Computer Networking (CCS2201/CE-231) PDF 2020
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2020
Ehab Abousaif, Jim Kurose, Keith Ross
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This document is an introduction to computer networking, covering topics such as the Internet structure, different types of access networks and protocols. The document is part of Computer Networking: A Top-Down Approach 8th edition course material.
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Computer Networking CCS2201/CE-231: Introduction to Networks Dr. Ehab Abousaif PhD in Electrical and Computer Eng., University of Idaho, USA IEEE member, IMAPS member College of Computing and Information Technology, AASTMT Cell: 01114757888 Email: [email protected] Chapter 1 Introduction...
Computer Networking CCS2201/CE-231: Introduction to Networks Dr. Ehab Abousaif PhD in Electrical and Computer Eng., University of Idaho, USA IEEE member, IMAPS member College of Computing and Information Technology, AASTMT Cell: 01114757888 Email: [email protected] Chapter 1 Introduction Computer Networking: A A note on the use of these PowerPoint slides: Top-Down Approach These slides are based on the original slides made by the authors of the book. 8th edition These slides are a modified version of the original slides and have the same copyrights for Jim Kurose, Keith Ross the authors and for Dr. Ehab Abousaif who modify the slides and put it into this final form. Pearson, 2020 Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-1 CCS-2201/CE-231: Introduction to Networks Grading: At least 12-degrees out of 40 Continuous Assessment must be obtained in the final in the form of: exam to pass the course. Final exam is comprehensive. Assignments 5-degrees of the final exam will Reports be about Self-Learning Study. Quizzes No absence more than FOUR Lectures are allowed. Don’t Worry.. Just be Here Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-2 Chapter 1: introduction Chapter goal: Overview/roadmap: Get “feel,” “big picture,” What is the Internet? What is a introduction to terminology protocol? more depth, detail later in Network edge: hosts, access network, physical media course Network core: packet/circuit switching, internet structure Performance: loss, delay, throughput Security Protocol layers, service models History Tell me and I forget, Show me and I remember, Involve me and I understand … Chinese Proverb Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-3 The Internet: a “nuts and bolts” view Billions of connected mobile network computing devices: national or global ISP hosts = end systems running network apps at Internet’s “edge” Packet switches: forward packets (chunks of data) local or Internet regional ISP routers, switches home network content Communication links provider network datacenter fiber, copper, radio, satellite network transmission rate: bandwidth Networks enterprise collection of devices, routers, network links: managed by an organization Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-4 “Fun” Internet-connected devices Tweet-a-watt: monitor energy use bikes Pacemaker & Monitor Amazon Echo Web-enabled toaster + IP picture frame weather forecaster Internet refrigerator Slingbox: remote cars control cable TV Security Camera AR devices sensorized, scooters bed Others? mattress Gaming devices Internet phones Fitbit Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-5 The Internet: a “nuts and bolts” view mobile network 4G Internet: “network of networks” national or global ISP Interconnected ISPs protocols are everywhere Skype IP Streaming video control sending, receiving of messages local or regional ISP e.g., HTTP (Web), streaming video, Skype, TCP, IP, WiFi, 4G, Ethernet home network content provider HTTP network Internet standards datacenter network Ethernet RFC: Request for Comments IETF: Internet Engineering Task enterprise TCP Force network WiFi Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-6 The Internet: a “services” view Infrastructure that provides mobile network services to applications: national or global ISP Web, streaming video, multimedia teleconferencing, email, games, e- Streaming commerce, social media, inter- Skype video connected appliances, … local or regional ISP provides programming interface to distributed applications: home network content provider “hooks” allowing sending/receiving HTTP network datacenter apps to “connect” to, use Internet network transport service provides service options, analogous enterprise to postal service network Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-7 What’s a protocol? Human protocols: Network protocols: “what’s the time?” computers (devices) rather than humans “I have a question” all communication activity in Internet introductions governed by protocols Rules for: Protocols define the format, order of … specific messages sent messages sent and received among … specific actions taken network entities, and actions taken when message received, or other events on message transmission, receipt Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-8 What’s a protocol? A human protocol and a computer network protocol: Hi TCP connection request Hi TCP connection response Got the time? GET http://gaia.cs.umass.edu/kurose_ross 2:00 time Q: other human protocols? Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-9 Chapter 1: roadmap What is the Internet? What is a protocol? Network edge: hosts, access network, physical media Network core: packet/circuit switching, internet structure Performance: loss, delay, throughput Security Protocol layers, service models History Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-10 A closer look at Internet structure mobile network Network edge: national or global ISP hosts: clients and servers servers often in data centers local or regional ISP home network content provider network datacenter network enterprise network Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-11 A closer look at Internet structure mobile network Network edge: national or global ISP hosts: clients and servers servers often in data centers local or Access networks, physical media: regional ISP wired, wireless communication links home network content provider network datacenter network enterprise network Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-12 A closer look at Internet structure mobile network Network edge: national or global ISP hosts: clients and servers servers often in data centers local or Access networks, physical media: regional ISP wired, wireless communication links home network content provider network datacenter Network core: network interconnected routers network of networks enterprise network Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-13 Access networks and physical media Q: How to connect end systems mobile network to edge router? national or global ISP residential access nets institutional access networks (school, company) local or mobile access networks (WiFi, 4G/5G) regional ISP home network content provider network datacenter network enterprise network Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-14 Access networks: cable-based access cable headend … cable splitter modem C O V V V V V V N I I I I I I D D T D D D D D D A A R E E E E E E T T O O O O O O O A A L 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Channels frequency division multiplexing (FDM): different channels transmitted in different frequency bands Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-15 Access networks: cable-based access cable headend … cable splitter cable modem modem CMTS termination system data, TV transmitted at different frequencies over shared cable ISP distribution network HFC: hybrid fiber coax asymmetric: up to 40 Mbps – 1.2 Gbps downstream transmission rate, 30-100 Mbps upstream transmission rate network of cable, fiber attaches homes to ISP router homes share access network to cable headend Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-16 Access networks: digital subscriber line (DSL) central office telephone network DSL splitter modem DSLAM voice, data transmitted ISP at different frequencies over DSL access dedicated line to central office multiplexer use existing telephone line to central office DSLAM data over DSL phone line goes to Internet voice over DSL phone line goes to telephone net 24-52 Mbps dedicated downstream transmission rate 3.5-16 Mbps dedicated upstream transmission rate Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-17 Access networks: fiber to the home (FTTH) FTTH using the Passive Optical Network (PON) distribution architecture. Each home has an Optical Network Terminator (ONT), which is connected by dedicated optical fiber to a neighborhood splitter. The splitter combines a number of homes (typically less than 100) onto a single, shared optical fiber, which connects to an optical line terminator (OLT) in the telecommunication company (telco) central office (CO). The OLT, providing conversion between optical and electrical signals, connects to the Internet via a telco router. At home, users connect a home router (typically wireless) to the ONT and access the Internet via this home router. Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-18 Access networks: home networks Wireless and wired devices to/from headend or central office often combined in single box cable or DSL modem WiFi wireless access router, firewall, NAT point (54, 450 Mbps) wired Ethernet (1 Gbps) Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-19 Wireless access networks Shared wireless access network connects end system to router via base station aka “access point” Wireless local area networks Wide-area cellular access networks (WLANs) provided by mobile, cellular network typically within or around operator (10’s km) building (~100 ft) 10’s Mbps 802.11b/g/n (WiFi): 11, 54, 450 4G cellular networks (5G coming) Mbps transmission rate to Internet to Internet Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-20 Access networks: enterprise networks Enterprise link to ISP (Internet) institutional router Ethernet institutional mail, switch web servers companies, universities, etc. mix of wired, wireless link technologies, connecting a mix of switches and routers (we’ll cover differences shortly) Ethernet: wired access at 100Mbps, 1Gbps, 10Gbps WiFi: wireless access points at 11, 54, 450 Mbps Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-21 Access networks: data center networks mobile network high-bandwidth links (10s to 100s national or global ISP Gbps) connect hundreds to thousands of servers together, and to Internet local or regional ISP home network content provider network datacenter network Courtesy: Massachusetts Green High Performance Computing enterprise Center (mghpcc.org) network Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-22 Host: sends packets of data host sending function: takes application message breaks into smaller chunks, two packets, known as packets, of length L bits L bits each transmits packet into access network at transmission rate R 2 1 link transmission rate, aka link host capacity, aka link bandwidth R: link transmission rate packet time needed to L (bits) transmission = transmit L-bit = delay packet into link R (bits/sec) Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-23 Links: physical media bit: propagates between Twisted pair (TP) transmitter/receiver pairs two insulated copper wires physical link: what lies Category 5: 100 Mbps, 1 Gbps Ethernet between transmitter & Category 6: 10Gbps Ethernet receiver guided media: signals propagate in solid media: copper, fiber, coax unguided media: signals propagate freely, e.g., radio Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-24 Links: physical media Coaxial cable: Fiber optic cable: two concentric copper conductors glass fiber carrying light pulses, each pulse a bit bidirectional high-speed operation: broadband: high-speed point-to-point multiple frequency channels on cable transmission (10’s-100’s Gbps) 100’s Mbps per channel low error rate: repeaters spaced far apart immune to electromagnetic noise Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-25 Links: physical media Wireless radio Radio link types: signal carried in various Wireless LAN (WiFi) “bands” in electromagnetic 10-100’s Mbps; 10’s of meters spectrum wide-area (e.g., 4G cellular) no physical “wire” 10’s Mbps over ~10 Km broadcast, “half-duplex” Bluetooth: cable replacement (sender to receiver) short distances, limited rates propagation environment effects: terrestrial microwave reflection point-to-point; 45 Mbps channels obstruction by objects satellite Interference/noise up to 45 Mbps per channel 270 msec end-end delay Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-26 Chapter 1: roadmap What is the Internet? What is a protocol? Network edge: hosts, access network, physical media Network core: packet/circuit switching, internet structure Performance: loss, delay, throughput Security Protocol layers, service models History Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-27 The network core mesh of interconnected routers mobile network national or global ISP packet-switching: hosts break application-layer messages into packets network forwards packets from one local or router to the next, across links on regional ISP path from source to destination home network content provider network datacenter network enterprise network Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-28 Two key network-core functions routing algorithm Routing: Forwarding: local local forwarding forwarding table table global action: header value output link determine source- aka “switching” 0100 0101 3 2 destination paths local action: 0111 2 taken by packets move arriving 1001 1 packets from routing algorithms router’s input link 1 to appropriate router output link 3 2 destination address in arriving packet’s header Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-29 Packet-switching: store-and-forward L bits per packet 3 2 1 source destination R bps R bps packet transmission delay: takes L/R seconds to One-hop numerical example: transmit (push out) L-bit packet into link at R bps L = 10 Kbits store and forward: entire packet must arrive at R = 100 Mbps router before it can be transmitted on next link one-hop transmission delay = 0.1 msec Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-30 Packet-switching: queueing R = 100 Mb/s A C D B R = 1.5 Mb/s E queue of packets waiting for transmission over output link Queueing occurs when work arrives faster than it can be serviced: Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-31 Packet-switching: queueing R = 100 Mb/s A C D B R = 1.5 Mb/s E queue of packets waiting for transmission over output link