Network+ Tables
Network+ Tables
Max
Designation Cable Type Speed Connector Topology Standard
Length
IEEE
10BASE-T Cat3 UTP 100 m 10 Mbps RJ45 star
802.3i
IEEE
10BASE-FL MMF 2000 m 10 Mbps ST star
802.3j
100BASE- Cat5 UTP, IEEE
100 m 100 Mbps RJ45 star
TX Cat5e FTP 802.3u
412 m 100 Mbps
(half (half
100BASE- duplex) duplex) star, point- IEEE
Micro MMF SC
FX 2000 m 200 Mbps point 802.3u
(full (full
duplex) duplex)
Cat5e / Cat6
1000BASE- IEEE
UTP (4 100 m 1 Gbps RJ45 star
T 802.3ab
pairs)
1000BASE- star, point- IEEE
Twinax STP 25 m 1 Gbps HSSDC
CX point 802.3z
550 m
1000BASE- (50u) IEEE
Micro MMF 1 Gbps SC point-point
SX 275 m 802.3z
(62.5u)
550 m
1000BASE- SMF or (MMF) IEEE
1 Gbps SC, LC point-point
LX MMF 5000 m 802.3z
(SMF)
10 GBASE- 850nm serial IEEE
MMF 300 m 10 Gbps point-point
SR LAN 802.3ae
10 GBASE- 1310nm IEEE
MMF 10,000 m 10 Gbps point-point
LR serial LAN 802.3ae
10 GBASE- 1550nm IEEE
MMF 40,000 m 10 Gbps point-point
ER serial LAN 802.3ae
Network topologies
Access
Standard Description Speed Topology Media
Method
10, 100, physical star, UTP, STP, fiber
802.3 Ethernet CSMA/CD
1000 Mbps logical bus optics
Token physical star,
802.5 Token ring 4, 16 Mbps STP
passing logical ring
1, 11, 54
802.11 Wireless networks CSMA/CA cellular Atmosphere
Mbps
Fiber Distributed Token
FDDI 100 Mbps dual ring Fiber optics
Data Interface passing
Data
Standard Frequency Transmission Type Topology Range
Speed
IEEE 802.11
2 Mbps 2.4 GHz FHSS or DSSS Point-point 30 m
Legacy
IEEE
11 Mbps 2.4 GHz DSSS with CCK Point-point 30 m
802.11b WiFi
IEEE 802.11a
54 Mbps 5 GHz OFDM Point-point 30 m
WiFi
IEEE >20 Mbps: OFDM, <20
54 Mbps 2.4 GHz Point-point 30 m
802.11g WiFi Mbps: DSSS with CCK
IEEE
540 Mbps 2.4/5 GHz MIMO Point-point 50 m
802.11n WiFi
Bluetooth 2 Mbps 2.45 GHz FHSS Scatternet 10 m
100 kbps~ 100 GHz ~ 1000 Point-point
Infrared Baseband 1m
16 Mbps THz LOS
IEEE 802.16 2 GHz ~ 11 Point-point
75 Mbps BPSK 30 km
WiMax GHz, 66 GHz Cellular
Data Transfer
Drive Description Capacity
Speed
60 kbps, 125
QIC Quarter Inch Cartridge; formats: 3.5", 5.25" 20 GB, 50 GB
kbps
1 Mbps, 1.83
Travan Enhancement of QIC; formats: TR4, TR5 4/8 GB, 10/20 GB
Mbps
Digital Audio Tape; formats: DDS (Digital 40 GB (DDS), 160 4.8 Mbps, 20
DAT
Data Storage), DLT (Digital Linear Tape) GB (DLT) Mbps
An 8mm backup format used in computer 10/20 GB, 20/40 3 Mbps, 6
Mammoth
systems; AIT (Advanced Intelligent Tape) GB Mbps
The Open Systems Interconnect reference model
Tool Usage
Wire crimper Used to affix an UTP/STP cable to a modular connector or plug
Used to affix several cables to a punchdown block or a patch panel found in
Punchdown tool
wiring cabinets
Media Used to test continuity or polarity of cables, trace shorts along the line; can’t
tester/certifier be used on live/active wires
Used along with a probe to verify cable continuity, identify wiring faults,
Tone generator
determine line voltage and polarity; can be used in active wires
Types of media connectors
Lock
Connector Description Usage Developed by
Method
Registered Jack modular telephone
RJ11 snap-in Bell Telephone Labs
connector (6P2C) equipments, PBX
twisted pair ethernet,
Registered Jack modular
RJ45 snap-in PoE, ISDN, T1, Bell Telephone Labs
connector (8P8C)
token ring
F-type coaxial connector broadband cable,
F-type screw-on
(75Ω) CATV, CCTV
Bayonet Nut Coupling thin ethernet, RF
BNC bayonet Bell Labs, Amphenol
(50Ω) applications
Straight Tip fiber optic
ST bayonet fiber optic ethernet AT&T
connector
Subscriber/Square fiber optic gigabit
SC snap-in IBM
Connector ethernet
fiber optic gigabit
LC Local Connector (SFF) snap-in Lucent
ethernet
Mechanical Transfer
MT-RJ snap-in fiber optic ethernet AMP
Registered Jack (SFF)
Apple, Sony,
digital devices,
IEEE 1394 FireWire (i.Link) snap-in Samsung, Matshusita,
consumer electronics
IBM, JVC, …
HP, Compaq, Lucent,
Universal Serial Bus digital devices,
USB snap-in Microsoft, Intel, NEC,
