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Networking. A few questions on the course A few questions about the course. 43 of 70. The Director of Studies is. Alwyn Barry James Davenport Alan Hayes Mickey Mouse. That was the “warmup”. I hope you got Alan Hayes: James Davenport is so last year! Alwyn Barry is just history
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Networking • A few questions on the course • A few questions about the course
43 of 70 The Director of Studies is • Alwyn Barry • James Davenport • Alan Hayes • Mickey Mouse
That was the “warmup” • I hope you got Alan Hayes: • James Davenport is so last year! • Alwyn Barry is just history • (as far as this job is concerned!)
Questions on the course (mostly factual, but there is more to the course than facts)
An Ethernet address is how long? • 4 bytes • 6 bytes • 16 bytes • Variable length
The answer is B (6 bytes) If you didn’t get that, you’re pretty confused: re-read sections 2.2 and 3.2 of the book.
100 Mbps twisted pair length limit is • 60 metres • 100 metres • 195 metres • 500 metres
The correct answer is B: 100m However, this is the sort of factual answer: • I don’t expect you to know, and would give you in an exam question; • You should always check in real life, especially if equipment installation depends on it; • As I showed in the Library, isn’t what it seems in practice
Internet and Ethernet • An internet is impossible without Ethernet • The Internet needs Ethernet • Today’s Internet depends on Ethernet • Totally independent concepts
I hope that made you think • Certainly false • Was false in the beginning, and may well be false again. • True in practice today. • True, but not as helpful as C.
When it comes to END characters, PPP • Is better than SLIP, as it doesn’t use one • Has one, which can’t be used in IP • Allows it in the middle of IP packets • Allows it anywhere in IP packets
The correct answer is D:anywhere in IP packets • Since PPP doesn’t have a length field, it must have some END marker • IP can contain arbitrary binary data, so B and C can’t be right. • If there is an END character in the IP packet, it is “escaped” by the sending PPP, and re-interpreted by the receiver • See figure 2.2
When it comes to delivering packets, IP • Guarantees to deliver • Guarantees to deliver or return an ICMP error • Makes no guarantees
The answer is C • On Ethernets, you have no idea if the packet is received • Congested routers may just drop packets • No error is generated for header checksum errors • No error is generated for broadcast or multicast packets • Etc.
The system administrator decides on the routing mechanism • True • False
False • There is only one routing mechanism: see Stevens sections 9.1, 9.2. • Who confused routing mechanism with policy?
The manager of an autonomous system in the Internet • Can do whatever he likes • Must implement the routing policy of whoever his AS is connected to • Must satisfy the constraints of whoever his AS is connected to • Depends on whether it’s stub/transit
True, but he may not stay connected to the Internet for very long. • It would be rare to be told what routing policy to implement. • Yes, such constraints must be satisfied. • In theory no, but in practice a transit AS will have many more constraints.
Networking • A few questions on the course • A few questions about the course
The textbook is a fantastic resource • Strongly Agree • Agree • Neutral • Disagree • Strongly Disagree
Actually, I use other sources • Strongly Agree • Agree • Neutral • Disagree • Strongly Disagree
My principal other source is • Bradford’s book • Farouzan’s book • Other book • Wikipedia • Other on-line non-book sources • A mixture • No other source
If you had “other” • Then you can tell us. • Text to 07624804921.
The lecturer uses the textbook far too much in lectures • Strongly Agree • Agree • Neutral • Disagree • Strongly Disagree
What about this technology • Revolutionises problem classes • Useful extra, but shouldn’t dominate • OK 1-2 times/term • Never again • Abstain