootp Daemon for Unix) lancaster.andrew.cmu.edu
- p. NUPOP (POP3 daemon for MS-DOS) ftp.acns.nwu.edu
- q. NETWATCH (PC Network watching program) netlab1.usu..edu
- r. iupop3 (POP3 server for VMS) mythos.ucs.indiana.edu
- s. Beholder (PC Network watching program) ?
- t. KarlBridge (PC-based filter bridge)
- nisca.acs.ohio-state.edu
- u. Mosaic (multifacited information/news client)
- ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu
- v. Gopher (client/server information system) boombox?
- w. Pegasus (Mail client for PCs & Macs) risc.ua.edu
- x. Kermit (terminal emulator) Columbia U
- y. netatalk (AppleTalk for UNIX Systems) terminator.rs.itd.umich.edu z. etherman (X-based Ethenet monitoring) ftp.cs.curtin.edu.au
- aa. interman (X-based IP monitoring) ftp.cs.curtin.edu.au
- bb. packetman (Ethernet packet analyzer) ftp.cs.curtin.edu.au
-
- 13. Books
-
- The following books were mentioned by responders to the 12/93
- BIG-LAN Reader Survey as good books for administrators of
- Campus-sized LANs:
-
- a. Douglas Comer. Internetworking with TCP/IP.
- b. Albitz & Liu. DNS and BIND.
- c. Mark Miller. Troubleshooting Internetworks.
- d. Ed Kroll. The whole Internet.
- e. Marshall Rose. The Simple Book.
- f. Craig Hunt. TCP/IP Network Administration.
- g. Andrew Tanenbaum. Computer Networks.
- h. Nemeth, Snyder & Seebass. Unix System Administration Handbook.
- i. Stevens. Unix Network Programming
- j. Martin A. W. Nemzow. Keeping The Link (McGraw-Hill).
- k. Interconnections. Radia Perlman
- l. Inside AppleTalk.
- m. Caroline Arms. Campus Networking Strategies. Digital Press.
- Out of print.
-
- Also mentioned were books published by O'Reilly in general.
-
- 14. Periodicals
-
- The following periodicals were mentioned by responders to the 12/93
- BIG-LAN Reader Survey as good periodicals for administrators of
- Campus-sized LANs:
-
- a. Network World
- b. Data Communications
- c. LAN Magazine
- d. LAN Times
- e. Communications Week
- f. PC Week
- g. Network Computing
- h. InfoWorld
- i. ConneXions
- j. Byte
- k. Unix World
- l. Macworld
- m. MacWEEK
- n. PC Magazine
- o. Open Systems Today
- p. Network Management
- q. Lightwave
-
- 15. Training Courses
-
- The following providers of tutorials were mentioned by responders
- to the 12/93 BIG-LAN Reader Survey:
-
- a. Interop Tutorials
- b. Cisco training
- c. Westnet training
- d. Network World: Understanding SNMP
- e. Trellis training
- f. TC3 Land/Wan Video
- g. TC3 NetWare 3.11
- h. PDA Data Communications
- i. Hewlett-Packard free seminars
- j. Fred Prior Project Management Seminars
- k. CRAY Research training program
- l. Banyan training
-
- 16. Conferences
-
- The following conferences were mentioned by responders to the 12/93
- BIG-LAN Reader Survey as good conferences for administrators of
- Campus-sized LANs:
-
- a. Interop
- b. EDUCOM
- c. Networld
- d. Comnet
- e. Association of Banyan Users International
- f. ACUTA
-
- IV. Basic Glossary on Campus Networks
-
- Another glossary is RFC1208. See "Online Papers" above.
-
- 100BASE-T - A set of proposals to the IEEE 802.3 for 100Mbps
- Ethernet, called 100BASE-TX, 100BASE-TF, and 100BASE-T4. A
- medium-independent interface and an adaptor is planned (to be
- used like the AUI and MAU of 10Mbps 802.3). This is being
- developed & promoted by the Fast Ethernet Alliance.
-
- 100BASE-T4 - Proposed IEEE 802.3 standard for a 100Mbps
- Ethernet-like network. One of the flavors of "100BASE-T"
- proposed by the Fast Ethernet Alliance. Uses 8B6T encoding and
- 25MHZ clocking, and in addition to the two pairs traditionally
- used in the manner of 10BASE-T, also has two pair used in
- bidirectional half-duplex fashion. Among other things, this
- means that this particular kind of Ethernet cannot be made full
- duplex without the use of more pair. Formerly called 4T+.
-
- 100BASE-TF - A proposal to IEEE 802.3 for a 100Mbps Ethernet-like
- network. Borrows the physical characteristics of FDDI's
- multimode fiber PMD, but uses Ethernet framing & CSMA/CD. One
- of three flavors of "100BASE-T" proposed by the Fast Ethernet
- Alliance. Formerly part of 100BASE-X proposal.
-
- 100BASE-TX - A proposal to IEEE 802.3 for a 100Mbps Ethernet-like
- network. Borrows the physical characteristics of FDDI's TP-PMD,
- TP-PMD, but uses Ethernet framing & CSMA/CD. One of three
- flavors of "100BASE-T" proposed by the Fast Ethernet Alliance.
- Formerly part of 100BASE-X proposal.
-
- 100BASE-X - Old name for 100BASE-TF and 100BASE-TX.
-
- 100Mbps Copper UNI - ATM Forum UNI specification for 100Mbps over
- some sort of copper cable. I believe it is just 100MbpsUNI
- making use of FDDI's TP-PMD rather than the older fiber PMD.
-
- 100Mbps UNI - ATM Forum 100Mbps multimode fiber private UNI. Same
- as Fore's TAXI. Borrows optical characteristics & basic
- encoding of FDDI.
-
- 100VG-AnyLAN - "100VG-AnyLAN": Originally a proposal to IEEE 802.3
- for a 100Mbps Ethernet-like network, later relegated to IEEE
- 802.12. Formerly known as 100BASE-VG. Uses Demand Priority
- media access method and Quartet Signaling. I've also seen
- reference to its ability to use Category 4 UTP, Category 5 UTP,
- and STP, but I don't know how many pairs.
-
- 100VG-AnyLAN Forum - Group of vendors trying to accelerate
- 100VG-AnyLAN acceptance & interoperability.
-
- 10BASE-F - Three variants of IEEE 802.3 which runs over multimode
- fiber. See 10BASE-FB, 10BASE-FP, and 10BASE-FL.
-
- 10BASE-FB - IEEE 802.3 10BASE-FB: "Synchronous Ethernet" which is
- a special-purpose multimode fiber link for linking repeaters
- that allows the repeaters to communicate more efficiently, thus
- enlarging the count of repeaters that can be placed in series
- above the traditional 4. Described in IEEE 802.3 Section 17.
-
- 10BASE-FL - IEEE 802.3 10BASE-FL: multimode fiber Ethernet used to
- attach a pair of devices (each being either a host or a
- repeater) as a "Link Segment"--a lot like 10BASE-T except that
- it uses fiber. It makes FOIRL obsolete. 10BASE-FL transceivers
- can interoperate with FOIRL transceivers. It is described in
- IEEE 802.3 Section 18.
-
- 10BASE-FP - IEEE 802.3 10BASE-FP: passive star fiber Ethernet.
- Attaches a number of Ethernet devices together with a passive
- star hub (i.e., the hub is not electronic--it just splits the
- light travelling through each incoming fiber to go out all the
- outgoing fibers). It is described in IEEE 802.3 Section 16.
-
- 10BASE-T - A variant of IEEE 802.3 which allows stations to be
- attached via twisted-pair cable.
-
- 155Mbps UNI - ATM Forum 155Mbps private UNI. In two flavors:
- multimode and shielded twisted-pair. The multimode version is
- incompatible with STS3cUNI. This version is for private
- networks only and presumably will be less expensive. I heard
- that a C5 version has been proposed.
