Connecting to the Internet through an ISP Networking for Home & Small Business
Feb 25, 2016
Connecting to the Internet through an ISP
Networking for Home & Small Business
What this Chapter is About…• Every day people are online• We need to communicate• Internet Service Providers (ISP)
– Make this possible– Web of service providers
• You’ll see:– Why ISP’s are necessary– The Network Operations Centers
What is the Internet• Worldwide collection of computer networks,
cooperating with each other to exchange information using common standards– Network of networks that connects users in
every country in the world• Do this through:
– Wireless, fiber, telephone lines, satellite & more
The Internet• Who owns it?
– No one• What allows computers to communicate?
– Protocols• There are several organizations that help
manage it– Standards– Addressing
Imagine…• What would the Internet be like if no
organization granted domain names?– Might have 1000 www.nintendo.com sites
• What other areas did standards help in?– Mobile web (other browsers)– Any device with browser can access Internet– Use of various devices to access web
Internet Organizations• ISOC Internet Society
– Central leadership organization• IETF Internet Engineering Task Force
– Proposes solutions to Internet problems– Recommends protocol standards
• IRTF Internet Research Task Force– Researches future of Internet– How to handle transmissions during disaster
• IANA Internet Assigned Numbers Authority– Bookkeeper of who addresses are assigned to
ISP’s• What’s an ISP?
– Company that provides connections & support to access the Internet
• Name yours & others
ISP Services• What other services do ISP’s provide?
– Internet access– Domain name registration– Web hosting– Transit to all over
• Internet is a series of ISP’s connected to one another
Connect to the ISP through POP• Point of Presence• Between your LAN & the ISP• Where you get the ISP’s services- closest point of
connection
High Speed Backbone
Maps• http://www.telegeography.com/maps/index.
php
Review1. Describe the Internet.2. What does ISP stand for?
– Internet Service Provider3. What does an ISP do?
– Provides connection to the Internet4. What is the connection point between the
ISP and your LAN?– POP
Options for Connecting to the ISP• Dial-up- slowest, telephone lines• Cell Phone Modem- becoming fast• DSL- high speed over phone lines• Cable Modem- high speed over cable lines• Leased Line- high speed over dedicated digital
lines, for businesses, T1• Satellite- medium speeds
Connecting to the ISP• Modem is used to connect to ISP• You may have an ISR to connect multiple
computers to the modem
ISP Service Levels• Home Service
– Slower speed – Less expensive– Less web space– Fewer email addresses
• Business Class– Faster speed– More expensive– More web space– More email addresses– SLA (Service Level Agreements)
• Network availability terms• Service response time• Link
Asymmetric Service• Download transfer rate is
different from upload rate– Common in homes, most
Internet users– Download is faster
Symmetric Service• Download transfer rate is
same as upload rate– Common in businesses or
hosting servers– Great for uploading lots of
video, data, graphics
Which ISP?
End of Day One
Activity• Complete 4.1.5-3
• Handout Research
• Go home & test your speed HW!• http://www.speedtest.net
Review1. Name some features that a business
class ISP service would offer that home service does not.
2. Describe asymmetric service.3. Describe symmetric service.4. What is a POP?
– Connection between LAN & ISP5. What’s the high speed links that connect
ISPs called?– backbone
The Importance of IP• Internet Protocol
– Uses packets to carry data– IP carries what you do on the Internet– Contains source & destination IP address
IP Packet• Header contains the IP addresses & control
info for routers
• IP addresses MUST be unique• ISP gets blocks of addresses
– Then they manage & split them up
How an ISP handles Packets• Before hitting the Internet, your message is
divided into small packets– Downloading a 1 MB song requires over 600 packets
of 1500 bytes each• ISP determines whether packet is for local or for
remote network
NOC• Controls traffic flow
– Uses destination IP• Has services (web hosting, email)
NOC- AT &T Monitoring
Network Utilities• Ping
– End-to-end connectivity
• Traceroute– Traces path
from source to destination
– Displays each hop
Activities• Packet Tracer 4.2.3.2• Lab 4.2.3.3
The Internet Cloud• Many routes to a destination
– Bad router- take the back road!• Cloud represents Internet or another
network
Devices in the Cloud• More than just routers• Tech at home must match tech at ISP
– DSL connects to a DSLAM (access multiplexer)
– Cable Modem connects to a CMTS (termination system)