(1.1 & 2.0) computer peripherals
Philips
Network connectivity devices
Rules of subnetting
No Rule
1 B bits => 2; R bits => 2
2 Usable subnets created = 2B - 2
3 Usable hosts per subnet = 2R - 2
4 Decimal value of the number of bits borrowed = increment of the subnets
Optical carriers
Characteristics of fault-tolerance
Item Implementation
UPS, SPS; backup generators, cooling fans, processors; surge suppressor; line
Power
conditioners
Link Backup links: ISDN, dial-up; microwave wireless radios; secondary ISP;
redundancy clustering
Storage Hardware or software RAID; SCSI hard disks; data warehousing
Mission critical servers and equipments: gateways, routers, switches; SAN
Services
clusters, MSOS
Disaster Backup/restore schemes; offsite storage: NAS, SAN; hot/cold spares; hot,
recovery warm, cold sites
Authentication protocols
Name Function
Uses a hashed algorithm MD5 that provides client
Challenge Handshake
CHAP response encryption; weak and one-way
Authentication Protocol
authentication protocol
Microsoft Challenge Has two versions used in Windows systems that
MS-
Handshake Authentication offers more security; version1 not compatible with
CHAP
Protocol version2
The weakest authentication protocol that sends
Password Authentication
PAP username and password in clear text over the network
Protocol
to be verified by RAS
Remote Authentication Dial- An industry standard that provides authentication,
RADIUS
in User Service authorization, and accounting services
A fully-fledge security system that uses secret key
Kerberos -
cryptography
A general protocol often used by a wireless devices to
Extensible Authentication
EAP connect to a RADIUS server; TLS uses certificates
Protocol
such as smart cards
Routing protocols
Vendor Releases
Novell Netware 3.x, 4.x, 5.x, 6.x
Microsoft Windows NT, Windows 2000, Windows Server 2003
Apple Mac OS X, AppleShare IP
UNIX/Linux SCO ACE, RedHat
Backup types
Clears
Type Description Sets to restore
archive bit?
full/normal backs up all data; longest time to backup Y full only
backs up files changed or added since the last full + every
incremental Y
backup; faster to backup; uses more tapes incremental
backs up files changed or added since the last full + last
differential N
full backup; faster to restore; uses lesser tapes differential
mirror/copy backs up all data; used to make offsite copies; N -
TCP/IP utilities
IEEE Standards
Standard Description
802.1 Internetworking
802.2 Logical Link Control (LLC)
802.3 Ethernet (CSMA/CD)
802.4 Token bus LAN
802.5 Token ring LAN
802.6 Metropolitan Area Network (MAN)
802.7 Broadband technical advisory
802.8 Fiber optic
802.9 Integrated voice/data
802.10 Network Security
802.11 Wireless Networks
802.12 Demand Priority (100VG-Any LAN)
802.13 Not used
802.14 Cable modem
802.15 Wireless personal area network
802.16 Broadband wireless access
802.17 Resilient packet ring
Troubleshooting strategy
No Step
1 Identify the symptoms
2 Identify the affected area
3 Establish what has changed
4 Select the most probable cause
5 Implement a solution and action plan
6 Test the result
7 Recognize the effects of the solution
8 Document the solution and process
Security protocols
The most common type of cable is Unshielded Twisted Pair (UTP); as the name suggests, this
type of cable includes an unshielded media that includes twisted pairs. Specifically, UTP
includes four different pairs of copper cables that are each twisted together; the twisted rate
depends on the specific category of cable. Figure 1 shows an example of UTP cabling:
Most networks in the last 15 years or so have included UTP cabling that is at least rated as
category 5; this cabling supports Ethernet data rates up to 100 Mbps. On modern networks that
have been deployed recently, it is common to install at least a category 6 cable with support for
up to 1000 Mbps; Table 1 shows a short list of the available UTP categories and their supported
rates.