Packet queuing and loss: if arrival rate (in bps) to link exceeds transmission rate (bps) of link for some period of time: packets will queue, waiting to be transmitted on output link packets can be dropped (lost) if memory (buffer) in router fills up Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-32 Alternative to packet switching: circuit switching end-end resources allocated to, reserved for “call” between source and destination in diagram, each link has four circuits. call gets 2nd circuit in top link and 1st circuit in right link. dedicated resources: no sharing circuit-like (guaranteed) performance circuit segment idle if not used by call (no sharing) commonly used in traditional telephone networks Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-33 Circuit switching: FDM and TDM Frequency Division Multiplexing (FDM) 4 users frequency optical, electromagnetic frequencies divided into (narrow) frequency bands each call allocated its own band, can transmit at max rate of that narrow time band Time Division Multiplexing (TDM) frequency time divided into slots each call allocated periodic slot(s), can transmit at maximum rate of (wider) time frequency band (only) during its time slot(s) Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-34 Packet switching versus circuit switching example: 1 Gb/s link N each user: users 1 Gbps link 100 Mb/s when “active” active 10% of time Q: how many users can use this network under circuit-switching and packet switching? circuit-switching: 10 users packet switching: with 35 users, probability > 10 active at same time is less than.0004 * Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-35 Packet switching versus circuit switching Is packet switching a “slam dunk winner”? great for “bursty” data – sometimes has data to send, but at other times not resource sharing simpler, no call setup excessive congestion possible: packet delay and loss due to buffer overflow protocols needed for reliable data transfer, congestion control Q: How to provide circuit-like behavior with packet-switching? “It’s complicated.” We’ll study various techniques that try to make packet switching as “circuit-like” as possible. Q: human analogies of reserved resources (circuit switching) versus on-demand allocation (packet switching)? Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-36 Internet structure: a “network of networks” mobile network hosts connect to Internet via access national or global ISP Internet Service Providers (ISPs) access ISPs in turn must be interconnected so that any two hosts (anywhere!) local or regional ISP can send packets to each other resulting network of networks is home network content provider very complex network datacenter network evolution driven by economics, enterprise national policies network Let’s take a stepwise approach to describe current Internet structure Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-35 Internet structure: a “network of networks” Question: given millions of access ISPs, how to connect them together? access access net net access net access access net net access access net net access access net net access net access net access net access net access access net access net net Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-38 Internet structure: a “network of networks” Question: given millions of access ISPs, how to connect them together? access access net net access net access access net net access access net net connecting each access ISP to each other directly doesn’t scale: O(N2) connections. access access net net access net access net access net access net access access net access net net Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-39 Internet structure: a “network of networks” Option: connect each access ISP to one global transit ISP? Customer and provider ISPs have economic agreement. access access net net access net access access net net access access net net global access net ISP access net access net access net access net access net access access net access net net Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-40 Internet structure: a “network of networks” But if one global ISP is viable business, there will be competitors …. access access net net access net access access net net access access ISP A net net access net ISP B access net access ISP C net access net access net access net access access net access net net Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-41 Internet structure: a “network of networks” But if one global ISP is viable business, there will be competitors …. who will want to be connected Internet exchange point access access net net access net access access net net IXP access access ISP A net net access net IXP ISP B access net access ISP C net access net access net peering link access net access access net access net net Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-42 Internet structure: a “network