1. What are the two types of transmission technology
available?
(i)
Broadcast and (ii) point-to-point
2.
What
is subnet?
A
generic term for section of a large networks usually separated by a bridge or
router.
3.
Difference
between the communication and transmission.
Transmission is a physical movement of information and concern issues like bit
polarity, synchronisation, clock etc.
Communication means the meaning full exchange of information between two
communication media.
4.
What
are the possible ways of data exchange?
(i)
Simplex (ii) Half-duplex (iii)
Full-duplex.
5.
What
is SAP?
Series
of interface points that allow other computers to communicate with the other
layers of network protocol stack.
6.
What
do you meant by "triple X" in Networks?
The function of PAD (Packet Assembler Disassembler) is
described in a document known as X.3. The standard protocol has been defined
between the terminal and the PAD, called X.28; another standard protocol exists
between hte PAD and the network, called X.29. Together, these three
recommendations are often called "triple X"
7.
What
is frame relay, in which layer it comes?
Frame relay is a packet switching technology. It
will operate in the data link layer.
8.
What
is terminal emulation, in which layer it comes?
Telnet
is also called as terminal emulation. It belongs to application layer.
9.
What
is Beaconing?
The
process that allows a network to self-repair networks problems. The stations on
the network notify the other stations on the ring when they are not receiving
the transmissions. Beaconing is used in Token ring and FDDI networks.
10. What is redirector?
Redirector is software that intercepts file or prints I/O requests and
translates them into network requests. This comes under presentation layer.
11. What is NETBIOS and NETBEUI?
NETBIOS is a programming interface that allows I/O requests to be sent to and
received from a remote computer and it hides the networking hardware from
applications.
NETBEUI is NetBIOS extended user interface. A transport protocol designed by
microsoft and IBM for the use on small subnets.
12. What is RAID?
A
method for providing fault tolerance by using multiple hard disk drives.
13. What is passive topology?
When
the computers on the network simply listen and receive the signal, they are
referred to as passive because they don’t amplify the signal in any way.
Example for passive topology - linear bus.
14. What is Brouter?
Hybrid
devices that combine the features of both bridges and routers.
15. What is cladding?
A
layer of a glass surrounding the center fiber of glass inside a fiber-optic
cable.
16. What is point-to-point protocol
A
communications protocol used to connect computers to remote networking services
including Internet service providers.
17. How Gateway is different from Routers?
A
gateway operates at the upper levels of the OSI model and translates
information between two completely different network architectures or data
formats
18. What is attenuation?
The
degeneration of a signal over distance on a network cable is called
attenuation.
19. What is MAC address?
The
address for a device as it is identified at the Media Access Control (MAC)
layer in the network architecture. MAC address is usually stored in ROM on the
network adapter card and is unique.
20. Difference between bit rate and baud rate.
Bit rate is the number of bits transmitted during one second whereas baud rate
refers to the number of signal units per second that are required to represent
those bits.
baud
rate = bit rate / N
where N is
no-of-bits represented by each signal shift.
21. What is Bandwidth?
Every line has an upper
limit and a lower limit on the frequency of signals it can carry. This
limited range is called the bandwidth.
22. What
are the types of Transmission media?
Signals are
usually transmitted over some transmission media that are broadly classified in
to two categories.
a)
Guided Media:
These are those
that provide a conduit from one device to another that include twisted-pair,
coaxial cable and fiber-optic cable. A signal traveling along any of these
media is directed and is contained by the physical limits of the medium.
Twisted-pair and coaxial cable use metallic that accept and transport signals
in the form of electrical current. Optical fiber is a glass or plastic cable
that accepts and transports signals in the form of light.
b) Unguided Media:
This is the
wireless media that transport electromagnetic waves without using a physical
conductor. Signals are broadcast either through air. This is done through radio
communication, satellite communication and cellular telephony.
23. What is Project 802?
It is a project
started by IEEE to set standards to enable intercommunication between equipment
from a variety of manufacturers. It is a way for specifying functions of the
physical layer, the data link layer and to some extent the network layer to
allow for interconnectivity of major LAN
protocols.
It consists of
the following:
Ø
802.1 is an internetworking standard for
compatibility of different LANs and MANs across protocols.
Ø
802.2 Logical link control (LLC) is the upper
sublayer of the data link layer which is non-architecture-specific, that is
remains the same for all IEEE-defined LANs.
Ø
Media access control (MAC) is the lower sublayer
of the data link layer that contains some distinct modules each carrying proprietary
information specific to the LAN product being used. The modules are Ethernet
LAN (802.3), Token ring LAN (802.4), Token bus LAN (802.5).