• Must have equipment to connect to other ISPs
• Must handle lots of traffic, near 100% uptime, redundant
Devices in the Cloud
Devices in the Cloud
Activity
Review1. A DSLAM is needed at the ISP for which
technology?– DSL
2. What does DSL stand for?– Digital Subscriber Line
3. A CMTS is needed for which technology?– Cable Modem
4. What do you need to connect to the Internet?
– IP Address, default Gateway, connection to a network, and an ISP to connect you
Home & Business Devices
Home & Business Environment
Cables• What’s another name for cable?
– Medium– Channel
• Copper• Fiber Optic
Network Cables
Twisted Pair Cabling• Electricity over the copper wires• Pairs twisted inside jacket• Can get EMI• Crosstalk on long runs
– Cat 5 has 3-4 twists per inch– Makes it more resistant to interference
Kinds of Twisted Pair• UTP
– Electricity– Inexpensive– Easy to install– 4 pairs of wires, color coded– RJ45 connector
• Cat 5 & 5e– 100 & 1000Mbps
• Cat 6– 1000Mbps & higher
Review1. What connector is on UTP?
– RJ452. What is the high speed links called that
connect ISPs?– Backbone
3. A router, switch & access point all in one is called what?
– ISR
Coax Cable• Transmits electricity• Better shielding than UTP• Harder to install than UTP• ISP uses these for CMTS
Fiber Optic Cables• Transmits pulses of light• Used in big environments• Glass or plastic• No EMI• High speed
– LAN backbone– Connect ISP to Internet
• 2 fibers– Transmit & receive
Fiber Optic Cables• Multimode
– Less $– Used in LANs/Campuses
• 2000 meters– LED– Many paths of light
• Single Mode– More $– Connects backbone/NOCs
• 3000 meters– LED laser– Single path of light
Activity- Fiber or UTP?
Cabling Standards• Specs for installing & testing cable
– Pinouts (order of wires)– Wire sizes– Shielding– Cable lengths– Connector types – Performance limits
UTP Cables• TIA/EIA
– 568A– 568B
Straight-Through Cable• 568B to 568B• Connect unlike devices
– Computer to Hub/Switch– Switch to router port
• On the PC NIC– Pins 1 & 2 transmit– Pins 3 & 6 receive
Crossover Cable• 568A to 568B• Like Devices
– Switch/hub port to switch/hub port– Router port to router port– PC to router port– PC to PC
UTP Termination• RJ45 male connector• Jack is female
Let’s make cables!• Straight-through• 568B to 568B
• White-Orange• Orange• White-Green• Blue• White-Blue• Green• White-Brown• Brown
Let’s make cables!• Crossover• 568B to 568A• Change Oranges & Greens on ONE SIDE!
• White-Green• Green• White-Orange• Blue• White-Blue• Orange• White-Brown• Brown
Terminating• Patch Panel
– Switchboard– Quickly
rearrange– RJ45
• Jacks
Lab• Terminate to a jack
Testing Cables• Open
– Wire not in connector– Break in wire
• Short– Copper touches another
• Reversed Pair• Split Pair
Other Tests- Degradation• Attenuation
– Measure of signal strength– If message fades at destination, will not be
understood
• Crosstalk– Signal leaks onto another pair of wires– Can happen if cables are not terminated
properly or low quality connectors
Cabling Best Practices• Cable Management
– Keeps wires neat & organized to easily find problems
– Protected from damage
Review• Which cable would you use:
– In your house?• UTP
– Between buildings?• Fiber
– To your cable modem?• Coax
– Where you get a lot of EMI?• Coax or fiber, NOT UTP!!