of networks” … and regional networks may arise to connect access nets to ISPs access access net net access net access access net net IXP access access ISP A net net access net IXP ISP B access net access ISP C net access net access net regional ISP access net access access net access net net Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-43 Internet structure: a “network of networks” … and content provider networks (e.g., Google, Microsoft, Akamai) may run their own network, to bring services, content close to end users access access net net access net access access net net IXP access access ISP A net net Content provider network access net IXP ISP B access net access ISP C net access net access net regional ISP access net access access net access net net Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-44 Internet structure: a “network of networks” Tier 1 ISP Tier 1 ISP Google IXP IXP IXP Regional ISP Regional ISP access access access access access access access access ISP ISP ISP ISP ISP ISP ISP ISP At “center”: small # of well-connected large networks “tier-1” commercial ISPs (e.g., Level 3, Sprint, AT&T, NTT), national & international coverage content provider networks (e.g., Google, Facebook): private network that connects its data centers to Internet, often bypassing tier-1, regional ISPs Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-45 Chapter 1: roadmap What is the Internet? What is a protocol? Network edge: hosts, access network, physical media Network core: packet/circuit switching, internet structure Performance: loss, delay, throughput Security Protocol layers, service models History Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-46 How do packet delay and loss occur? packets queue in router buffers, waiting for turn for transmission queue length grows when arrival rate to link (temporarily) exceeds output link capacity packet loss occurs when memory to hold queued packets fills up packet being transmitted (transmission delay) A B packets in buffers (queueing delay) free (available) buffers: arriving packets dropped (loss) if no free buffers Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-47 Packet delay: four sources transmission A propagation B nodal processing queueing dnodal = dproc + dqueue + dtrans + dprop dproc: nodal processing dqueue: queueing delay check bit errors time waiting at output link for determine output link transmission typically < microsecs depends on congestion level of router Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-48 Packet delay: four sources transmission A propagation B nodal processing queueing dnodal = dproc + dqueue + dtrans + dprop dtrans: transmission delay: dprop: propagation delay: L: packet length (bits) d: length of physical link R: link transmission rate (bps) s: propagation speed (~2x108 m/sec) dtrans = L/R dprop = d/s dtrans and dprop very different Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-49 Caravan analogy 100 km 100 km ten-car caravan toll booth toll booth toll booth (aka 10-bit packet) (aka link) car ~ bit; caravan ~ packet; toll time to “push” entire caravan service ~ link transmission through toll booth onto toll booth takes 12 sec to service highway = 12*10 = 120 sec car (bit transmission time) time for last car to propagate “propagate” at 100 km/hr from 1st to 2nd toll both: 100km/(100km/hr) = 1 hr Q: How long until caravan is lined up before 2nd toll booth? A: 62 minutes Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-50 Caravan analogy 100 km 100 km ten-car caravan toll booth toll booth (aka 10-bit packet) (aka router) suppose cars now “propagate” at 1000 km/hr and suppose toll booth now takes one min to service a car Q: Will cars arrive to 2nd booth before all cars serviced at first booth? A: Yes! after 7 min, first car arrives at second booth; three cars still at first booth Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-51 Packet queueing delay (revisited) a: average packet arrival rate average queueing delay L: packet length (bits) R: link bandwidth (bit transmission rate) L.a arrival rate of bits “traffic : R service rate of bits intensity” traffic intensity = La/R 1 La/R ~ 0: avg. queueing delay small La/R ~ 0 La/R -> 1: avg. queueing delay large La/R > 1: more “work” arriving is more than can be serviced - average delay infinite! La/R -> 1 Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-52 “Real” Internet delays and routes what do “real” Internet delay & loss look like? traceroute program: provides delay measurement from source to router along end-end Internet path towards destination. For all i: sends three packets that will reach router i on path towards destination (with time-to-live field value of i) router i will return packets to sender sender measures time interval between transmission and reply 3 probes 3 probes 3 probes Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-53 Real Internet delays and routes