-
- 25Mbps UNI - IBM proposed copper interface for ATM that so far as
- been rejected by the ATM Forum. IBM's proposal that borrows
- some of Token Ring's signaling characteristics. I've read the
- statement that the ATM Forum doesn't support this proposal.
-
- 4T+ - Old name for 100BASE-T4.
-
- 51Mbps UNI - I don't know the actual name. ATM Forum 51Mbps UNI
- for Category 3 UTP. Uses AT&T's 16-CAP (a 16 constellation
- modem-type modulation scheme) line coding to transmit the
- signal. The transmission convergence layer (framing) conforms
- to the STS-1 SONET standard.
-
- 802, 802.x - see IEEE 802, IEEE 802.x.
-
- ANSI "American National Standards Institute" - A definer of
- standards of all kinds, including FDDI.
-
- ANSI X3 - ANSI group developing standards for information
- processing.
-
- ANSI X3T9 - ANSI group within X3 developing standards for I/O
- interfaces.
-
- ANSI X3T9.3 Committee - ANSI group within X3T9 standardizing HiPPI.
-
- ANSI X3T9.5 Committee - ANSI group within X3T9 that standardized
- FDDI, PMD, SMF-PMD, and is standardizing TP-PMD and LCF-PMD.
-
- AppleTalk - A protocol family developed by Apple Computer to
- implement LANs serving Macintoshes.
-
- ATM "Asynchronous Transfer Mode" - a method for switching little
- fixed-size packets (cells) around. Like T1 and DS3, digitized
- voice was a major consideration in its design, but it can be
- used for data. It can be run at different speeds over different
- media including T1 and DS3 as well as 51Mbps, 100Mbps, 155Mbps
- and 622Mbps standards (see SONET & TAXI). The fixed cell size
- is 53 bytes. Though ATM is really designed for voice and WANs,
- there are schemes to use it in LANs. ATM is a big buzzword
- these days but it is still very new.
-
- ATM Forum - Non-profit international industry consortium chartered
- to accelerate ATM acceptance & interoperability.
-
- AUI "Attachment Unit Interface" - the Ethernet/IEEE 802.3 term for
- the interface between a MAU and a station. A special kind of
- cable known as an "AUI Cable" can attach a MAU to a station at a
- distance (up to 50 meters).
-
- Backbone - a fairly nebulous term for a part of the network that
- interconnects other parts of the network. For example, a campus
- might have an FDDI ring that interconnects a number of
- Ethernets. The FDDI ring could be called the network's
- backbone.
-
- BNC Connector "Bayonet Neill-Concelman connector" - a type of
- connector used for attaching coax cable to electronic equipment
- which can be attached or detached quicker than connectors that
- screw. ThinWire Ethernet (IEEE 802.3 10BASE2) uses BNC
- connectors.
-
- Bridge - A network "relay" which reads, buffers, and sends data to
- relay it from one data link to another, but makes the two data
- links appear as one to levels higher than the data link layer.
-
- Category 3 Unshielded Twisted Pair - standardization of unshielded
- twisted pair cable for voice use. Some data communications
- standards such as 10BASE-T can utilize it.
-
- Category 4 Unshielded Twisted Pair - standardization of unshielded
- twisted pair cable.
-
- Category 5 Unshielded Twisted Pair - standardization of unshielded
- twisted pair cable for data use. TP-PMD requires Category
- 5 cable rather than Category 3.
-
- CDDI "Copper Data Distribution Interface" - Commonly used term
- for TP-PMD, but actually a trade name of Crescendo.
-
- Cell - An ATM 53-byte cell. Note: there are various proposals for
- how typical packets will be broken into cells and restored.
-
- Cell Switching - a term for ATM-style networks. See "ATM".
-
- CMIP "Common Management Information Protocol" - An OSI protocol
- for management of network equipment. Not widely implemented.
- See SNMP.
-
- CMOT "CMIP over TCP/IP" - A protocol consisting of CMIP running
- under TCP/IP. An alternative to SNMP.
-
- Coaxial Cable - any of a number of kinds of electrical
- communications cable designed so one conductor is in the center
- and the second conductor forms a ring around it. Depending upon
- who you talk to, someone might have a specific kind of coaxial
- cable in mind. Some well known kinds are various Cable TV
- cables, cables used by IBM 327x terminals and ARCNet, and cables
- used by Ethernet & IEEE 802.3.
-
- Collapsed Backbone - a network backbone that is located in a
- single room. It might be a single router or multiport bridge,
- or a small LAN of some sort. A typical collapsed-backbone-
- style campus LAN might consist of Ethernets in a number
- of buildings, each with a repeated fiber link into a single room
- at a central point where a router interconnects them. An
- example of the opposite would be putting a router in each
- building and interconnecting them all with a big FDDI ring.
-
- Concentrator - a device which allows a number of stations to
- be connected to a LAN. In the case of Ethernet, it is
- simply a multi-port repeater. In the case of ring networks
- like Token Ring and FDDI, it acts as a switch which keeps
- the ring intact even if individual devices are unplugged.
-
- Counterrotating Ring - (see Ring, FDDI, Token Ring) a method of
- using two ring networks going in opposite directions to provide
- redundancy. The network interfaces can change the path of the
- ring that the data flows around, thereby preserving the ring
- (thus the operation of the LAN) even if some of the cable is
- uplugged or cut, or if a device on the ring fails in such a way
- that it can't transmit data around the ring.
-
- DECNet - Trade name of Digital Equipment Corporation for some
- of their networking products. It is a kind of network
- built out of Digital Equipment Corporations own networking
- protocols (with some standard protocols also used).
-
- Dialup Modem - Modem used over ordinary dial-up telephone lines
- as opposed to private or leased lines.
-
- DS3 UNI - ATM Forum DS3 UNI, 44.236Mbps. Also called HSSI?
-
- DXI - ATM Forum "Data Exchange Interface".
-
- Ethernet - LAN data-link protocol developed by a consortium
- of vendors; later standardized as IEEE 802.3 with a few
- modifications. For many applications, users have not adopted
- all the IEEE 802.3 differences. Ethernet/802.3 now can be
- run on two types of coaxial cable as well as multi-mode
- fiber and unshielded twisted-pair. "Raw" rate of data
- transmission is 10 megabits/second.
-
- Fast Ethernet Alliance - Group of vendors working on a 100Mbps
- version of IEEE 802.3. They intend to submit their proposals
- for approval by the IEEE for a new set of 802.3 standards called
- 100BASE-T.
-
- FDDI "Fiber Data Distribution Interface" - LAN data-link protocol.
- Designed to run on multi-mode fiber. "Raw" rate of data
- transmission is 100 megabits/second. Developed by the American
- National Standards Institute.
-
- FDDI-2 - Same speed, same fiber, same basic protocol as FDDI.
- FDDI-2 adds a layer which allows you to allocate fixed bandwidth
- to applications of your choice, making it more like broadband.
- FDDI-2 is still rather new.
-
- FDSE - Full Duplex Ethernet: a variant of Switched Ethernet which
- does not use CSMA/CD, but uses slightly-modified network
- interface cards to send & receive packets simultaneously.
- Presumably based on 10BASE-T for most clients, and cannot be
- based on ThinWire or ThickWire Ethernet.
-
- Fiber - optical fiber: a very long, narrow, flexible piece of
- glass. Used for high-speed communications.
-
- Fibre Channel - an ANSI standard to replace HiPPI. It uses optical
- fiber instead of copper cables. Speeds are up to roughly
- 1Gbps.
-
- Fibre Channel Systems Initiative - Group of vendors trying to
- accelerate Fiber Channel acceptance & interoperability. Members
- include: HP, IBM, Sun.
