Summary

This document is a presentation on the network layer, focusing on IPv4 and IPv6 protocols. It explains the characteristics of IP, how packets are handled, and different routing methods.

Full Transcript

Module 8: Network Layer Introduction to Networks v7.0 (ITN) Module 8: Topics What will I learn to do in this module? Topic Title Topic Objective Network Layer Explain how the network layer uses IP protocols for reliable Characteristics...

Module 8: Network Layer Introduction to Networks v7.0 (ITN) Module 8: Topics What will I learn to do in this module? Topic Title Topic Objective Network Layer Explain how the network layer uses IP protocols for reliable Characteristics communications. IPv4 Packet Explain the role of the major header fields in the IPv4 packet. IPv6 Packet Explain the role of the major header fields in the IPv6 packet. Explain how network devices use routing tables to direct packets to a How a Host Routes destination network. Router Routing Tables Explain the function of fields in the routing table of a router. © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 2 8.1 Network Layer Characteristics © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 3 Network Layer Characteristics The Network Layer Provides services to allow end devices to exchange data IP version 4 (IPv4) and IP version 6 (IPv6) are the principle network layer communication protocols. The network layer performs four basic operations: Addressing end devices Encapsulation Routing De-encapsulation © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 4 Network Layer Characteristics IP Encapsulation IP encapsulates the transport layer segment. IP can use either an IPv4 or IPv6 packet and not impact the layer 4 segment. IP packet will be examined by all layer 3 devices as it traverses the network. The IP addressing does not change from source to destination. Note: NAT will change addressing, but will be discussed in a later module. © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 5 Network Layer Characteristics Characteristics of IP IP is meant to have low overhead and may be described as: Connectionless Best Effort Media Independent © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 6 Network Layer Characteristics Connectionless IP is Connectionless IP does not establish a connection with the destination before sending the packet. There is no control information needed (synchronizations, acknowledgments, etc.). The destination will receive the packet when it arrives, but no pre-notifications are sent by IP. If there is a need for connection-oriented traffic, then another protocol will handle this (typically TCP at the transport layer). © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 7 Network Layer Characteristics Best Effort IP is Best Effort IP will not guarantee delivery of the packet. IP has reduced overhead since there is no mechanism to resend data that is not received. IP does not expect acknowledgments. IP does not know if the other device is operational or if it received the packet. © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 8 Network Layer Characteristics Media Independent IP is unreliable: It cannot manage or fix undelivered or corrupt packets. IP cannot retransmit after an error. IP cannot realign out of sequence packets. IP must rely on other protocols for these functions. IP is media Independent: IP does not concern itself with the type of frame required at the data link layer or the media type at the physical layer. IP can be sent over any media type: copper, fiber, or wireless. © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 9 Network Layer Characteristics Media Independent (Contd.) The network layer will establish the Maximum Transmission Unit (MTU). Network layer receives this from control information sent by the data link layer. The network then establishes the MTU size. Fragmentation is when Layer 3 splits the IPv4 packet into smaller units. Fragmenting causes latency. IPv6 does not fragment packets. Example: Router goes from Ethernet to a slow WAN with a smaller MTU © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 10 8.2 IPv4 Packet © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 11 IPv4 Packet IPv4 Packet Header IPv4 is the primary communication protocol for the network layer. The network header has many purposes: It ensures the packet is sent in the correct direction (to the destination). It contains information for network layer processing in various fields. The information in the header is used by all layer 3 devices that handle the packet © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 12 IPv4 Packet IPv4 Packet Header Fields The IPv4 network header characteristics: It is in binary. Contains several fields of information Diagram is read from left to right, 4 bytes per line The two most important fields are the source and destination. Protocols may have may have one or more functions. © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 13 IPv4 Packet IPv4 Packet Header Fields Significant fields in the IPv4 header: Function Description Version This will be for v4, as opposed to v6, a 4 bit field= 0100 Differentiated Services Used for QoS: DiffServ – DS field or the older IntServ – ToS or Type of Service Header Checksum Detect corruption in the IPv4 header Time to Live (TTL) Layer 3 hop count. When it becomes zero the router will discard the packet. Protocol I.D.s next level protocol: ICMP, TCP, UDP, etc. Source IPv4 Address 32 bit