420 likes | 571 Views
The. Internet. Internet Tiers. Internet is built in layers 9 Tier One computing centers in US Many Tier Two providers connected to Tier Ones Lots of Tier Threes connected to Tier Twos If one link breaks, there are other routes from A to B. TCP/IP. The language of the Internet
E N D
The Internet
Internet Tiers • Internet is built in layers • 9 Tier One computing centers in US • Many Tier Two providers connected to Tier Ones • Lots of Tier Threes connected to Tier Twos • If one link breaks, there are other routes from A to B
TCP/IP • The language of the Internet • Provides many services • Hypertext Transport Protocol (HTTP) is one service, FTP is another • We connect to Internet using TCP/IP through Internet Service Providers (ISPs)
Dial-up Connections • Hardware: Modem or ISDN Terminal Adapter • Software: Microsoft’s Dial-up Networking (DUN) • Uses PPP – Point to Point Protocol (your point to another modem)
Modems • Modulator/Demodulator: to convert digital signals to analog to run over phone lines
UARTs • Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter • Converts parallel data to serial data to parallel data • External modems do not have UARTs (they use serial port, which has UART) • Internal modems have on-board UART • 16550A is today’s UART
BAUD • Technically, it is one cycle per second (same as Hertz) • Max baud rate over phone lines (actually phone switches) is 2400 baud • It’s 56 Kbps, not 56 baud or 56 K baud • 33.6 Modem is 14 bits x 2400 Baud
Standards Server • V.90 is 56K down and 33.6 up • V.92 is 56K down and 48 upload • All of this over perfect phone wires and to an equal modem on the other end • FCC limit is 54Kbps • Best actual use is 48K down and 28K up (I get 32K max.) Me
Flow Control • Also called Handshaking. • Local flow control between modem and COM port • Software uses special characters; XON/XOFF; slower mode • Hardware uses extra wires; RTS/CTS • End-to-end flow control is between modems which is handled by the modems
Connections • Internal • ACR (Advanced Commication Riser) – AMD • CNR (Communications Network Riser) – Intel • PCI slot • PCI-e slot • External • Serial port • USB port
Dial-up Networking • Network and Internet Connections applet • Will need to know ISP phone number, account name and password • Use Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) • Make sure there is dial tone on line in use • Make sure dial tone is plugged into Line port • “No Carrier Detect(ed)” is no connection to a modem on the other end
ISDN • Integrated Services Digital Network • Up to 64 Kbps by going digital all the way to your house over Bearer (B) channel • D channels carry setup and configuration at 16Kbps • Can get two B channels for 128Kbps in Basic Rate Interface (BRI) • Can get 23 B’s and a D for 1.544Mbps – T1
xDSL • Asynchronous (ADSL) is 2Mbps down and 128-768 Kbps up • Synchronous (SDSL) has same up and down speed – but costs • Connect filters on all jacks except the one to DSL modem • NIC setup is usually just DHCP now • Have to be within two miles of CO 2M 56K 2 miles
Cable • RG-6 or RG-59 cable to modem; RJ-45 connector and UTP to computer (CAT 5e) • 6-100 Mbps down and 1-10 Mbps up • Got a bad rap at first due to many people sharing a cable; fiber optic backbone now
Networking Revisited • The “language” of the Internet is TCP/IP. • Have to have an IP address • “Upstream” of you is likely a router that hands out IP address when your modem is turned on • DHCP can supply much more than just IP address
Satellite • Used to require a dial-up modem for upload traffic • Dish now handles both up and down • In theory, allows you to be way out in the bush and still connect • 500 Kbps down and ~50Kbps up
Routers • Lots to choose from at Fry’s • Provide firewall between you and Internet • NAT – Network Address Translation: private IP’s inside and one IP outside (public)
Connection Sharing • Internet Connection Sharing – allows sharing of (dial-up) connection • Broadband (DSL and Cable): use router between modem and PCs • XP’s (Internet Connection) Firewall can prevent peer-to-peer networking as can third party firewalls isp pc1 router pc2 modem pc3
WWW • World Wide Web • Runs on port 80 • Servers run special software (IIS)
Internet Explorer • Internet Options in Control Panel or Tools menu in Explorer • Internet Options has no effect outside of IE • General tab: home page, browsing history, searching • Security tab: Zones for Internet, local intranet, trusted sites and restricted sites • Privacy tab: Cookies and pop-ups • Content tab: What will or will not display • Connections tab: Set up connection to Internet, connect to VPN, proxy server • Programs tab: Settings for browser and add-ons • Advanced tab: Accessibility, browsing, international and security
Proxy Server • A LinkSys router operates at Layer 3 of OSI model (Network layer) • PS operates at layer 7 – Application layer • You request the PS to request a web page
Email • Email address: <name>@<server> • Need account name, password, POP3 server name and SMTP server name • Should come from your ISP • Have to use your ISP’s outgoing mail (SMTP) server – even for other accounts • Get a “throw away” account (free) at Yahoo or Hot Mail or Google • Ports: POP3=110; IMAP=143; SMTP=25
FTP • File Transfer Protocol • Ports 20 and 21 • You use FTP to download my PowerPoint decks; I use it to upload decks • User name and password sent in clear text; don’t use important password
Telnet and SSH • Telnet to remotely control a server/router • Clear text, again • Port 23 • SSH = Secure Shell; port 22 • Entire connection is encrypted; looks like Telnet
SFTP • FTP running through an SSH tunnel • Can get a dedicated server and client for this
VoIP • Voice over IP • Phone calls over the network • Works with DSL to cable to satellite • Skype is completely proprietary • Low latency (time for packet to get there) is important • Adapter is built into the cable modem from Time Warner
Remote Desktop • Programs that allow you to run another computer • Also called Terminal Emulation or VNC • We will do this, both Remote Desktop and Ultra-VNC later
Virtual Private Network • An encrypted tunnel requires endpoints with dedicated IP addresses; server at one end and client at the other • Can be a dedicated box (router) • Point-to-point Tunneling Protocol (PPTP) • Employee to home office; Routing and Remote Access Service (RRAS) on server • Remote gets address on LAN
LDAP • Lightweight Directory Access Protocol • Used to do anything with Active Directory
SNMP • Simple Network Management Protocol • Enables remote query and remote configuration of just about anything on a network, provided it is SNMP-capable
SMB • Server Message Block • Tools that get PC’s names around the network • NetBIOS names are gone; SMB is the reason that Network can show you all the computers on you network • SAMBA emulates SMB
No Connectivity • Rule out the network issue(s) first • Ping the URL; should get an IP address and successful ping; no IP means DNS issue • “Repair” connection • Try another DNS server 8.8.8.8 or 8.8.4.4
Limited Connectivity • The dreaded APIPA address: 169.254.x.x • Means no DHCP server is working (check/restart router)
Local-only Connectivity • Could be a router problem (I had to get a new one) • If no external (WAN) IP address it’s time to call ISP
Slow Transfer Speed • It’s a bandwidth issue; similar to traffic on the freeway • Buy more bandwidth? • QoS = Quality of Service; can limit usage by application, IP address and others; find it on router’s configuration
Safe Surfing • Need firewall – either Windows, router or third party • Need antivirus – either pay for it (Norton) or free download (AVG Free) • Need antispam software (Ad-Aware, Spybot Search and Destroy) • Watch what you click on!!!!