-
- Firewall Router - a router which blocks traffic according to
- various criteria for security--for example a router which
- allows no telnet to any host through one of its interfaces
- but allows ftp to a list of authorized hosts through the
- same interface.
-
- FOIRL "Fiber Optic Inter-Repeater Link" - a standard for running
- IEEE 802.3 over fiber, linking two devices (each either a host
- or a repeater) as a "Link Segment". It has been replaced by
- 10BASE-FL.
-
- FTP - Protocol in the "TCP/IP" family for copying files from
- one computer to another. Stands for "File Transfer Protocol".
-
- Full Duplex Switched Ethernet Consortium - Group of vendors that
- are working out the details of FDSE. Cabletron is a member.
-
- Full Duplex Token Ring - IBM scheme to add switching to token-ring
- hubs that would allow full-duplex linking to individual
- computers using modified token-ring adaptors. Has the same
- wiring characteristics as token ring.
-
- Gateway - A type of "network relay" that attaches two networks
- to build a larger network. Modern "narrow" usage is that it
- is one that translates an entire stack of protocols, e.g.,
- translates TCP/IP-style mail to ISO-style mail. Older usage
- used it for other types of relays--in particular, in the "TCP/IP"
- world, it has been used to refer to what many now insist is
- a "router".
-
- GOSIP "Government Open Systems Interconnect Profile" - A subset of
- OSI standards specific to US Government procurements, designed
- to maximize interoperability in areas where plain OSI standards
- are ambiguous or allow options. Theoretically, required of all
- US Government networking procurements since mid-1990.
-
- Heartbeat - In Ethernet (Version 2), a test of the collision
- functionality of the transciever. The term "Heartbeat" is often
- (wrongly) used interchangeably with "SQE" which is a similar
- function of IEEE 802.3. See Question on SQE/Heartbeat below.
-
- HiPPI - "High Performance Parallel Interface", ANSI draft standard
- X3T9.3.
-
- HSSI "High Speed Serial Interface" -
-
- Hub - a nebulous term, typically applied to a multiport repeater
- or concentrator consisting of a chassis with slots to be
- populated by cards, allowing it to be configured with various
- numbers and combinations of LAN ports. Vendors of networking
- equipment often also have other types of devices that can be
- inserted in the slots such as terminal servers, bridges,
- routers, gateways, etc.
-
- IEEE - Institute of Electrical & Electronic Engineers
-
- IEEE 802 - The set of IEEE standards for the definition of LAN
- protocols. A story goes that a long time ago, IEEE and ANSI
- decided that IEEE would get the slow protocols and ANSI would
- get the fast ones, thus IEEE defined the 802 protocols and ANSI
- defined FDDI. Presumably IEEE saw limited application for FDDI
- at the time. Also, the IEEE standards-making committees
- associated with these standards.
-
- IEEE 802 Group within IEEE that standardizes LAN technologies.
-
- IEEE 802.1 - The IEEE 802 standard for Network Management and
- Network Bridging of IEEE 802 networks.
-
- IEEE 802.11 - Proposed IEEE 802 group for wireless Ethernet.
-
- IEEE 802.12 - Group within IEEE 802 working on 100VG-AnyLAN.
-
- IEEE 802.2 - An IEEE standard for the portion of LAN data-link
- protocols that is the same for all flavors of IEEE LAN
- protocols, e.g. 802.3 and 802.5. Sometimes not used.
-
- IEEE 802.3 - An IEEE standard for LANs--their "improved" version of
- Ethernet. See Ethernet.
-
- IEEE 802.3 - Group within IEEE 802 that standardizes CSMA/CD LANs.
-
- IEEE 802.4 - An IEEE standard for LANs: Token Bus networks.
- Basically, standardizes MAP, a protocol that operates a Token
- Bus protocol on broadband.
-
- IEEE 802.5 - An IEEE standard for Token-Ring-based LANs. There
- are two types: 4Mbps and 16Mbps. See also "Token Ring".
-
- IEEE 802.6 - An IEEE standard for Metropolitan Area Networks. Also
- known as DQDB.
-
- IEEE 802.7 - IEEE 802 technical advisory group on Broadband.
-
- IEEE 802.8 - IEEE 802 technical advisory group on FDDI & fiber
- optics.
-
- IEEE 802.9 - IEEE 802 group on integrated data & voice networks.
-
- IMAP "Internet Mail Access Protocol" - TCP/IP-based protocol
- similar to POP, but with additional function designed to handle
- storage of mail on the server rather than the client. There are
- two versions in common use: IMAP2 and IMAP4.
-
- IPX - Novell's protocol used by Netware. Utilizes part of XNS. A
- router with "IPX routing" purports to interconnect LANs so that
- Novell Netware clients & servers can talk through the router.
-
- LCF-PMD - FDDI "Low-Cost Fiber" PMD. Less expensive than PMD. I
- don't believe it is common nor is it finished as a standard.
-
- MAU "Media Adaptor Unit" - an IEEE 802.3 or Ethernet device which
- attaches a station to the cable. Popularly called a
- "transceiver". Can be attached by cable to the station or built
- into the station.
-
- MIB "Management Information Base" - the set of parameters an SNMP
- management station can query or set in an SNMP agent (e.g.
- router). Standard, minimal MIBs have been defined (MIB I, MIB
- II), and vendors often have custom entries. In theory, any SNMP
- manager can talk to any SNMP agent with a properly defined MIB.
-
- Multimode fiber - A type of fiber mostly used for shorter, e.g.
- campus distances. It can carry 100 megabits/second for typical
- campus distances, the actual maximum speed (given the right
- electronics) depending upon the actual distance. It is easier
- to connect to than Single Mode Fiber, but its limit on speed x
- distance is lower.
-
- NFS "Network File System" - an IP-based protocol originally
- developed by Sun Microsystems which provides file services.
-
- OCx - (e.g. OC1, OC3) variants of SONET.
-
- OSI "Open System Interconnect" - A standard put forth by the ISO
- for communication between computer equipment and networks.
-
- OSI Reference Model - A model put forth by the ISO for
- communication between computer equipment and networks, which
- maps out 7 protocol layers.
-
- Top layer: layer number 7: application layer
- layer number 6: presentation layer
- layer number 5: session layer
- layer number 4: transport layer
- layer number 3: network layer
- layer number 2: data-link layer (e.g. IEEE 802.x)
- Bottom layer: layer number 1: physical layer (wire &
- electricity)
-
- This model explains what each layer does. The model is often
- used to explain anyones protocols (not just OSI) to the point
- where many people seem to believe that true data-communications
- requires these 7 layers.
-
- PMD - FDDI "Physical Layer Medium Dependent" part. When "PMD" is
- used by itself, it may refer to the usual kind of FDDI physical
- layer that uses multimode fiber. Note that FDDI terminology
- also uses it as a more generic term, referring to different FDDI
- PMD's such as TP-PMD and SMF-PMD.
-
- POP "Post Office Protocol" - A TCP/IP-based protocol designed to
- allow client-stations (e.g. micros) to read mail from a server.
- There are three versions under the name "POP": POP, POP2, and
- POP3. Latter versions are NOT compatible with earlier
- versions.
-
- Protocol - The "rules" by which two network elements trade
- information in order to communicate. Must include rules about a
- lot of mundane detail as well as rules about how to recover from
- a lot of unusual communication problems. Thus they can be quite
- complicated.
-
- Relay - One terminology uses the term "relay" as a device that
- interconnects LANs, different kinds of relays being repeaters,
- bridges, routers, and gateways.
-
- Repeater - In the "Ethernet" world, a "relay" that regenerates and
- cleans up signals, but does no buffering of data packets.