Ø
802.6 is distributed queue dual bus (DQDB)
designed to be used in MANs.
24. What is Protocol Data Unit?
The data unit in
the LLC level is called the protocol data unit (PDU). The PDU contains of four
fields a destination service access point (DSAP), a source service access point
(SSAP), a control field and an information field. DSAP, SSAP are addresses used
by the LLC to identify the protocol stacks on the receiving and sending
machines that are generating and using the data. The control field specifies
whether the PDU frame is a information frame (I - frame) or a supervisory frame
(S - frame) or a unnumbered frame (U - frame).
25. What are the different type of networking /
internetworking devices?
Repeater:
Also called a
regenerator, it is an electronic device that operates only at physical layer.
It receives the signal in the network before it becomes weak, regenerates the
original bit pattern and puts the refreshed copy back in to the link.
Bridges:
These operate
both in the physical and data link layers of LANs of same type. They divide a
larger network in to smaller segments. They contain logic that allow them to
keep the traffic for each segment separate and thus are repeaters that relay a
frame only the side of the segment containing the intended recipent and control
congestion.
Routers:
They relay
packets among multiple interconnected networks (i.e. LANs of different type).
They operate in the physical, data link and network layers. They contain
software that enable them to determine which of the several possible paths is
the best for a particular transmission.
Gateways:
They relay
packets among networks that have different protocols (e.g. between a LAN and a
WAN). They accept a packet formatted for one protocol and convert it to a
packet formatted for another protocol before forwarding it. They operate in all
seven layers of the OSI model.
26. What is ICMP?
ICMP is Internet
Control Message Protocol, a network layer protocol of the TCP/IP suite used by
hosts and gateways to send notification of datagram problems back to the
sender. It uses the echo test / reply to test whether a destination is
reachable and responding. It also handles both control and error messages.
27. What are the data units at different layers of
the TCP / IP protocol suite?
The data unit
created at the application layer is called a message, at the transport layer
the data unit created is called either a segment or an user datagram, at the
network layer the data unit created is called the datagram, at the data link
layer the datagram is encapsulated in to a frame and finally transmitted as
signals along the transmission media.
28. What is difference between ARP and RARP?
The address
resolution protocol (ARP) is used to associate the 32 bit IP address with the
48 bit physical address, used by a host or a router to find the physical
address of another host on its network by sending a ARP query packet that
includes the IP address of the receiver.
The reverse
address resolution protocol (RARP) allows a host to discover its Internet
address when it knows only its physical address.
29. What is the minimum and maximum length of the
header in the TCP segment and IP datagram?
The header should have a minimum length of 20
bytes and can have a maximum length of 60 bytes.
30. What is the range of addresses in the classes of
internet addresses?
Class
A
0.0.0.0
- 127.255.255.255
Class
B
128.0.0.0
- 191.255.255.255
Class
C
192.0.0.0
- 223.255.255.255
Class
D
224.0.0.0 -
239.255.255.255
Class E
240.0.0.0
-
247.255.255.255
31. What is the difference between TFTP and FTP
application layer protocols?
The Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP) allows a local host to obtain files
from a remote host but does not provide reliability or security. It uses the
fundamental packet delivery services offered by UDP.
The File Transfer Protocol (FTP) is the standard mechanism provided by TCP / IP
for copying a file from one host to another. It uses the services offer by TCP
and so is reliable and secure. It establishes two connections (virtual
circuits) between the hosts, one for data transfer and another for control
information.
32. What are major types of networks and explain?
Ø Server-based network
Ø Peer-to-peer network
Peer-to-peer network, computers can act as both
servers sharing resources and as clients using the resources.
Server-based networks provide centralized control
of network resources and rely on server computers to provide security and
network administration
33. What are the important topologies for networks?
Ø
BUS
topology:
In this each computer is directly connected to
primary network cable in a single line.
Advantages:
Inexpensive,
easy to install, simple to understand, easy to extend.
Ø STAR topology:
In this all computers are connected using a central hub.
Advantages:
Can be inexpensive, easy to install and
reconfigure and easy to trouble shoot physical problems.
Ø
RING
topology:
In this all computers are connected in loop.
Advantages:
All computers have equal access to network media, installation can be simple,
and signal does not degrade as much as in other topologies because each
computer regenerates it.
34. What is mesh network?
A network in which there are multiple network
links between computers to provide multiple paths for data to travel.
35. What is difference between baseband and broadband
transmission?
In a baseband transmission, the entire bandwidth
of the cable is consumed by a single signal. In broadband transmission, signals
are sent on multiple frequencies, allowing multiple signals to be sent
simultaneously.
