Network Models
Network Models
Network Models
Application Application
Presentatio Presentatio
n
Session n
Session
Transport Transport
Network Network
Layer- Layer-
Data Link 3 3 Data Link
Physical Device Device Physical
Layer 2 and 3 addressing schemes needed and
layer 1 addressing scheme is not needed
Layer 1: Physical Layer
Responsible of:
Transmitting individual bits from one to the
next.
Physical characteristics of interface and media.
Representation of bits: a stream of bit(0s,1s),
Data rate.
Synchronize of bits
Line configuration
Physical topology
Transmission mode
Physical Layer cont.
Layer 2: Data Link layer
Responsible of:
Moving frames from one hop (node) to the next.
Framing: divided the stream of bits received from
the network layer manageable data units called
frames.
Physical address (MAC address).
Flow control.
Error control: added trailer to the end of frame.
Access control.
Hop to hop delivery
Data Link layer cont.
Telnet
SMTP Telnet HTTP SMTP HTTP
Summary
Application data stream
data stream
Presentation data
data stream
Session
Transport data data data Segments
Physical
1110111 0111 011111101 Bits
TCP/IP Protocol Suite
The TCP/IP protocol suite is a hierarchical
protocol , made of five layers:
Physical layer
Data link layer
Network layer
Transport layer
Application layer.
Some Protocols in TCP/IP Suite
TCP/IP PROTOCOL SUITE
The layers in the TCP/IP protocol suite do not
exactly match those in the OSI model.
The original TCP/IP protocol suite was defined
as having four layers: host-to-network,
internet, transport, and application.
However, when TCP/IP is compared to OSI, we
can say that the TCP/IP protocol suite is made
of five layers: physical, data link, network,
transport, and application.
TCP/IP and OSI model
Addressing in TCP/IP
2.32
Relationship of layers and addresses in TCP/IP