traceroute: gaia.cs.umass.edu to www.eurecom.fr 3 delay measurements from gaia.cs.umass.edu to cs-gw.cs.umass.edu 1 cs-gw (128.119.240.254) 1 ms 1 ms 2 ms 3 delay measurements 2 border1-rt-fa5-1-0.gw.umass.edu (128.119.3.145) 1 ms 1 ms 2 ms 3 cht-vbns.gw.umass.edu (128.119.3.130) 6 ms 5 ms 5 ms to border1-rt-fa5-1-0.gw.umass.edu 4 jn1-at1-0-0-19.wor.vbns.net (204.147.132.129) 16 ms 11 ms 13 ms 5 jn1-so7-0-0-0.wae.vbns.net (204.147.136.136) 21 ms 18 ms 18 ms 6 abilene-vbns.abilene.ucaid.edu (198.32.11.9) 22 ms 18 ms 22 ms 7 nycm-wash.abilene.ucaid.edu (198.32.8.46) 22 ms 22 ms 22 ms trans-oceanic link 8 62.40.103.253 (62.40.103.253) 104 ms 109 ms 106 ms 9 de2-1.de1.de.geant.net (62.40.96.129) 109 ms 102 ms 104 ms 10 de.fr1.fr.geant.net (62.40.96.50) 113 ms 121 ms 114 ms looks like delays 11 renater-gw.fr1.fr.geant.net (62.40.103.54) 112 ms 114 ms 112 ms 12 nio-n2.cssi.renater.fr (193.51.206.13) 111 ms 114 ms 116 ms decrease! Why? 13 nice.cssi.renater.fr (195.220.98.102) 123 ms 125 ms 124 ms 14 r3t2-nice.cssi.renater.fr (195.220.98.110) 126 ms 126 ms 124 ms 15 eurecom-valbonne.r3t2.ft.net (193.48.50.54) 135 ms 128 ms 133 ms 16 194.214.211.25 (194.214.211.25) 126 ms 128 ms 126 ms 17 * * * 18 * * * * means no response (probe lost, router not replying) 19 fantasia.eurecom.fr (193.55.113.142) 132 ms 128 ms 136 ms * Do some traceroutes from exotic countries at www.traceroute.org Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-54 Packet loss queue (aka buffer) preceding link in buffer has finite capacity packet arriving to full queue dropped (aka lost) lost packet may be retransmitted by previous node, by source end system, or not at all buffer (waiting area) packet being transmitted A B packet arriving to full buffer is lost * Check out the Java applet for an interactive animation (on publisher’s website) of queuing and loss Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-55 Throughput throughput: rate (bits/time unit) at which bits are being sent from sender to receiver instantaneous: rate at given point in time average: rate over longer period of time link capacity pipe that can carry linkthat pipe capacity can carry Rsfluid bits/sec at rate Rfluid c bits/sec at rate serverserver, sends with bits (fluid) into pipe (Rs bits/sec) (Rc bits/sec) file of F bits to send to client Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-56 Throughput Rs < Rc What is average end-end throughput? Rs bits/sec Rc bits/sec Rs > Rc What is average end-end throughput? Rs bits/sec Rc bits/sec bottleneck link link on end-end path that constrains end-end throughput Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-57 Throughput: network scenario per-connection end- Rs end throughput: Rs Rs min(Rc,Rs,R/10) in practice: Rc or Rs is R often bottleneck Rc Rc Rc * Check out the online interactive exercises for more examples: http://gaia.cs.umass.edu/kurose_ross/ 10 connections (fairly) share backbone bottleneck link R bits/sec Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-58 Chapter 1: roadmap What is the Internet? What is a protocol? Network edge: hosts, access network, physical media Network core: packet/circuit switching, internet structure Performance: loss, delay, throughput Security Protocol layers, service models History Introduction: 1-59 Network security Internet not originally designed with (much) security in mind original vision: “a group of mutually trusting users attached to a transparent network” Internet protocol designers playing “catch-up” security considerations in all layers! We now need to think about: how bad guys can attack computer networks how we can defend networks against attacks how to design architectures that are immune to attacks Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-60 Network security Internet not originally designed with (much) security in mind original vision: “a group of mutually trusting users attached to a transparent network” Internet protocol designers playing “catch-up” security considerations in all layers! We now need to think about: how bad guys can attack computer networks how we can defend networks against attacks how to design architectures that are immune to attacks Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-61 Bad guys: packet interception packet “sniffing”: broadcast media (shared Ethernet, wireless) promiscuous network interface reads/records all packets (e.g., including passwords!) passing by A C src:B dest:A payload B Wireshark software used for our end-of-chapter labs is a (free) packet-sniffer Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-62 Bad guys: fake identity IP spoofing: injection of packet with false source address A C src:B dest:A payload B Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-63 Bad guys: denial of service Denial of Service (DoS): attackers make resources (server, bandwidth) unavailable to legitimate traffic by overwhelming resource with bogus traffic 1. select