CompTIA Network+ | Microsoft MTA Networking: Common Physical Network Topologies

[bs_icon name=”glyphicon glyphicon-chevron-right”] Introduction To Network

 

We have Two kind of Network Model :

[bs_icon name=”glyphicon glyphicon-chevron-right”] Peer to Peer [bs_icon name=”glyphicon glyphicon-chevron-right”] Client / Server

 

 

Topology – is the arrangement of the how device are layout in network

We have several Topologies :

 

BusThis topology is an old one and essentially has each of the computers on the network daisy-chained to each other. Packets must pass through all computers on the bus. This type is cheap, and simple to set up, but causes excess network traffic, a failure may affect many users, and problems are difficult to troubleshoot.

The bus network topology is also known as a linear bus because the computers in such a network are linked together using a single cable called a trunk, or backbone.The use the terminator at end of each coaxial cables; and if the terminator is loose ; you will not be able to talk to other PC, it is Old technology

 

 

 

Star – The star topology uses twisted pair (10baseT or 100baseT) cabling and requires that all devices are connected to a hub. Advantages are centralized monitoring, and failures do not affect others unless it is the hub, easy to modify. The disadvantage is that the hub is a single point of failure. If it goes down, there are no communications possible. 

 

 

 

Ring A ring topology has a physical and logical ring and is used on SONET and FDDI networks (note that Token Ring networks are actually a hybrid star ring topology). Any station can send a packet around the ring but only the station with the token can do so. The token is passed around the ring giving all stations an opportunity to communicate. This is a very fast and simple network. However if any part of the ring goes down, the entire LAN goes down. If there is a problem at a station, it may be difficult to locate it. Ring networks are not very common.

 

 

MeshIn a true mesh topology every node has a connection to every other node in the network. A full mesh provides redundancy in case of a failure between links, but is impractical due the complexity and the expensive amount of cabling required.

 

 

 

 

 Wireless Topology –  In Wireless Topology we have two format :

In Adhoc Model there is no AP=Access Point; just two devoices are connected via Adhoc .

In infrastructure model we have a more than 2 Wireless device ( like laptop) that will talk to other laptop via AP access point . In order talk to each other ; they must use the same SSID .

 

Source by wikipedia

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