- It can extend an Ethernet by strengthening signals, but timing
- limitations on Ethernets still limit their size.
-
- RFC "Request For Comments" - The name is a real red herring when
- it comes to Internet RFCs. Some really are "Requests For
- Comments" but all Internet protocol documents are stamped with
- an RFC number that they never shake, so the acronym RFC
- generally refers to documents that describe protocols in the
- TCP/IP family.
-
- RG numbers (E.g. RG62; sometimes there are qualifiers, e.g. RG 58
- A/U) a shorthand designation for military cable. RG58 & RG62
- designate two different types of cable used by the military.
- Some data-communications equipment was designed to work with
- a particular military standard, e.g. IBM 3270-type terminals
- use RG62. In other cases, people use an RG-numbered cable
- that is close to what they need: for example ThinWire
- Ethernet & IEEE 802.3 10BASE2 define the type of cable they
- need and people sometimes substitute flavors of RG58, which
- are "close". One can't recommend this practice because you
- can get yourself in trouble. I think "RG" originally stood
- for "Radio Guide", presumably reflecting the fact that the
- series of cables was designed to handle radio frequencies. The
- IEEE 802.3 10BASE2 specifications define two RG numbered cables
- (RG58 A/U and RG58 C/U) as meeting the cable requirements for
- thin Ethernet. However, cable vendors may list a range of
- cables under these same RG numbers, and some of the cables
- listed may not meet the 802.3 specs. You need to check the
- cable specifications closely, and beware of relying on the RG
- number alone when ordering network cables.
-
- Ring - A classification of network technology exemplified by
- Token Ring and FDDI. The interconnected devices are connected
- one-to-another in the shape of a ring and data flows around
- it in one direction. See also "Counterrotating Ring".
-
- RJ numbers ("Regestered Jack" numbers, e.g. RJ11, RJ45) - numbers
- applied to types of connectors often used in UTP wiring.
- Borrowed from voice telecommunications industry.
-
- Router - A network "relay" that uses a protocol beyond the
- data-link protocol to route traffic between LANs and other
- network links.
-
- Routing Protocol - a protocol sent between routers by which
- routers exchange information own how to route to various parts
- of the network. The TCP/IP family of protocols has a bunch,
- such as RIP, EGP, BGP, OSPF, and dual IS-IS.
-
- SDH "Synchronous Digital Hierarchy" - Similar to SONET, but used
- outside North America. Some of the SDH and SONET standards are
- identical. Standardized by the CCITT.
-
- Shielded Twisted Pair - a type of twisted-pair cable with a
- metallic shield around the twisted conductors. The shield
- reduces the noise from the cable and reduces the effects of
- noise on the communications in the cable, but changes the
- electrical characteristics of the cable so some equipment
- optimized to non-shielded cable runs worse on shielded cable.
-
- Single Mode fiber - a type of fiber optic cable used for longer
- distances and higher speeds, e.g. for long-distance telephone
- lines. See also "Multimode Fiber".
-
- SMF-PMD - FDDI "Single-Mode Fiber" PMD. Runs further than PMD.
-
- SMTP "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol" - the protocol in the
- TCP/IP family used to transfer electronic mail between
- computers. It is not oriented towards a client/server system so
- other protocols (see "POP") are often used in that context.
- However, servers will use SMTP if they need to transfer a
- message to another server.
-
- SNMP "Simple Network Management Protocol" - Originally developed
- to manage IP based network equipment like routers and bridges,
- now extended to wiring hubs, workstations, toasters, jukeboxes,
- etc. SNMP for IPX and AppleTalk under development. Widely
- implemented. See CMIP.
-
- SONET "Synchronous Optical Network" - A set of standard
- fiber-optic-based serial standards planned for use with ATM in
- North America. Developed by Bellcore. Different types of SONET
- run at different speeds (OC1 runs at 51Mbps, OC3 runs at
- 155Mbps, OC12 runs at about 600Mbps, OC48 runs at over 2Gbps),
- and use different types of fiber (OC3 has several variants for
- use with different fibers & different distances; there are
- versions for both single mode and multimode fiber).
-
- SQE Test "Signal Quality Error Test" - an IEEE 802.3 function
- that tests the transceiver. The term "SQE" is often (wrongly)
- used interchangeably with "Heartbeat" which is a similar
- function of Ethernet Version 2. See Question on SQE/Heartbeat
- below.
-
- STP - Shielded Twisted Pair
-
- STS-3c UNI - ATM Forum SONET STS-3c UNI, 155.52Mbps.
-
- Switched Ethernet - really the same as Ethernet as far as
- standards go: acts like a very fast multiport Ethernet bridge
- giving an Ethernet to each station. Presumably based on
- 10BASE-T for most stations.
-
- Switched FDDI - really the same as FDDI as far as standards
- go: acts like a very fast multiport FDDI bridge. Basically the
- DEC GigaSwitch.
-
- T1 - A phone-company standard for running 24 digitized voice
- circuits through one 1.5megabit/second digital channel. Since
- phone companies run lots of T1, and will run T1 between customer
- sites, the standard is often used for data communications,
- either to provide 24 low-speed circuits, or to provide 1
- high-speed circuit, or to be divided other ways.
-
- TAXI - "Transparent Asynchronous Transmitter-Receiver Interface"
- Two ATM UNI specifications developed by Fore. The slower one
- ran at 100Mbps and borrowed the physical characteristics of FDDI
- and has been adopted by the ATM Forum as its 100Mbps UNI
- specification. The faster one ran at 140Mbps.
-
- TCP/IP "Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol" -
- literally, two protocols developed for the Defense Data Network
- to allow their ARPANET to attach to other networks relatively
- transparently. The name also designates the entire family of
- protocols built out of IP and TCP. The Internet is based upon
- TCP/IP.
-
- TELNET - a protocol in the TCP/IP family that is used for
- "remote login". The name is also often used as the name of the
- client program that utilizes the TELNET protocol.
-
- Terminal Server - a network device that allows a number of
- terminals to attach to a LAN, and do remote logins across the
- LAN.
-
- ThickWire - "ThickWire" Ethernet or IEEE 802.3 10BASE5.
-
- ThinWire - ThinWire Ethernet or IEEE 802.3 10BASE2.
-
- TN3270 - A variant of the TELNET program that allows one to
- attach to IBM mainframes and use the mainframe as if you had a
- 3270 or similar terminal.
-
- Token Ring - People often use the term "Token Ring" to designate
- IEEE 802.5 (see above). In the more general sense of the
- phrase, a token ring is a type of LAN that has stations wired in
- a ring, where each station constantly passes a special message
- (a "token") on to the next. Whoever has the token can send a
- message.
-
- TP - "Twisted Pair".
-
- TP-PMD - FDDI "Twisted Pair Physical Layer Medium". ANSI
- specification for FDDI-like service over UTP. Being
- standardized by ANSI X3T9.5. Was X3T9/93-130 X3T9.5/93-022
- TP-PMD/306 Rev 2.0, now there is a Rev 2.1. Uses MLT-3 encoding
- instead of CDDI's NRZI encoding.
-
- Tunneling - An important concept in the design of many kinds of
- networks: taking some protocol-family's ability to move packets
- from user to user, or to open virtual-circuits between users,
- and use this as if it were a data-link protocol to run another
- protocol family's upper layers (or even the same protocol
- family's upper layers). Examples: running TCP/IP over AppleTalk
- instead of something like Ethernet; running AppleTalk over
- DECNet instead of something like Localtalk or Ethernet.
-
- Twisted Pair - The type of wire used by the phone company to wire
- telephones -- at least over distances like between your house
- and the central office. It has two conductors, which are
- twisted. The twists are important: they give it electrical
- characteristics which allow some kinds of communications
- otherwise not possible. Ordinary telephone cables are not
- shielded (see "Shielded twisted Pair").