target 2. break into hosts around the network (see botnet) 3. send packets to target target from compromised hosts Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-64 Lines of defense: authentication: proving you are who you say you are cellular networks provides hardware identity via SIM card; no such hardware assist in traditional Internet confidentiality: via encryption integrity checks: digital signatures prevent/detect tampering access restrictions: password-protected VPNs firewalls: specialized “middleboxes” in access and core networks: off-by-default: filter incoming packets to restrict senders, receivers, applications detecting/reacting to DOS attacks … lots more on security (throughout, Chapter 8) Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-65 Chapter 1: roadmap What is the Internet? What is a protocol? Network edge: hosts, access network, physical media Network core: packet/circuit switching, internet structure Performance: loss, delay, throughput Security Protocol layers, service models History Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-66 Protocol “layers” and reference models Networks are complex, Question: is there any with many “pieces”: hope of organizing hosts structure of network? routers and/or our discussion links of various media of networks? applications protocols hardware, software Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-67 Example: organization of air travel end-to-end transfer of person plus baggage ticket (purchase) ticket (complain) baggage (check) baggage (claim) gates (load) gates (unload) runway takeoff runway landing airplane routing airplane routing airplane routing How would you define/discuss the system of airline travel? a series of steps, involving many services Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-68 Example: organization of air travel ticket (purchase) ticketing service ticket (complain) baggage (check) baggage service baggage (claim) gates (load) gate service gates (unload) runway takeoff runway service runway landing airplane routing routing service airplane routing airplane routing layers: each layer implements a service via its own internal-layer actions relying on services provided by layer below Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-69 Why layering? Approach to designing/discussing complex systems: explicit structure allows identification, relationship of system’s pieces layered reference model for discussion modularization eases maintenance, updating of system change in layer's service implementation: transparent to rest of system e.g., change in gate procedure doesn’t affect rest of system Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-70 Layered Internet protocol stack application: supporting network applications HTTP, IMAP, SMTP, DNS application application transport: process-process data transfer TCP, UDP transport transport network: routing of datagrams from source to destination network IP, routing protocols link link: data transfer between neighboring network elements physical Ethernet, 802.11 (WiFi), PPP physical: bits “on the wire” Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-71 Services, Layering and Encapsulation M application Application exchanges messages to implement some application application service using services of transport layer Ht M transport Transport-layer protocol transfers M (e.g., reliably) from transport one process to another, using services of network layer network transport-layer protocol encapsulates network application-layer message, M, with link transport layer-layer header Ht to create a link transport-layer segment Ht used by transport layer protocol to physical implement its service physical source destination Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-72 Services, Layering and Encapsulation M application application Ht M transport Transport-layer protocol transfers M (e.g., reliably) from transport one process to another, using services of network layer network Hn Ht M network Network-layer protocol transfers transport-layer segment [Ht | M] from one host to another, using link layer services link link network-layer protocol encapsulates transport-layer segment [Ht | M] with physical network layer-layer header Hn to create a physical network-layer datagram source Hn used by network layer protocol to destination implement its service Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-73 Services, Layering and Encapsulation M application application Ht M transport transport network Hn Ht M network Network-layer protocol transfers transport-layer segment [Ht | M] from one host to another, using link layer services link Hl Hn Ht M link Link-layer protocol transfers datagram [Hn| [Ht |M] from host to neighboring host, using network-layer services physical physical link-layer protocol encapsulates network datagram [Hn| [Ht |M], with link-layer header source Hl to create a link-layer frame