Chapter 4
Chapter 4
Internetworking
By Lake.F
Outlines
2
● Introduction
● Internetworking with TCP/IP
● Intranet, Extranet and Internet
● IP Addressing
● Subnetting
● Network Applications – Web, Mail, DNS, DHCP
By Lake.F
Introduction
3
By Lake.F
Cont’
4
Ethernet
It is the most widely-installed local area network ( LAN)
technology.
Specified in a standard, IEEE 802.3.
By Lake.F
Cont’
5
Intranet
An intranet is a computer network that uses Internet
Protocol(IP) technology to share information within an
organization.
Sometimes, the term refers only to the organization's
internal website, but may be a more extensive part of the
organization's information technology infrastructure.
Composed of multiple local area networks.
By Lake.F
Cont’
6
Extranet
It is a private network that uses Internet technology and the
public telecommunication system.
This is to securely share part of a business's information or
operations with suppliers, vendors, partners, customers, or
other businesses.
An extranet can be viewed as part of a company's
intranet that is extended to users outside the company.
By Lake.F
Cont’
7
Internet
Internet is a global system of interconnected computer
networks that use the standard internet protocol
suit (TCP/IP) to serve several billion users worldwide.
By Lake.F
Cont’
By Lake.F 8
How to use the Internet ?
9
Research
Shopping
News
Games
… etc.
By Lake.F
Internet Terms? 10
Browser
Search Engine
URL
Domain
html
By Lake.F
Cont’
11
Web
The World Wide Web (WWW), commonly known as the
By Lake.F
Cont’
12
Mail
Electronic mail, e-mail or email is an information stored
By Lake.F
Cont’
13
Browser
documents.
Example
By Lake.F
Search Engine
14
A web site that will help you search the Internet for key
words, subjects, etc.
Example
By Lake.F
URL
15
can be viewed.
Example:
https://[www].[facebook.com]/ [Learn-the-Net -330002341216]/
Sub domain
Protocol Domain
path/directory
By Lake.F
Domain
16
.com: commercial,
.edu: education.
By Lake.F
html
17
By Lake.F
Internet Protocol (IP)
18
communicating data.
By Lake.F
Cont’
19
By Lake.F
IP Addressing
20
scheme.
By Lake.F
IPv4 Addresses
21
They are unique in the sense that each address defines one
Two devices on the Internet can never have the same address
By Lake.F
Address Space 22
space.
protocol.
By Lake.F
Cont’ 23
IPv4 uses 32-bit addresses, which means that the address space
By Lake.F
Notations
24
Binary Notation
Dotted-Decimal Notation
By Lake.F
Cont’
26
Example
Dotted-decimal notation and binary notation for an IPv4
address.
By Lake.F
Classful Addressing 27
By Lake.F
Network ID and Host ID
28
decimal 127.
network addresses.
By Lake.F
Cont’
30
Any address that starts with a value between 1 and 126 in the
Example: 98.56.82.30
By Lake.F
Cont’
31
decimal 128.
decimal 191.
Any address that starts with a value between 128 and 191 in
Example: 167.3.27.30
By Lake.F
Cont’
32
decimal 192.
decimal 223.
Any address that starts with a value between 192 and 223 in
Example: 192.168.0.1
By Lake.F
Network Addresses
33
By Lake.F
IP addressing: Summary
35
200.150.56.1 to 200.150.56.254
The address 200.150.56.0 is called the network address.
By Lake.F
How many networks are there?
37
By Lake.F
Cont’
38
network.
Note:
• Network addresses have all zeros for the host portion.
• Broadcast addresses have all ones for the host portion.
By Lake.F
Subnetting
39
Advantages:
Reduced network traffic
Simplify management
By Lake.F
The subnetting process
40
host bit.
By Lake.F
Cont’
41
The subnet field and the host field are created from the
By Lake.F
How many bits should we borrow?
42
By Lake.F
Cont’
43
Example:
By Lake.F
Usable subnets
44
If the first subnet (all 0’s in the subnet field) is used, then
If the last subnet (all 1’s in the subnet field) is used, the network
Example:
By Lake.F
Usable hosts
46
Example:
By Lake.F
Mask
47
contiguous 0s.
• The mask can help us to find the network ID and the host
ID.
By Lake.F
Subnet masks
48
the network must know which part of the host address will
be used as the subnet address.
machine
By Lake.F
Subnet masks
49
packets to distinguish:
By Lake.F
Subnet masks
50
By Lake.F
Default subnet masks
51
Not all networks need subnets, meaning they use the
default subnet mask
By Lake.F
Specifying subnets
52
mask is 255.255.255.224
For example, /24 indicates that the total bits that were used for the
By Lake.F
Subnetting Class C addresses - Example 1
53
2^6 – 2 = 62 hosts
By Lake.F
Cont’
54
192.168.10.192
The ones which do not have all 0’s or all 1’s in the subnet field,
By Lake.F
Cont’
55
By Lake.F
Cont’
56
broadcast address. The hosts for the first valid subnet are
192.168.10.65, 192.168.10.66, …, 192.168.10.126
192.168.10.130, …, 192.168.10.190
By Lake.F
Calculating class A and B networks
57
By Lake.F
Subnetting Class B addresses – Example 1
58
By Lake.F
Cont’
59
By Lake.F
Subnetting Class A addresses – Example 1
60
By Lake.F
Subnetting Class A addresses – Example 1
61
By Lake.F
Network Address Translation (NAT)
62
depletion.
addresses.
By Lake.F
IPv6 ADDRESSES
63
long.
By Lake.F
...’’’
64
Note:
Computers understand numbers and can be identified by IP
address.
By Lake.F
DNS server (domain name system)
65
addresses.
remember.
By Lake.F
Cont
66
developed.
addresses).
By Lake.F
Cont
67
devices on a network.
it is still connected.
By Lake.F
Cont’
69
Static IP
Solution: Dynamic IP
By Lake.F
Cont’
70
IP address
Subnet mask
Default gateway
DNS server
By Lake.F
Cont’
71
Lease
DHCP server assigns IP address as a lease.
computer.
address.