kbnetworkIntermediate Systems; Repeaters, Bridges, Routers, and Gateways, are networking devices that facilitate the transmission of packets between the source computer and the final destination computer. Although the gateway involves all seven levels of the OSI model, these devices are generally thought of as functioning at the lowest three levels; Physical, Data Link, and Network.MORE INFORMATION
Repeaters strengthen the physical transmission signal. In analog electronic
networks, such as Ethernet and Token Ring, the signal is also improved or
cleaned up by regenerating the square wave that has degenerated as it
traveled down the wire.
DefinitionsGateway: (All OSI layers)Translator. Allows communication between two dissimilar protocols (eg: IPX and NetBEUI) or physical networks (eg: Ethernet and Token Ring).NOTE: In TCP/IP terminology, a gateway = router. Router: (Network Layer.) Uses the Network address. Protocol independent. Can change between topologies even in the frame size changes between the segments or networks. Breaks-up the network into separate physical segments, filtering out traffic and increasing each segments bandwidth or capacity.Bridge: (Data Link level.) Frame-level, Understands the network adapter address in the packet. Protocol independent. Can change between topologies if the frame size between the networks is the same.Brouter: A combination device. A Bridge with some of the features of a Router.Repeater: (Physical level) Bit-level. Topology and Protocol independent. Strengthens and/or cleans-up the transmission signal. Additional query words:
Keywords : ntgeneral ntprotocol |
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