destination Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-74 Services, Layering and Encapsulation M application M application message Ht M transport Ht M transport segment network Hn Ht M Hn Ht M network datagram link Hl Hn Ht M Hl Hn Ht M link frame physical physical source destination Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-75 message M source application Encapsulation: an segment Ht datagram Hn Ht M transport network end-end view M frame Hl Hn Ht M link physical link physical switch destination Hn Ht M network M application Hl Hn Ht M link Hn Ht M Ht M transport physical Hn Ht M network Hl Hn Ht M link router physical Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-76 ISO/OSI reference model Two layers not found in Internet application protocol stack! presentation presentation: allow applications to interpret meaning of data, e.g., encryption, session compression, machine-specific conventions transport session: synchronization, checkpointing, network recovery of data exchange link Internet stack “missing” these layers! physical these services, if needed, must be implemented in application The seven layer OSI/ISO reference model needed? Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-77 Chapter 1: roadmap What is the Internet? What is a protocol? Network edge: hosts, access network, physical media Network core: packet/circuit switching, internet structure Performance: loss, delay, throughput Security Protocol layers, service models History Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-78 Internet history 1961-1972: Early packet-switching principles 1961: Kleinrock - queueing 1972: theory shows effectiveness of ARPAnet public demo packet-switching NCP (Network Control Protocol) 1964: Baran - packet-switching first host-host protocol in military nets first e-mail program 1967: ARPAnet conceived by ARPAnet has 15 nodes Advanced Research Projects Agency 1969: first ARPAnet node operational Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-77 Internet history 1972-1980: Internetworking, new and proprietary networks 1970: ALOHAnet satellite Cerf and Kahn’s internetworking network in Hawaii principles: 1974: Cerf and Kahn - minimalism, autonomy - no architecture for interconnecting internal changes required to networks interconnect networks best-effort service model 1976: Ethernet at Xerox PARC stateless routing late70’s: proprietary decentralized control architectures: DECnet, SNA, XNA define today’s Internet architecture 1979: ARPAnet has 200 nodes Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-80 Internet history 1980-1990: new protocols, a proliferation of networks 1983: deployment of TCP/IP new national networks: CSnet, 1982: smtp e-mail protocol BITnet, NSFnet, Minitel defined 100,000 hosts connected to 1983: DNS defined for name- confederation of networks to-IP-address translation 1985: ftp protocol defined 1988: TCP congestion control Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-81 Internet history 1990, 2000s: commercialization, the Web, new applications early 1990s: ARPAnet late 1990s – 2000s: decommissioned more killer apps: instant 1991: NSF lifts restrictions on messaging, P2P file sharing commercial use of NSFnet network security to forefront (decommissioned, 1995) est. 50 million host, 100 million+ early 1990s: Web users hypertext [Bush 1945, Nelson 1960’s] HTML, HTTP: Berners-Lee backbone links running at Gbps 1994: Mosaic, later Netscape late 1990s: commercialization of the Web Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-82 Internet history 2005-present: scale, SDN, mobility, cloud aggressive deployment of broadband home access (10-100’s Mbps) 2008: software-defined networking (SDN) increasing ubiquity of high-speed wireless access: 4G/5G, WiFi service providers (Google, FB, Microsoft) create their own networks bypass commercial Internet to connect “close” to end user, providing “instantaneous” access to social media, search, video content, … enterprises run their services in “cloud” (e.g., Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure) rise of smartphones: more mobile than fixed devices on Internet (2017) ~18B devices attached to Internet (2017) Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-83 Chapter 1: summary We’ve covered a “ton” of material! Internet overview what’s a protocol? You now have: network edge, access network, core context, overview, packet-switching versus circuit- switching vocabulary, “feel” Internet structure of networking performance: loss, delay, throughput more depth, layering, service models detail, and fun to security follow! history Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-84 Wireshark application (www browser, packet email client) analyzer application OS packet Transport (TCP/UDP) Network (IP) capture copy of all Ethernet frames Link (Ethernet) (pcap) sent/received Physical Copyrights ©Dr. Ehab Abousaif - Introduction: 1-85