700 likes | 1.09k Views
Switching Basics and Intermediate Routing CCNA 3 Chapter 5 . LAN Design Introduction. LAN design has become more difficult Due to multiple media types and LANs Complexity has increased Three aspects of a network that need to be identified before designing a large LAN:
E N D
LAN DesignIntroduction • LAN design has become more difficult • Due to multiple media types and LANs • Complexity has increased • Three aspects of a network that need to be identified before designing a large LAN: • An access layer that connects end users to a LAN • A distribution layer that provides policy-based connectivity between end-user LANs • A core layer that provides the fastest connection between distribution points
LAN DesignLAN Design Goals • Requirements of most networks designs: • Functionality: the network must work as intended • Scalability: the network must be expandable • Adaptability: the network must be designed with a vision toward future technologies • Manageability: the design must facilitate network monitoring and management to ensure stability
LAN DesignLAN Design Considerations • A virtual LAN (VLAN) is a group of devices on one or more LANs that communicate as if they were attached to the same wire • To maximize bandwidth and performance, address these LAN design considerations: • Function and placement of servers • Collision domain issues • Segmentation issues • Broadcast domain issues
LAN DesignLAN Design Considerations • Servers are usually dedicated to one function such as email or file sharing • Servers can be one of two types: • Enterprise servers support all users on the network • e-mail • Domain Name System (DNS), the Internet-wide system of mapping names to IP addresses • Workgroup servers support a specific set of users and offers services such as word processing and file sharing
LAN DesignLAN Design Considerations • Enterprise servers are usually placed in the main distribution facility (MDF) • Traffic to enterprise servers should travel only to the MDF and not across other networks • Workgroup servers should be placed in the intermediate distribution facilities (IDFs) closest to the users who access the applications on these servers • Layer 2 switches in the MDF and IDF should have 1000Mbps (1Gbps) allocated bandwidth
LAN DesignLAN Design Considerations Servers Are Typically Placed at a Point of Convergence in the Network, Such as Within an IDF or MDF
LAN DesignLAN Design Considerations • Ethernet nodes use carrier sense multiple access with collision detection (CSMA/CD) • Each node must contend with all other nodes for access to the shared medium, or collision domain • If two nodes transmit at the same time, a collision occurs • The transmitted frames are destroyed and a jam signal is sent to all nodes on the segment • Excessive collisions reduce bandwidth
LAN DesignLAN Design Considerations Collisions Increase Multiplicatively with the Number of Hosts
LAN DesignLAN Design Considerations • Microsegmentation is when a single collision domain is split into smaller collision domains • Reduces number of collisions on a LAN segment • A broadcast occurs when the destination MAC address is FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF Single Broadcast Domain
LAN DesignLAN Design Methodology • LAN design should be done in a set of systematic steps: • Step 1: Gather the requirements and expectations • Users • Corporate structure • Skill level of people • User attitudes towards computes and applications • Documented policies of the organization • Business information flow • Data that is mission critical • Protocols allowed on the network
LAN DesignLAN Design Methodology • Step 1: Gather the requirements and expectations (continued) • Performance characteristics of current network • Types of desktops supported • Persons responsible for LAN addressing, naming, topology design, and configuration • Current topology • Human, hardware, and software resources • How resources are linked and shared • Financial resources of organization
LAN DesignLAN Design Methodology • Documentation of requirements allows for an informed estimate of costs and timelines for implementation • Availability measures the usefulness of the network • Factors affecting availability: • Throughput • Response time • Access to resources • Customers may have different definitions of availability • As a network designer, goal is greatest availability at least cost
