CCN Lecture 7
CCN Lecture 7
CCN Lecture 7
Switching
7.1
Figure 7.1 Switched network
7.2
Figure 7.2 Taxonomy of switched networks
7.3
CIRCUIT-SWITCHED NETWORKS
7.4
Figure 7.3 A trivial circuit-switched network
7.5
Three phases of circuit switching
7.6
Note
7.7
Example
7.8
Figure 7.4 Circuit-switched network used in Example
7.10
Figure 7.5 Circuit-switched network used in Example
7.11
Figure 7.6 Delay in a circuit-switched network
7.12
Note
7.13
PACKET-SWITCHED NETWORK
7.15
Two Basic Forms of Packet
Switching
7.16
Datagram
7.17
Figure 7.7 A datagram network with four switches (routers)
7.18
Figure 7.7 Routing table in a datagram network
7.19
Note
7.20
Note
7.21
Figure 7.9 Delay in a datagram network
7.22
Note
7.23
VIRTUAL-CIRCUIT NETWORKS
7.24
Virtual Circuit chracteristics
• Preplanned route established before any packets
sent
• Call request and call accept packets establish
connection (handshake)
• Each packet contains a virtual circuit identifier
instead of destination address
• No routing decisions required for each packet
• Clear request to drop circuit
• Not a dedicated
7.25
Figure 7.10 Virtual-circuit network
7.26
Virtual Circuit addressing
Two types of addressing are used
1. Global addressing
• a source or a destination address is a global address in the scope of the
network.
• it is used to create virtual –circuit Identifier
2. Virtual –circuit Identifier (VCI)
3. It has a small number which has only switch scope and used between two
switches.
7.28
Figure 7.12 Switch and tables in a virtual-circuit network
7.29
Figure 7.13 Source-to-destination data transfer in a virtual-circuit network
7.30
Figure 7.14 Setup request in a virtual-circuit network
7.31
Figure 7.15 Setup acknowledgment in a virtual-circuit network
7.32
Note
7.33
Figure 7.16 Delay in a virtual-circuit network
7.34
Note
7.35
S(witched)VC vs. P(ermanent)VC setup
7.36
S(witched)VC vs. P(ermanent)VC setup
7.37
Summary
7.38