-
- Type1 - IBM Type 1 STP. The most usual type of Shielded Twisted
- Pair in LAN communications.
-
- UNI - ATM Forum "User to Network Interface". See ATM.
-
- UTP (Unshielded Twisted-Pair) - See "Twisted-Pair" and "Shielded
- Twisted-Pair".
-
- X.400, X.500 - OSI protocols for mail and directory services.
-
- V. Frequently Asked Questions on Campus Networks
-
- It is hard to answer typical BIG-LAN questions in advance for two
- reasons. Answers are often long and they are often
- controversial. To provide some sort of objective information
- relevant to the controversies, a survey of BIG-LAN readers was
- taken on answers to various questions, so this memo could offer a
- sampling of opinions. Note that the opinions below are extracted
- from the 41 responses received for the survey. We can't say these
- 41 responses represent a fair sampling of campus LAN
- administrators, but they do show some of the answers that you
- would get if you posed some of these questions to the BIG-LAN
- readership.
-
- 1. What is the difference between Ethernet and IEEE 802.3?
-
- Ethernet ran through an evolution starting with some experimenting
- at Xerox, and ending with a standard published by Xerox, DEC, and
- Intel, which they offered to the world (with minimal royalties) as
- a standard technology for building LANs. The Institute of
- Electrical & Electronic Engineers took this as a proposed
- standard, and rewrote the protocol description making some
- clarifications and a few changes. Some of the changes have been
- universally adopted, and others have not. After the first go
- round of IEEE standard defining, Ethernet version 2 was introduced
- which brought it more into line with standards. The basic
- differences are:
-
- - Heartbeat vs SQE (see below) - Which pin in the MAU & AUI
- connectors carry the ground conductor - Packet Length Field vs
- Type Field
-
- The latter issue is the one in which IEEE 802.3 has not displaced
- Ethernet. Ethernet had a 16-bit field which defined the type of
- packet (examples: IP, XNS, AppleTalk). The IEEE committee decided
- to use that field to specify the length of the packet, and have
- the data-portion of the packet define itself through the next
- higher level of protocol (e.g., IEEE 802.2). However, the sets of
- possible values for that field used by the two different protocols
- are completely separate, and both protocols are designed to
- deliberately ignore packets with fields outside their own sets of
- values. Thus Ethernet and IEEE 802.3 packets can coexist on the
- same cable, though a computer which expects to get packets
- belonging to just one of the protocols won't notice any packets
- sent according to the rules of the other (the expression used is
- "they pass by each other like ships in the night").
-
- These days, LANs use both. There is a way to send TCP/IP packets
- via 802.3, but when 802.3 was introduced, there were already so
- many systems using the Ethernet rules that the use of
- Ethernet-style packets for TCP/IP has persisted now for years.
-
- 2. What is encapsulation? What do I have to know about it?
-
- One encapsulation issue on LANs is whether IEEE 802.3 packets are
- used or Ethernet packets are used to encapsulate your traffic on
- your IEEE 802.3/Ethernet LAN. See previous question for more
- explanation. Most TCP/IP systems use Ethernet, any that uses IEEE
- 802.3 by default might surprise you by not interoperating with the
- rest of your TCP/IP network.
-
- A second encapsulation issue on IEEE 802.3/Ethernet networks is
- whether your Novell (IPX) packets use Novell's default
- encapsulation or whether they use Ethernet-style encapsulation.
- Novell, at least for a long time, had the distinction of using
- IEEE 802.3 as if it were the only protocol on the network, not
- following the rules for avoiding other protocols running under
- IEEE 802.3 rules. They offered a utility called ECONFIG that
- changed Netware to use Ethernet rules, and use them properly, so
- Novell IPX packets could utilize the same LAN as other protocols.
- In no case would the Novell traffic bother Ethernet traffic-- only
- any other IEEE 802.3 traffic if ECONFIG wasn't used. In any case,
- a single Ethernet segment, or bridged segments, had to have all
- Novell servers and clients configured the same, in order to
- interoperate.
-
- A third encapsulation issue stems from Berkeley Unix 4.2, from
- which many versions of Unix and many TCP/IP implementations have
- been modeled. It used, by default, its own encapsulation rules
- (i.e., manner of putting IP packets within Ethernet packets) which
- is termed "Trailer Encapsulation". When an Ethernet had some
- computers using Trailer Encapsulation and some not, TCP/IP
- connections would often work, but hang when large data transfers
- were taking place. The next version of Berkeley Unix, version
- 4.3, remedied this by avoiding Trailer Encapsulation except when
- it was guaranteed to work correctly.
-
- A fourth encapsulation issue is "tunneling", which consists of
- one of the layers in the protocol stack mimicking another layer to
- provide a way of running a different set of upper layers than
- would otherwise be possible. This is rather widely used and
- seldom explained to beginners. It is perhaps best explained with
- an actual example:
-
- [Here put an example, perhaps AppleTalk over IP]
-
- [Include "encapsulated bridging" as a second example]
-
- 3. How do I know whether to use a router or a bridge?
-
- (Note that the answer to this question is oriented to
- Ethernet-based LANs). Few administrators of networks doubt that a
- network can be large enough to require routers nor that there are
- situations where a bridge is an effective solution. However,
- there is controversy as to where to draw the line. Campus-sized
- networks involving distances of up to a mile and possibly
- thousands of stations, can be, and have been built solely out of
- one or the other. The BIG-LAN Survey of 12/93 showed the
- following opinion among respondents:
-
- Survey question: "When you build a campus network, do you tend
- to use bridges as opposed to routers?"
-
- Answers: 13 said yes; 45 said no; 10 said some of each.
-
- Some clear tradeoffs: routers generally have to be set up no
- matter what whereas bridges can be plug-and-play on a network
- without too much total traffic; bridges generally have a higher
- speed-to-cost ratio and the low-end bridge is less expensive than
- the low-end router; routers handle huge networks with links of
- different speeds better.
-
- 4. How do I know whether to use a bridge or a repeater? How many
- repeaters may I put on an Ethernet?
-
- [Note: with the advent of 10BASE-F, this section needs updating.
- -ed]
-
- You cannot keep plugging more repeaters and add more cables to an
- Ethernet indiscriminately and expect it to work. With too large a
- networks, the protocol which keeps the number of collisions down
- (known as CSMA/CD) fails to do that. The protocol documents
- supply rules-of-thumb which, if followed, prevent this from
- occurring. If you break them, you may be risking large
- performance degradations.
-
- The latest version of the rules-of-thumb (which have been updated
- over time as new features like 10BASE-T have been added to the
- protocol) are in the IEEE 802.3 document describing 10BASE-T,
- specifically IEEE Std 802.ei-1990 in the section called "System
- Considerations for Multisegment 10 Mb/s Baseband Networks".
- The rules refer to the piece of the LAN that is between repeaters
- as a segment and refer to 4 kinds: 10BASE5 (i.e. "classic"
- Ethernet) and 10BASE2 (i.e., ThinWire Ethernet) both classified as
- "Coax" segments and FOIRL (fiber inter-repeater links) and
- 10BASE-T, both classified as "Link" segments, and both of which
- have the property that you can attach things only to their ends.
- The basic repeater rule is that between any two stations on the
- LAN, there may be at most 4 repeaters and three coax segments. In
- addition, there are length restrictions on the segments which are
- designed to keep CSMA/CD working properly:
-
- 10BASE5 500 meters
- 10BASE2 185 meters
- FOIRL 500 meters (1000 meters in some cases)
- 10BASE-T 100 meters (or more)
-
- FOIRL links can be 1000 meters if you have at most 3 repeaters
- between stations instead of 4. 10BASE-T links can be longer if
- the cable will support it: CSMA/CD is not the limiting factor on
- 10BASE-T. For the purposes of this discussion, bridges, routers,
- and gateways are "stations" since the CSMA/CD protocol does not
- pass through them. Thus if you discover these rules prevent you
- from putting a repeater in the network where you need one, then
- you can put a bridge there instead, or perhaps split the LAN
- somewhere else using a bridge.