LAN DesignLAN Design Methodology • Step 2: Analyze the requirements of the network and its users • Needs of users change • Need for bandwidth increases • Voice and video applications • The network must reliably provide prompt and accurate information • Information requirements of the users and organization must be met
LAN DesignLAN Design Methodology • Step 3: Decide on the overall LAN topology that will satisfy user requirements • Star • Extended star (most common) The Star Topology is a Special Case of the Extended Star Topology
LAN DesignLAN Design Methodology • Step 3: Decide on the overall LAN topology that will satisfy user requirements (continued) • LAN topology design has three unique OSI model categories: • Network layer (Layer 3) • Data link layer (Layer 2) • Physical layer (Layer 1) • By looking at theOSI layer, the design engineer can properly incorporate products and technologies
LAN DesignLAN Design Methodology • Step 4: Document the physical and logical topology of the network • Physical topology: the way the network components are connected • Logical topology: the flow of data in the network, and the name and addressing schemes used
LAN DesignLAN Design Methodology Logical Design Includes Name and Address Schemes
LAN DesignLAN Design Methodology • Important elements of LAN design documentation: • OSI layer topology map • LAN logical map • LAN physical map • Cut sheets, which show cable runs • VLAN logical map • Layer 3 logical map • Address maps
LAN DesignLAN Design Methodology Cut Sheet for IDF Location – Room XXX
LAN DesignLAN Design Methodology VLAN Logical Design
LAN DesignLAN Design Methodology IP Networks Are Displayed in a Layer 3 Logical Map
LAN DesignLAN Design Methodology Address Maps Provide a Detailed View of IP Addresses for Key Devices and Interfaces
LAN DesignLayer 1 Design • One of the most important design considerations is the cables • Most LAN cabling is based of FastEthernet or Gigabit Ethernet technology • Both can utilize full duplex technology, giving concurrent, collision-free, two-way communication • A logical bus topology that uses CSMA/CD can also be used with standard Ethernet
LAN DesignLayer 1 Design • Design issues at Layer 1: • Type of cabling (copper or fiber optic) • 100BASE-TX specifies Cat5e unshielded twisted-pair (UTP), limited to 100m per segment • 100BAS-FX specifies multimode fiber with a length limit of 2 km • TIA/EIA-568-A standard details layout and wiring connection schemes • Media types: Cat5, Cat5e, Cat6 UTP and shielded twisted-pair (STP) that has shielding around wire pairs and another shield around all the wires in the cable, single-mode fiber, multi-mode fiber
LAN DesignLayer 1 Design • Design issues at Layer 1 (continued): • Carefully evaluate strengths and weaknesses of topologies • Layer 1 issues cause most network problems • Use fiber-optic cable in the backbone and risers of a network • Use Cat5e or Cat6 in horizontal runs • Every device should be connected to a central location with a horizontal cabling run
LAN DesignLayer 1 Design • In a simple star topology with only one wiring closet, the MDF includes one or more horizontal cross-connect (HCC) patch panels • HCC patch panels connect Layer 1 horizontal cabling with Layer 2 switch ports • The uplink port on the LAN switch is connected to the Ethernet port on the Layer 3 router with a patch cable
LAN DesignLayer 1 Design HCC Connects Layer 1 Cabling to Layer 2 Switch Ports
LAN DesignLayer 1 Design • When hosts in larger networks exceed the 100m distance limitation for Cat5e UTP, more than one wiring closet is required • Multiple wiring closets means you have multiple catchment areas • Secondary wiring closets are referred to as intermediate distribution facilities (IDFs)
LAN DesignLayer 1 Design IDFs Connect via the MDF
LAN DesignLayer 1 Design • Vertical cabling is also called backbone cabling • A vertical cross-connect interconnects IDFs to the central MDF • Fiber-optic cable is normally used for the VCC because cable lengths are longer than the100m limit for Cat5e cable
LAN DesignLayer 1 Design VCC Interconnects IDFs to the MDF
LAN DesignLayer 1 Design • The logical diagram is the basic road map of the LAN and includes these elements: • Location and identification of MDF and IDF wiring closets • Type and quantity of cables used to interconnect the IDFs with the MDF • Number of spare cables that are available to increase bandwidth between wiring closets • Detailed documentation of all cable runs, identification numbers, and port on which the run is terminated at the HCC or VCC • Essential for troubleshooting network problems
