Local networks and the Internet : from protocols to interconnection

著者

    • Toutain, Laurent
    • Minaburo, Ana

書誌事項

Local networks and the Internet : from protocols to interconnection

Laurent Toutain, Ana Minaburo

ISTE , Wiley, 2011

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 3

この図書・雑誌をさがす

注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. [679]-680) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This title covers the most commonly used elements of Internet and Intranet technology and their development. It details the latest developments in research and covers new themes such as IP6, MPLS, and IS-IS routing, as well as explaining the function of standardization committees such as IETF, IEEE, and UIT. The book is illustrated with numerous examples and applications which will help the reader to place protocols in their proper context.

目次

Chapter 1. Introduction 1 1.1. Why a network? 1 1.2. Network classification 2 1.3. Interconnection networks. 8 1.4. Examples of network utilization 10 1.5. The Internet network 11 1.6. Structure of this book 15 Chapter 2. Standardization and Wiring 19 2.1. The IEEE 802 committee 19 2.2. The standards 21 2.3. IEEE 802.1 addressing 27 2.4. Cabling rules 30 Chapter 3. Ethernet and IEEE 802.3 Protocols 37 3.1. History 37 3.2. Physical level 39 3.3. The fundamentals of CSMA/CD 45 3.4. Frame format 53 3.5. The 10BASE5 network 58 3.6. Devices for the 10BASE2 62 3.7. Twisted pair equipment 63 3.8. Fiber optics 79 3.9. Examples of Ethernet frames 87 3.10 Evolution of the Ethernet 92 Chapter 4. The LLC and SNAP Sublayers 95 4.1. Definition 95 4.2. LLC frames 97 4.3. Example 106 4.4. The SNAP layer 111 Chapter 5. Interconnection by Bridges: The Spanning Tree Algorithm 115 5.1. Introduction115 5.2. Transparent filtering bridges 116 5.3. Spanning tree algorithm 118 Chapter 6. Internet 131 6.1. The Internet players 131 Chapter 7. IP Protocols 143 7.1. Implementation of the TCP/IP protocols 143 7.2. Internet addressing 149 7.3. The IPv4 protocol (RFC 791, RFC 1122) 168 7.4. The ICMP (Internet Control Message Protocol) (RFC 792) 180 7.5. The IPv6 protocol 196 7.6. Tunnels 199 7.7. Configurations 202 7.8. Configuration of a Cisco router 204 7.9. IPv4 and multicast 207 Chapter 8. Level 4 Protocols: TCP, UDP and SCTP 213 8.1. Port notion 213 8.2. TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) (RFC 793) 215 8.3. The three protocol phases 218 8.4. The options 227 8.5. Adaptation to the environment 230 8.6. TCP flow control 239 8.7. Study of TCP by simulations 252 8.8. Network consideration of TCP 263 8.9. The UDP (user datagram protocol) (RFC 768) 275 8.10. SCTP 283 Chapter 9. Address Resolution and Automatic Configuration Protocols 299 9.1. Introduction 299 9.2. The address resolution protocol (ARP) 300 9.3. Neighbor discovery in IPv6 308 9.4. Initialization and auto-configuration 309 9.5. The domain name server (DNS) (RFC 1034, RFC 1035) 333 Chapter 10. Routing Protocols 367 10.1. Routing tables 367 10.2. Equipment classification 368 10.3. Routing table configuration 369 10.4. Station or router? 373 10.5. High-speed router 374 10.6. Router classification 375 10.7. Routing protocols 376 10.8. Autonomous systems 376 Chapter 11. Internal Routing Protocols 381 11.1. The Distant Vector algorithm 381 11.2. Link State algorithm 396 11.3. The OSPF protocol 403 11.4. IS-IS 434 Chapter 12. External Routing Protocols 453 12.1. Path announcing 453 12.2. The interconnection points 461 12.3. The symmetry of routes 461 12.4. BGP (border gateway protocol) 462 12.5. Route selection rules 480 12.6. BGP traffic analysis 481 12.7. Reduction of oscillations 485 12.8. Routing limit in the Internet 486 Chapter 13. Virtual Local Networks 487 13.1. Definition 487 13.2. Multicast data management 488 13.3. Virtual networks 497 Chapter 14. MPLS (Multi Protocol Label Switching) 507 14.1. Routing protocols' limits 507 14.2. MPLS header format 510 14.3. Principles of operation 513 14.4. MPLS label D distribution protocols 518 14.5. Traffic engineering 525 Chapter 15. IP on Point-to-Point Links: PPP 529 15.1. Serial links 530 15.2. SLIP (Serial Link IP, RFC 1055) 533 15.3. PPP (point-to-point protocol, RFC 1661) 535 15.4. Configuration of routers 560 15.5. The RADIUS protocol 560 15.6. PPP over X.25 (RFC 1598) 561 15.7. PPP over high-speed networks 561 15.8. Bridging with PPP (RFC 1638) 561 15.9. ADSL network architecture 565 Chapter 16. Network Administration 571 16.1. Vocabulary and concepts 571 16.2. ASN.1 (Abstract Syntax Notation) 574 16.3. Definition of the MIB SNMP (RFC 1213) 579 16.4. Format of SNMPvl messages (RFC 1157) 581 16.5. Formats of SNMPv2 messages (RFC 1905) 587 16.6. Examples of SNMPvl traffic 590 16.7. MIB example 594 16.8. Other MIBs 607 Chapter 17. Security 613 17.1. Risks 613 17.2. Filtering routers 614 17.3. Bastion 622 17.4. Proxy 623 17.5. NAT (Network Address Translator, RFC 1631) 624 Chapter 18. Flow Management 627 18.1. Quality of service 627 18.2. Flow notion 630 18.3. Flow management 631 18.4. Flow measurements 644 18.5. Integration of services on the Internet 648 18.6. Differentiated services 675 18.7. Perspectives 677 Bibliography 679 Index 681

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