-
- 5. Should I use "manageable" hubs, concentrators, etc on my LAN?
-
- This is a controversial question also. Vendors have attempted to
- make hubs and concentrators that require little training &
- manpower to manage & troubleshoot, and they will attempt to
- convince you that they have succeeded. You pay a premium for
- "manageability". Those who remain skeptical wonder how much the
- management features are ever used: for example, management allows
- you to turn on & off ports from an operator's console; how often
- do you need to do such a thing? Also, some of the benefits
- attributed to management packages are simply due to good record
- keeping, something which the administrator must find the manpower
- to accomplish with a management package or without one (presumably
- with a simple dbms, which can often be tailored more to the
- administrators needs).
-
- 6. Which LAN technology should I use? Arcnet? FDDI? Token Ring?
- 10BASE-T?
-
- A controversial question. Some questions & answers from the 12/93
- BIG-LAN Reader Survey:
-
- "When you install a LAN, which "Technology" (e.g. Ethernet,
- Token Ring) do you prefer?"
-
- All respondents said Ethernet through three also said FDDI
- is good.
-
- "If you have experience with two or more LAN technologies, which
- have you found works better?"
-
- Answers received:
- Ethernet works best 18
- 10BASE-T is best 6
- Ethernet & FDDI work best 3
- Ethernet is better than Token Ring 2
- Ethernet costs less than FDDI 2
- Localtalk better than 10BASE-T 1
- FDDI is best 1
- Ethernet is better than Pronet-10 1
- Ethernet is better than ARCNet 1
- Ethernet is better than PhoneNet 1
- Ethernet followed by FDDI 1
- Ethernet & Token Ring equal 1
- Depends on how they are maintained 1
-
- 7. What is the ideal cable to install in a new building?
-
- Distribution runs, i.e., phone closet to room: Best possible thing
- to do is to leave usable pathways for future expansion. Whatever
- you do, install at least 2 pair and probably 4 pair of data grade
- unshielded twisted pair. It will always have uses. Install
- something else too if you are tied to a particular vendor.
- Multimode fiber might become popular in the future but that is a
- gamble.
-
- Riser runs, i.e., phone closet to phone closet: it is imperative
- to leave usable pathways for future expansion. For Ethernet,
- ThinWire is a usable riser cable, multimode fiber is possible
- too.
-
- 8. What is the ideal cable to install between buildings on a campus?
-
- Trunks, i.e., cables into the building: pathways for future
- expansion very valuable. Multimode fiber is useful, run 24 fibers
- if you can. Use cable with some single mode too. Run several
- times what you need initially and leave a lot of the unused fiber
- unterminated for the time being. Cable pulling & termination are
- much more costly than the cable itself.
-
- 9. Whose routers are recommended?
-
- Question & answer from the 12/93 BIG-LAN Reader Survey:
-
- "Name some router vendors whose routers you have used and
- recommend:"
-
- Cisco got 55 mentions; Wellfleet 9; Proteon 8; 3Com 3; Novell 3;
- Xyplex 3; Network Systems 2; DEC 2; HP 2; NAT 2; Retix 1; NAC 1;
- GatorBox 1; Alantec 1; Telebit 1; Fibronics 1; Shiva 1;
- PCRoute 1.
-
- 10. Whose bridges are recommended?
-
- Question & answer from the 12/93 BIG-LAN Reader Survey:
-
- "Name some bridge vendors whose routers you have used and
- recommend:"
-
- DEC got 11 mentions; 3Com 8; Cabletron 5; Retix 5; Xyplex 5; HP
- 4; Cisco 3; Gandalf 3; Wellfleet 2; D-link 1; Asante 1; ODS 1;
- Synernetics 1; PlainTree 1; Alantec 1; Artel 1; Develcon 1;
- Gandalf 1; karl-bridge 1; Allied Telesis 1; Vitalink 1; ATT 1.
-
- 11. Whose Ethernet equipment are recommended?
-
- Question & answer from the 12/93 BIG-LAN Reader Survey:
-
- "Name some Ethernet concentrator/transceiver/repeater vendors
- whose Ethernet equipment you have used and recommend:"
-
- Cabletron got 30 mentions; 3Com 15; Allied Telesis 15; HP 13;
- Synoptics 11; Asante 9; Chipcom 8; DEC 7; SMC 7; David Systems
- 4; Xyplex 3; Milan 2; Lantronix 2; Gandalf 2; D-Link 2; Canary
- 2; ATT 2; BlackBox 2; Hughes 2; Fibermux 2; St. Clair 1;
- Pirelli-Focom 1; Pilkington 1; ODS 1; Networth 1; LANNET 1;
- Kalpana 1; Isolan 1; Interphase 1; Intel 1; IMC 1; Hirschmann 1;
- Fibercom 1; BICC 1.
-
- 12. Whose Token Ring equipment are recommended?
-
- Query and answers from the 12/93 BIG-LAN Reader Survey:
-
- "Name some Token Ring equipment vendors whose Token Ring
- equipment you have used and recommend:"
-
- IBM was mentioned by 12 responders; Proteon 3; ODS 2; UB 1;
- Thomas-Conrad 1; Startek 1; Madge 1; HP 1; Cabletron 1; CSP 1.
-
- 13. Whose FDDI equipment are recommended?
-
- Query and answers from the 12/93 BIG-LAN Reader Survey:
-
- "Name some FDDI equipment vendors whose FDDI equipment you have
- used and recommend:"
-
- Cisco was mentioned by 8 responders; Crescendo 7; DEC 5;
- Synoptics 3; Interphase 3; 3Com 3; Fibronics 2; Cabletron 2;
- Synernetics 1; Sun 1; SGI 1; Proteon 1; PlainTree 1; ODS 1;
- Network Peripherals 1; IBM 1; Fibermux 1; Chipcom 1.
-
- 14. What PC network software is recommended?
-
- Query and answers from the 12/93 BIG-LAN Reader Survey:
-
- "Name some PC network software vendors whose PC network software
- you have used or recommend:"
-
- Novell was mentioned by 32 responders; FTP Software 21; Apple 7;
- SunSelect 6; Microsoft 5; NCSA 4; IBM 4; Banyan 4; DEC 4;
- NetManage 3; Clarkson 3; 3Com 3; Word Perfect 2; WinQVT 2;
- Reflection 2; Qualcomm 2; Brightworks 2; Beame & Whiteside 2.
-
- 15. What protocols should run on a campus-wide LAN?
-
- Query and answers from the 12/93 BIG-LAN Reader Survey:
-
- "Name some protocols that you use to interconnect your campus
- that you would recommend:"
-
- TCP/IP was mentioned by 63 responders; IPX 26; AppleTalk 17;
- DECNet 7; LAT 3; VINES 2; SNA 2; CLNS 1.
-
- 16. What software is recommended for managing a campus-wide LAN?
-
- Queries and answers from the 12/93 BIG-LAN Reader Survey:
-
- "Name some network management system that you use for the
- management of a campus LAN, that you recommend:"
-
- SunNet Manager was mentioned by 13 respondents; HP OpenView 8;
- Cabletron Spectrum 3; Cabletron Remote LanView 3; PSI SNMP 2;
- Netlabs 2; CiscoWorks 2.
-
- "Name other software that you use for the management of a campus
- LAN that you recommend:"
-
- Ping was mentioned by 4 respondents; Traceroute 3; SunNet
- Manager 2; Network General Sniffer 2; Neon Software NetMinder 2;
- CMU SNMP 2.