LAN DesignLayer 2 Design • Purpose of Layer 2 devices is to switch frames based on destination MAC address • Collisions and collision domain size negatively affect network performance • Devices at Layer 2 (and Layer 3) determine the size of collision domains • Microsegmentation reduces the size of collision domains and is implemented through the use of switches
LAN DesignLayer 2 Design LAN Switches Provide Microsegmentation
LAN DesignLayer 2 Design • LAN switches allocate bandwidth on a per-port basis • This supplies more bandwidth to vertical cabling, uplinks, and servers • Referred to as asymmetric switching (provides switch connections between ports of unlike bandwidth) • Symmetric switching provides switched connections between ports of similar bandwidth
LAN DesignLayer 2 Design • Desired capacity of vertical cable runs is greater than that of a horizontal cable run • 100 Mbps is adequate on a horizontal drop • Asymmetric LAN switches allow 100 Mbps and 1 Gbps on a single switch • Next task in the design process is to determine number of 100 Mbps and 1 Gbps ports needed in the MDF and every IDF • The number of hosts connected to a single port on a switch determines the size of the collision domain, affects bandwidth available to each host • Collision domains can be eliminated by using one host per switch port
LAN DesignLayer 3 Design • A router is a Layer 3 device • Creates unique LAN segments • Allows communication between segments based on Layer 3 addresses, such as IP addresses • Allows segmentation of LAN into unique physical and logical networks • Allows for connectivity to WANs, such as the Internet • Forwards data packets based on destination addresses • Does not forward broadcasts • Is the entry and exit point for a broadcast domain
LAN DesignLayer 3 Design • When to use a router: • If the problem is a protocol issue instead of a contention issue • If there are excessive broadcasts on the LAN • If a higher level of security is needed • However, Layer 3 switches can now perform many of these functions at nearly the same cost • Expect Layer 3 switching to become pervasive in 10 years • Layer 3 switches perform wire-speed routing, QoS, and security functions
LAN DesignLayer 3 Design Logical Addressing Mapped to the Physical Network
LAN DesignLayer 3 Design Logical Network Addressing Map
LAN DesignLayer 3 Design Physical Network Maps Ease Troubleshooting
LAN DesignLayer 3 Design • VLAN implementation combines Layer 2 switching and Layer 3 routing technologies • Limits collision and broadcast domains • Provides security with creation of VLAN groups that communicate only through a router • Ports on a switch are assigned to different VLANs
LAN DesignLayer 3 Design VLANs Are Essentially Switch Port Groupings
LAN SwitchesIntroduction • Early LAN switches did not support VLANs • Second-generation switches supported VLANs, but relied on routers for inter-VLAN communication • Third generation switches have the route processors built into the switches • With the exception of access layer switches, switches are becoming almost indistinguishable from routers
LAN SwitchesSwitched LANs and the Hierarchical Design Model • Use of a hierarchical design model makes it more likely to meet the needs of a medium or large organization • Layers of the hierarchical model: • Access layer: gives users access to the network • Distribution layer: provides policy-based connectivity • Core layer: provides optimum transport between sites; often referred to as the backbone
LAN SwitchesAccess Layer Overview • Entry point to network for user workstations and servers • Functions include MAC layer filtering and microsegmentation • Layer 2 switches are used
LAN SwitchesAccess Layer Overview The Access Layer is an Entry Point to the Network, Particularly for End Users
LAN SwitchesAccess Layer Switches • Access layer switches generally operate at Layer 2 of the OSI model • Provide services such as VLAN membership • Main purpose is to connect end users • Should do this with low cost and high port density
LAN SwitchesAccess Layer Switches • Common legacy access layer switches used today • Catalyst 1900 series • Catalyst 2820 series • Catalyst 2950 series (not a legacy switch) • Catalyst 4000 series • Catalyst 5000 series