36. Explain 5-4-3 rule?
In a Ethernet network, between any two points on
the network ,there can be no more than five network segments or four repeaters,
and of those five segments only three of segments can be populated.
37. What MAU?
In token Ring , hub is called Multistation Access
Unit(MAU).
38. What is the difference between routable and non-
routable protocols?
Routable protocols can work with a router and can
be used to build large networks. Non-Routable protocols are designed to work on
small, local networks and cannot be used with a router
39. Why should you care about the OSI Reference
Model?
It provides a framework for discussing network
operations and design.
40. What is logical link control?
One of two sublayers of the data link layer of
OSI reference model, as defined by the IEEE 802 standard. This sublayer is
responsible for maintaining the link between computers when they are sending
data across the physical network connection.
41. What is virtual channel?
Virtual channel is normally a connection from one source to
one destination, although multicast connections are also permitted. The other
name for virtual channel is virtual circuit.
42. What is virtual path?
Along any transmission path from a given source to a given
destination, a group of virtual circuits can be grouped together into what is
called path.
43. What is packet filter?
Packet filter is a standard router equipped with some extra
functionality. The extra functionality allows every incoming or outgoing packet
to be inspected. Packets meeting some criterion are forwarded normally. Those
that fail the test are dropped.
44. What is traffic shaping?
One of the main causes of congestion is that traffic is
often busy. If hosts could be made to transmit at a uniform rate, congestion
would be less common. Another open loop method to help manage congestion is
forcing the packet to be transmitted at a more predictable rate. This is called
traffic shaping.
45. What is multicast routing?
Sending a message to a group is called multicasting, and its
routing algorithm is called multicast routing.
46. What is region?
When hierarchical routing is used, the routers are divided
into what we will call regions, with each router knowing all the details about
how to route packets to destinations within its own region, but knowing nothing
about the internal structure of other regions.
47. What is silly window syndrome?
It is a problem that can ruin TCP performance. This problem
occurs when data are passed to the sending TCP entity in large blocks, but an
interactive application on the receiving side reads 1 byte at a time.
48. What are Digrams and
Trigrams?
The most common two letter combinations are called as digrams.
e.g. th, in, er, re and an. The most common three letter combinations are
called as trigrams. e.g. the, ing, and, and ion.
49. Expand IDEA.
IDEA stands for International Data Encryption Algorithm.
50. What is wide-mouth frog?
Wide-mouth frog is the simplest known key distribution
center (KDC) authentication protocol.
51. What is Mail Gateway?
It is a system that performs a protocol
translation between different electronic mail delivery protocols.
52. What is IGP (Interior Gateway Protocol)?
It is any routing protocol used within an
autonomous system.
53. What is EGP (Exterior Gateway Protocol)?
It is the protocol the routers in neighboring
autonomous systems use to identify the set of networks that can be reached
within or via each autonomous system.
54. What is autonomous system?
It is a collection of routers under the control
of a single administrative authority and that uses a common Interior Gateway
Protocol.
55. What is BGP (Border Gateway Protocol)?
It is a protocol used to advertise the set of
networks that can be reached with in an autonomous system. BGP enables this
information to be shared with the autonomous system. This is newer than EGP
(Exterior Gateway Protocol).
56. What is Gateway-to-Gateway protocol?
It is a protocol formerly used to exchange
routing information between Internet core routers.
57. What is NVT (Network Virtual Terminal)?
It is a set of rules defining a very simple
virtual terminal interaction. The NVT is used in the start of a Telnet session.
58. What is a Multi-homed Host?
It is a host that has a multiple network
interfaces and that requires multiple IP addresses is called as a Multi-homed
Host.
59. What is Kerberos?
It is an authentication service developed at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Kerberos uses encryption to prevent
intruders from discovering passwords and gaining unauthorized access to files.
60. What is OSPF?
It is an Internet routing protocol that scales
well, can route traffic along multiple paths, and uses knowledge of an
Internet's topology to make accurate routing decisions.
61. What is Proxy ARP?
It is using a router to answer ARP requests. This
will be done when the originating host believes that a destination is local,
when in fact is lies beyond router.
62. What is SLIP (Serial Line Interface Protocol)?
It is a very simple protocol used for
transmission of IP datagrams across a serial line.
63. What is RIP (Routing Information Protocol)?
It is a simple protocol used to exchange
information between the routers.
64. What is source route?
It is a sequence of IP addresses identifying the
route a datagram must follow. A source route may optionally be included in an
IP datagram header.