-
- 17. What terminal server is recommended?
-
- Query and answers from the 12/93 BIG-LAN Reader Survey:
-
- "Name vendors of terminal servers that you use and recommend:"
-
- Cisco was mentioned by 21 respondents; Xylogics 12; Xyplex 11;
- DEC 9; Emulex 4; Spider 2; Equinox 2; Netblazer 1; Livingston 1;
- Lantronix 1; HP 1; Datability 1; Digiboard 1; Allied Telesis 1;
- 3Com 1.
-
- 18. Whose troubleshooting equipment are recommended?
-
- Query and answers from the 12/93 BIG-LAN Reader Survey:
-
- "Name some vendors of network troubleshooting equipment that you
- use and would recommend:"
-
- Network General was mentioned by 30 respondents; HP 11;
- MicroTest 4; Tektronix 3; Spider 3; Fluke 3; FOTEC 3; W&G 2;
- Novell 2; FTP 2; Exfo 2; Van Jacobson 1; Pentascanner 1; NCC 1;
- NAT 1; LM-1 1; Consultronics 1; Antel 1; AG Group 1.
-
- 19. What security products should I buy?
-
- Query and answers from the 12/93 BIG-LAN Reader Survey:
-
- "Name some security products that you use to maintain security
- on your campus LAN that you recommend:"
-
- COPS was mentioned by 5 respondents; tcpwrapper(s) 3; SecurID 3;
- Crack 3; Cisco access control 2; xtacacs 1; npassword 1;
- Tripwire 1; Socks 1; Netware 1; Native VINES security 1; McAffee
- Anti-Virus NLM 1; HP 1; Bridges 1; Beame and Whiteside 1.
-
- 20. Should the names of devices on my campus LAN have subdomains?
-
- Example of name without subdomain: bigvax.sequoia.edu; example
- with subdomain: bigvax.acs.sequoia.edu. It is possible to run
- networks of thousands of computers without the bother of
- subdomains, but they have some advantages.
-
- Queries and answers from the 12/93 BIG-LAN Reader Survey:
-
- "For Internet names of nodes on a campus network that supports
- TCP/IP, do you prefer the use of subdomains?"
-
- 49 responders said yes, 11 said no, 3 said it depends.
-
- "If you have worked on a campus that utilizes subdomains and one
- that does not, which does your experience tell you is the better
- way to administer names in a campus network?"
-
- 13 responders said the LAN with subdomains worked better; 1 said
- the LAN without subdomains worked better; 2 said it doesn't
- matter and 3 said it depends.
-
- 21. Should client stations use POP? Should they use just SMTP?
- Should I use some non-TCP/IP protocol for mail to/from client
- stations?
-
- Query and answers from the 12/93 BIG-LAN Reader Survey:
-
- "For client station's mail, which do you prefer: SMTP;
- TCP/IP-based client-server protocols (e.g. POP, POP2, etc);
- other LAN protocols?"
-
- 22 responders preferred TCP/IP-based client-server protocols
- (e.g. POP, IMAP, PCMAIL); 20 preferred SMTP; 5 preferred other
- LAN protocols; 3 said "use all three"; 3 said "SMTP and
- TCP/IP-based client-server protocols"; 3 said "SMTP and other
- LAN protocols"; 1 said "TCP/IP-based Client-server Protocols and
- other LAN protocols".
-
- 22. Should I enable SQE/heartbeat?
-
- SQE Test (often labeled "SQE" by vendors) is part of IEEE 802.3
- that is designed to test part of the the MAU (transceiver)
- hardware. It basically consists of the MAU trying out the
- collision signal line immediately after each packet it sends.
- Thus a station on the network can verify that the MAU is working
- by watching for this signal and can log an error for you if the
- signal is not present. Correct practice is to turn SQE Test off
- on any MAU that is attached to a repeater and turn it on on any
- MAU attached to a station. Not doing this can lead to incorrect
- repeater operation and/or a lack of logging of serious network
- errors when they occur.
-
- However, many vendors of networkable stations take no advantage of
- SQE Test (it was new to IEEE 802.3 & Ethernet Version 2, not being
- present in earlier Ethernet) and there have been many reports of
- stations that won't even work properly when it is enabled. Thus
- your dilemma: some of your users may have stations that won't work
- unless you set your MAU's wrong. Maybe some day all vendors will
- fall into line, or the IEEE will revise its standard to get rid of
- SQE Test. In the mean time you are forced to know which stations
- log errors without it and which ones work poorly with it on.
- Examples of computers/networking equipment sensitive (one way or
- the other) to SQE test:
-
- Definitely can't handle SQE Test:
- No convincing confirmations
-
- Mixed & inconclusive reports saying they can't handle SQE Test:
- Some Sun workstations
- Cisco routers
-
- Needs SQE Test or it reports errors (i.e., uses SQE Test as
- intended):
- VAX/VMS
- Alpha/VMS
-
- 23. If I have a thinwire network interface card, how do I connect it
- to a 10BASE-T concentrator?
-
- Ethernet standard provides only one way to do interconnect
- thinwire (10BASE2) and 10BASE-T: using a repeater (e.g. a
- concentrator). Since this is expensive and it increases the
- repeater count, thus limiting the expanse of the rest of the
- network, customers want, and several vendors provide adaptors that
- are not real repeaters. Typically, these allow a 10BASE-T segment
- to end in a shorter-than-usual thinwire segment. One depends upon
- the vendor to provide instructions as to how its use affects the
- limitations on segment lengths and repeater counts.
-
- 24. How much does a collision slow down an Ethernet packet?
-
- Perhaps you've noticed the phenomena that you might ask otherwise
- intelligent & knowledgeable network professionals how many
- collisions indicate too much load, and they immediately divert the
- conversation to the question of whether your network is broken.
- The implication is that they're more inclined to believe your
- Ethernet is performing poorly due to being broken than due to load.
- Here's an explanation, probably more than you ever wanted to
- know:
-
- Coaxial Ethernet was designed so that everyone shares the same
- single cable. Electrical characteristics of transmission were
- chosen so that when more than one station places bits on the
- network, the voltages in effect "add" and the transceiver can
- sense the "unusual" voltage as a collision.
-
- Transceivers detect the collisions, and signal the stations by
- raising a "collision detect" line to the station. According to
- the standard, transceivers signal any collision that occurs when
- it is sending a packet, and also any triple collision.
-
- The Network Interface hardware takes care of retransmissions and
- reports the collision to the driver. It might not report complete
- information on the number of collisions--for example, one Ethernet
- chip will report after each packet it sends, whether there were 0,
- 1, 2, <16, or >16 Collisions. The driver usually keeps a count
- that it updates from the information it gets from the card.
-
- Repeaters do not "recreate" electrical collisions on other
- networks. Any time the repeater detects a collision, it is, by
- definition, in the midst of transmitting a packet. It can no
- longer pick up valid data off the net to continue sending the
- packet. The Ethernet spec says it should start sending 32 bits of
- made-up data (called a JAM) that will make the packet terminate
- early, with a CRC error. None receiving stations on the other
- side of the repeater will see "collision" signaled by their
- transceiver. Instead, they will receive just the beginning of a
- packet. This is called a "runt". The network interface hardware
- could, theoretically, report a runt as a collision, which might be
- useful for some kinds of monitoring. Or the software, might
- consider a runt a collision and increment the same count. Or it
- can count them separately, or not count them at all. Software
- that reports these separately from collisions usually refers to
- them as runts or JAMs.