source address Destination IPV4 Address 32 bit destination address © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 14 IPv4 Packet Video – Sample IPv4 Headers in Wireshark This video will cover the following: IPv4 Ethernet packets in Wireshark The control information The difference between packets © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 15 8.3 IPv6 Packets © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 16 IPv6 Packets Limitations of IPv4 IPv4 has three major limitations: IPv4 address depletion – We have basically run out of IPv4 addressing. Lack of end-to-end connectivity – To make IPv4 survive this long, private addressing and NAT were created. This ended direct communications with public addressing. Increased network complexity – NAT was meant as temporary solution and creates issues on the network as a side effect of manipulating the network headers addressing. NAT causes latency and troubleshooting issues. © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 17 IPv6 Packets IPv6 Overview IPv6 was developed by Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). IPv6 overcomes the limitations of IPv4. Improvements that IPv6 provides: Increased address space – based on 128 bit address, not 32 bits Improved packet handling – simplified header with fewer fields Eliminates the need for NAT – since there is a huge amount of addressing, there is no need to use private addressing internally and be mapped to a shared public address © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 18 IPv6 Packets IPv4 Packet Header Fields in the IPv6 Packet Header The IPv6 header is simplified, but not smaller. The header is fixed at 40 Bytes or octets long. Several IPv4 fields were removed to improve performance. Some IPv4 fields were removed to improve performance: Flag Fragment Offset Header Checksum © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 19 IPv6 Packets IPv6 Packet Header Significant fields in the IPv6 header: Function Description Version This will be for v6, as opposed to v4, a 4 bit field= 0110 Traffic Class Used for QoS: Equivalent to DiffServ – DS field Flow Label Informs device to handle identical flow labels the same way, 20 bit field Payload Length This 16-bit field indicates the length of the data portion or payload of the IPv6 packet Next Header I.D.s next level protocol: ICMP, TCP, UDP, etc. Hop Limit Replaces TTL field Layer 3 hop count Source IPv4 Address 128 bit source address Destination IPV4 Address 128 bit destination address © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 20 IPv6 Packets IPv6 Packet Header (Cont.) IPv6 packet may also contain extension headers (EH). EH headers characteristics: provide optional network layer information are optional are placed between IPv6 header and the payload may be used for fragmentation, security, mobility support, etc. Note: Unlike IPv4, routers do not fragment IPv6 packets. © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 21 IPv6 Packets Video – Sample IPv6 Headers in Wireshark This video will cover the following: IPv6 Ethernet packets in Wireshark The control information The difference between packets © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 22 8.4 How a Host Routes © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 23 How a Host Routes Host Forwarding Decision Packets are always created at the source. Each host devices creates their own routing table. A host can send packets to the following: Itself – 127.0.0.1 (IPv4), ::1 (IPv6) Local Hosts – destination is on the same LAN Remote Hosts – devices are not on the same LAN © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 24 How a Host Routes Host Forwarding Decision (Cont.) The Source device determines whether the destination is local or remote Method of determination: IPv4 – Source uses its own IP address and Subnet mask, along with the destination IP address IPv6 – Source uses the network address and prefix advertised by the local router Local traffic is dumped out the host interface to be handled by an intermediary device. Remote traffic is forwarded directly to the default gateway on the LAN. © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 25 How a Host Routes Default Gateway A router or layer 3 switch can be a default-gateway. Features of a default gateway (DGW): It must have an IP address in the same range as the rest of the LAN. It can accept data from the LAN and is capable of forwarding traffic off of the LAN. It can route to other networks. If a device has no default gateway or a bad default gateway, its traffic will not be able to leave the LAN. © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 26 How a Host Routes A Host Routes to the Default Gateway The host will know the default gateway (DGW) either statically or through DHCP in IPv4. IPv6 sends the DGW through a router solicitation (RS) or can be configured manually. A DGW is static route which will be a last resort route in the routing table. All device on the LAN will need the DGW of the router if they intend to send traffic remotely. © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 27 How a Host Routes Host Routing Tables On Windows, route print or netstat -r to display the PC routing table Three sections displayed by these two commands: Interface List – all potential interfaces and MAC addressing IPv4 Routing Table IPv6 Routing Table © 2016 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 28

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