NOTE

  • In the OSI Model and 5 Layer TCP/IP Model, Ethernet Protocol belongs in both the Physical Layer (Layer 1) & Data Link Layer (Layer 2)
  • Layer 1 Ethernet contains the Physical Aspects (Cables) and Layer 2 Ethernet deals with the Logical Aspects (Protocols)

Communication Synchronization

Asynchronous Communication

Data is send when the receiver is not present/ active
e.g. Sending a Voicemail
Start and stop bits are used to indicate the start and end of the transmission to the receiver

Synchronous Communication

Uses a reference clock to coordinate the transmission between the sender and receiver

Bandwidth Utilization

Bandwidth: Measures the theoretical data transfer capacity
Throughput: Measures the actual data transfer capacity

Broadband

Divides bandwidth into separate channels
TV channels - we choose the portion of the bandwidth (channel) we what to use

Baseband

Uses all available frequencies on the medium (cable) to transmit data
Telephone - uses the entire network bandwidth (1 call at a time)
Ethernet Cable - uses the entire bandwidth to transmit data
Baseband uses a reference clock (Synchronous Communication)

Network Multiplexing

Allows to simultaneously use baseband connection

Time-Division Multiplexing (TDM)

Each session takes a turn, using time slots, to share the medium between users
Time slots are assigned even if the user does not need it

Statical Time-Division Multiplexing (StatTDM)

Dynamically allocates the time slots on an as-needed basis

Frequency-Division Multiplexing (FDM)

Divides the medium into channels based on frequencies and each session is transmitted over a different channel

Transceivers

Converts media from one format to another
GBIC: Hot pluggable Ethernet transceiver than can take copper or fiber as its connector

TransceiverSpeed
SFP (Small form-factor pluggable)Up to 4.2 Gbps
SFP+Up to16 Gbps
QSFP (Quad Small form-factor pluggable)Up to 40 Gbps
QSFP+Up to 41.2 Gbps
QSFP28Up to 100 Gbps
QSFP56Up to 200 Gbps