-
- Link segments like 10BASE-T, FOIRL and 10BASE-FL attach only two
- devices and have separate paths in each direction. Thus
- collisions are superfluous, but must still be detected and
- reported since Ethernet interfaces cannot be assumed to have the
- ability to send and receive packets at the same time. Thus the
- transceivers watch for packets flowing in both directions at the
- same time, and signal collision to the station as well as produce
- a JAM signal on the line so that the stations trying to send the
- packets will get the message that this was a collision and the
- packet needs to be resent.
-
- Ethernet interfaces retransmit packets up to 16 times with an
- exponential backoff for the first 10. The minimum retransmission
- time is relatively quick and the detection process takes a fixed
- amount of time, so 75% of all times that two stations are
- contending for a net are resolved with one station starting a
- successful transmission within 250 microseconds. It is important
- to realize that Ethernet's collisions are a normal part of
- scheduling the use of the LAN, that it is used only when carrier
- sensing doesn't do the trick, and that Ethernet uses a
- third-generation scheme that handles collisions very smoothly when
- when the hardware works & is properly assembled, even under high
- loads. A lot of mis-information is spread about collisions, often
- from people dealing with Ethernet's competitors, but also often
- from Ethernet users who simply haven't studied it too closely, or
- listened to the wrong people.
-
- A collision is always detected & taken care of (to the point of
- starting the backoff) within the first 50 microseconds of a
- packet's transmission on a correctly functioning Ethernet. Aside
- from helping to limit the time spent dealing with collisions, this
- insures that collisions of even the smallest legal packets are
- always detected. Some interface hardware reports late collisions,
- i.e. collisions signaled after this time: unlike collisions,
- which are normal, late collisions are a type of error. Note that
- on the other side of a repeater, the late collision simply looks
- like a CRC error perhaps with an alignment error. There are two
- causes of late collisions: faulty hardware; or the network being
- too large. In either case, it tells you that the network is
- having a problem, and packets are almost surely being lost
- sometimes, causing unnecessary & occasionally severe performance
- penalties. If the network is too large, properly placed routers,
- bridges (or some switches) can subdivide it into two
- properly-sized Ethernets.
-
- Can random collisions cause packets to be lost? The exponential
- backoff algorithm yields a probability of 50% that a pair of
- colliding packets require more than one retransmission to get
- through if two stations are contending for the net at exactly the
- same time, and only 25% of the ones that still haven't succeeded
- fail to get through after the second retransmission. For the
- 16-retry limit, the calculation of the faction not making it is:
-
- 1/2 x 1/4 x .... 1/(2*10) x (1/(2*10))**6
-
- or (1/2)**115
-
- or about (1/10)**34.
-
- I conclude that on every Ethernet ever installed, for every packet
- sent, that this has never happened (give me a billion LANs that
- transmit a billion packets every day for a billion days and the
- odds are still a million to one against even one lost packet).
- When more than two stations are involved (i.e., more than two
- stations have something to send at exactly the same time), these
- odds aren't so overwhelming--thus I conclude that there have
- indeed been packets lost on correctly functioning Ethernets
- somewhere (Note: also the randomness of the backoff is probably
- not perfect and I've heard of network interfaces that illegally
- stop before 16 retries!). Recall also that stations do sense
- carrier: collisions only resolve the problem of what happens when
- the packets start at almost the same time. Probably the most
- usual time for a collision is when two stations simultaneously see
- the end of a packet, both having a packet to send. In this case,
- there will be more than one collision on average, but as stated
- above, 75% of the time, one of them will have started a successful
- transmission within 250usec.
-
- In contrast to the smooth handling of properly detected
- collisions, an undetected collision causes a packet to be lost,
- which must be retransmitted by software: for example NFS is often
- set to time out at .5 seconds, so a lost packet (for example, the
- result of an undetected collision) causes a delay typically 2000
- times longer. Networks with problems that cause undetected
- collisions, frequent unnecessary collisions, or lose packets for
- other reasons are much worse performance killers than collisions
- caused by an increase in load.
-
- How many packets can you tolerate an Ethernet losing? 1 in 100?
- 1 in 1000? 1 in 10,000? 1 in 100,000? Depends. 1 in 100 is
- very bad. Where do you draw the line? Back-of-an envelope
- example of the effects: NFS often transmits blocks of 6 Ethernet
- packets, the loss of any one of which results in the
- retransmission of all 6. The loss of one packet in 12,000 means
- that every 2,000th block takes on the order of 2000 times longer
- to complete than normal, or performance is decreased to 50% of
- that on a working Ethernet.
-
- The Ethernet's packet loss problems are relative to those of your
- router, bridge, or switch. Routers, bridges, and switches lose
- packets when their buffers fill up, so if your
- router/bridge/switch is losing one packet in 10,000, then for
- traffic passing through the router/bridge/switch, addressing an
- Ethernet packet loss rate of 1/100,000 would have little effect,
- and addressing an Ethernet packet loss rate of 1/10,000 would help
- no more than addressing your router/bridge/switch problem.
-
- 25. Should I worry about Ethernet tailgating?
-
- Tailgating is a phenomena resulting from bugs in the design
- of Ethernet interfaces, which some vendors claim are due
- to ambiguities or changes in the Ethernet specification. There
- was indeed a change in the IEEE 802.3 specification's wording
- designed to eliminate misunderstanding.
-
- Tailgating problems consist of packets following close after
- packets, collisions, and/or noise: so close that some network
- interfaces aren't ready to receive them yet.
-
- The standard says network interfaces should wait a minimum of
- 9.6us after the end of a packet before sending another (the
- "interpacket gap"). Network interfaces typically don't start
- detecting the beginning of packets for a while after the end of a
- packet (i.e. carrier goes to idle) to avoid trying to treat the
- typical noise at the end of a packet as the beginning of the next
- packet. This has been called its "blind time". The standard
- doesn't specify how long the blind time should be, but naturally
- it must be less than the 9.6us interpacket gap. However on real
- products, the blind times vary between a fraction of 1us and 4us
- or longer.
-
- Another element is that some network interfaces sometimes send 24
- bits of data while the line is idle: not a real packet: somehow
- this causes short interpacket gaps. My guess is that it makes
- some interfaces go blind while not stopping other interfaces
- from sending immediately.
-
- Some interfaces don't wait 9.6us after a collision before sending
- a packet.
-
- There have been interfaces that cheat on the 9.6us interpacket
- gap after a packet. This is so explicitly against the standard
- that vendors of such products have been quick to fix them.
- Some products:
-
- Tailgate Tailgate
- Blind 24Bit after after
- Time Garbage Collisions Packets
- ------- ------- ---------- --------
- IBM PCMCIA 0.6us
- (Notebook Sniffer)
-
- Intel 82596 4.6us x
- (Desktop Sniffer)
-
- SEEQ 8003 x x
- (Cisco, oldSGI)
-
- AMD Lance AM7990 >4us
- (Sun)
-
- Intel 82586 long x
- (oldSun)
-
- oldKalpana x
- ------- ------- ---------- --------
- Tailgate Tailgate
- Blind 24Bit after after
- Time Garbage Collisions Packets
-
- (Notes: Information from InfoWorld, 11/93 and 3/94; IBM PCMCIA
- cards are highly immune to the problems; Kalpana has fixed its
- switches)
-
- Example: If a network has two Suns that have Intel 82596 Ethernet
- chips (A and B) and two other stations (C and D), you can have the
- following situation:
-
- C and D send packets which collide.
- A sends a packet to B too soon after the collision.
- B remains blind too long to receive the packet.
-
- Thus TCP, NFS, or whatever, must retransmit. Typical NFS
- retransmission time would be in the .5 to 1 second range, thus one
- lost packet translates into .5-1 second of waiting. TCP
- retransmission time adjusts itself to the network & is typically
- shorter between stations on the same LAN, but, for example, can be
- long if the packet is lost between a station and a router while
- the station is talking over a WAN.
-
- End of Memo: BIG-LAN Frequently Asked Questions
-