Another type of twisted pair cabling includes a shield that is used to both contain and protect the
different twisted pairs from interference. This type of cabling is not commonly seen in modern
LAN networks deployments at the time of this writing; however some newer very high speed
Ethernet technologies may require a cable that has a shield and thus will be shown here.
The term STP can include a number of different cable types which all include a shielding
mechanism. Some cable types include a shield only between the different twisted pairs within the
cable and others include various shielding types both around the pairs and the whole cable; the
specifics will not be covered in this article. Figure 2 shows an example of an STP cable that has a
shield between the pairs and the whole cable:
A very common type of fiber connection is Multi-Mode fiber (MMF); this type of cable uses
light to transmit signals between devices and is thus not susceptible to electrical interference.
MMF cables use a larger internal core diameter (typically, 50 µm or 62.5 µm) and can utilize
lower cost LEDs for transmission; this is both an advantage and a disadvantage. While the larger
core diameter offers a cable that supports multiple modes and a cable that is easier to work with
(light coming into the cable is allowed to come in at multiple angles), it is also limited by the
same factors in terms of total useable cable length. MMF cables are typically only used for
connections that are less than 2 kilometers in length; this also makes it a very common cable in
LAN deployments. Figure 3 below shows an example of a MMF cable:
Like Multi-Mode Fiber (MMF), Single Mode Fibers (SMF) transmits signals via light and is not
subject to electrical interference. The difference between SMF and MMF is in their physical
characteristics; a MMF cable has a large core diameter and is able to accept a number of
different modes that come into the cable from multiple angles, SMF has a much smaller core
diameter (typically 8-10 µm) and accepts signals coming in from a specific angle and on a
specific mode. The specifics of how the light propagate within the cable are really outside the
scope of required knowledge of an entry level network engineer/administrator; what does need to
be known is that MMF is typically used for shorter cable runs (up to 2 km typically) and SMF
can be used for cable runs of very long distances (typically up to ~40 miles without repeaters
depending on wavelength). Figure 4 below shows an example of a SMF fiber:
Figure 4 Single-Mode Fiber (SMF) Cable
Connectors
With all the different types of cabling come a number of different cable connectors. This section
takes a look at the most common cabling connectors.
The cable connector that is found on almost all UTP and STP cables is a Registered Jack 45
which is mostly commonly referred to as RJ45. This type of connector resembles the older RJ11
connectors that most people are familiar with from wired telephones. Figure 5 below shows an
example of a RJ45 connector:
The Straight Tip (ST) connector is often seen on the end of a multi-mode cable; it has been
commonly seen along with the SC connector for the last 20 years but is being slowly replaced by
multi-fiber connectors (LC and MTP). Figure 6 below shows an example of a ST connector:
The Lucent Connector (LC) was developed for high-density deployments where multiple fibers
would be terminated within a confined space. Unlike the SC and ST connectors, the LC
connector is always duplex connecting a pair of fibers at a time. Figure 8 below shows an
example of a LC connector:
The Multi-fiber Push On (MPO) connector is another duplex connector that offers an easy
options for connection. As the name suggests, it was designed to be able to be connected
multiple times without the creation of any potential connector issues. It is often also referred to
as Multi-fiber Termination Push-on (MTP); the MTP connector is a brand name (US Conec).
Figure 9 below shows an example of an MPO connector: