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Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network
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Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Dec 25, 2015

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Page 1: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Fundamentals of NetworkingDiscovery 1, Chapter 3Connecting to the Network

Page 2: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Objectives•Explain the concept of networking and the benefits

of networks.•Explain the concept of communication protocols.•Explain how communication occurs across a local

Ethernet network.•Describe Access Layer devices and communication

methods on a local Ethernet network.•Describe Distribution Layer devices and

communication methods across networks.

Page 3: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

What’s a Network?•Make a phone call, watching TV, radio, Internet,

Gaming▫All depend on a reliable network

•Group of connected devices able to communicate with each other

Page 4: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Communication Now•OLD: ▫Separate, dedicated networks for voice, data, vide

•NOW: ▫Converged into one over a single channel▫Can you name examples?

Page 5: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Networks

Page 6: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Basic Network Components•4 categories of components▫Hosts▫Shared peripherals▫Networking devices▫Networking media

Page 7: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Hosts•They send & receive data•Have an IP Address

Page 8: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Shared Peripherals•Shared devices ARE connected to a host▫Rely on their connected hosts to share▫Software allows the sharing

•Print sharing with a USB connected printer

Page 9: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Networking devices•Connect hosts & other devices▫Hubs, switches, routers

•Move & control network traffic

Page 10: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Networking media•Connects Devices▫Can be wired or wireless

Page 11: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Activity

Page 12: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Handout•Complete Handout 1

Page 13: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Computer Roles in a Network• Host sends & receives data on a network▫Computer is a host▫Can act as a client and/or a server

• Server▫Provide info to other hosts on a network▫Simultaneously ▫Email, web pages, file access

Separate server software for each• Client▫Requests & displays info from the server▫Can check email & view web at same time

Web browser/IE, Outlook

Page 14: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Activity

Page 15: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Client-Server•Hosts have an IP Address

•Hosts can act as a client or server▫Depends on software installed

•Server provides services to other hosts▫Like providing email or web services

•Clients request & display info from servers

Page 16: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Popular Client-Server Network

•World of Warcraft•Players from all over the world connect & play

Page 17: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Peer-to-Peer Networks•One computer can sometimes act

as the server & the client• Simplest: 2 connected devices▫Uses a crossover cable or wireless

•Multiple PC’s connect with a hub• Disadvantage▫Host can slow down if doing both

• Not for large networks▫Dedicated servers to handle

requests

Page 18: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Peer-to-Peer Networks

Page 19: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Famous Peer-to-Peer• LimeWire▫Exchanging MP3’s with

another user▫Only connected with

that ONE user

Page 20: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Client, Server, or Both

Page 21: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Lab 3.1.5•Building a Peer-to-Peer Network

Page 22: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Physical Topology• Layout/Map of network•Shows where each host is located, wiring, network

devices

Page 23: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Logical Topology•Groups hosts by how they use the network▫Not physical location

•Host names, addresses, group info & applications can be recorded

Page 24: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Review•What does SOHO stand for?▫Small office home office

•What interconnects hosts & controls traffic?▫Network devices

•Which cable connects 2 PC’s together?▫Crossover cable

•Hosts are devices that have what?▫IP Addresses

•Describe client-server.

Page 25: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Principles of Communication•The Message•Source or Sender•Destination or

Receiver•Channel or

Pathway•Protocol or Rules

Page 26: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Rules of Human Communication•What are some of our rules of communication?▫What if there were no rules?

Page 27: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Protocols•Rules of Communication over a medium▫May be different depending on the medium

•Protocols define the details of how the message is transmitted and delivered

•This includes issues of:

Page 28: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Message Encoding• Encoding

• Converting thoughts into words• Bits are encoded for that

medium Light, electricity, or radio waves

• Destination will decode the message

Page 29: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Message Format for Delivery

Page 30: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Encapsulation of Data•Computer messages packed in a FRAME▫Acts like an envelope▫Provides the addresses▫Must be properly addresses or won’t be delivered

Page 31: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Handout•Complete Handout 2 & 3•Message Format Ordering

Page 32: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Review•What 4 things do you need for communication?▫Source, destination, channel, protocol

•Describe encoding.▫Bits into electricity, light, or radio waves

•A message is encapsulated in what?▫Frame

•Which 2 address are in the frame?▫Source & destination MAC address

Page 33: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

What We Talked About So Far

Page 34: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Message Size•You talk in sentences.▫Length will vary depending on what can be processed

or understood by the listener•Messages sent across networks are broken into

smaller pieces▫Size of a frame

Page 35: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Message Timing•People use timing to determine when to speak, how

fast or slow to talk, and how long to wait for a response. These are the rules of engagement.

•Access Method•Flow Control•Response Timeout

Page 36: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Message Timing•Access Method▫When to begin sending & how to respond to errors▫Collision if two talk at same time

•Flow Control▫Sender can transmit messages faster than the

destination can receive & process▫Use flow control to negotiate correct timing for

successful communication•Response Timeout▫How long to wait for responses & what to do

Page 37: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Unicast Message Pattern•Unicast▫1 to 1 single message

Page 38: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Multicast Message Pattern•Multicast▫1 to a group message

Page 39: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Broadcast Message Pattern•Broadcast▫1 to all

Page 40: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Activity

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Review•What is it called when one message format is placed

in another message format?▫Encapsulation

•Bob is talking to Sally. Which type of message pattern is this?▫Unicast

•Which address is used in a frame?▫MAC address (source & destination)

Page 42: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Review•Which message is one to all?▫Broadcast

Page 43: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Importance of Protocols•Computers need rules to communicate• Local network devices MUST speak same language•Most common wired protocol is ETHERNET

Page 44: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Early Days of Computing•Each vendor had their own rules•Standards had to be created

Page 45: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Standardizing• IEEE maintains standards approvals▫Assigned a #▫802.3 is Ethernet▫100Base-T

100 megabit Ethernet Baseband Transmission Twisted Pair Cabling

Page 46: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Physical Addressing•Remember encapsulating frames?▫Source & destination address needed

•Each host on Ethernet has a physical address (MAC Address)▫Burned into NIC

•NIC encapsulates source & dest. MAC•Host that receives frame reads dest. MAC▫If it contains its own MAC, it will process it▫If not, it ignores it

Page 47: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Example

Page 48: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Lab 3.3.3•Determine the Mac Address• Ipconfig /all

Page 49: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Ethernet Frame Structure•Frames are also called PDU’s▫Protocol Data Units▫64-1518 bytes each frame

▫Preamble for timing▫SFD is end of timing, begin frame▫FCS- helps check for damaged frames

Page 50: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Activity

Page 51: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

MAC & IP- Happy Together!IP MAC

MAC

Page 52: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Hierarchical Design Structure•MAC Address is like your name▫Doesn’t tell where you are on the network▫Not efficient by itself▫Imagine if all hosts on Internet could only be identified

by a MAC address•Ethernet is a broadcast technology▫Sent to all in a network▫Too much traffic & collisions, slows network

•Separate into smaller networks

Page 53: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Hierarchical in Life

Page 54: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Hierarchical Design in Networks•Dividing your network into smaller groups or layers▫Keeps local traffic local▫Only data intended for other networks will move on to other

layers•Access Layer▫Provides connections to hosts in a local Ethernet network.

•Distribution Layer▫ Interconnects the smaller local networks.

•Core Layer▫A high-speed connection between distribution layer devices.

Page 55: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

3 Layer Model

Page 56: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Access Layer•Hosts/Clients connect to hubs/switches• Local segmented networks

Page 57: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Distribution Layer•Routers•Routing occurs•Traffic delivered to other local networks•Security (ACL)

Page 58: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Core Layer•High-speed backbone•Redundant paths•Powerful routers/switches▫Just sends the data▫No changes here

Page 59: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Goals of 3 Layer Model•Think how you can limit traffic from going to where it

doesn’t need to be▫Less collisions▫More efficient data paths▫Better placement of devices

Radio File Storage Server

Teacher File Server- GCIT

PowerSchool Server

Page 60: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

IP Addressing•Your name doesn’t change but where you live might▫MAC stays on NIC▫Doesn’t change no matter where you move

• IP Address is like your address▫It is logical, not physical

•Needed to go beyond your network▫Stay local or go elsewhere???

Page 61: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

IP Addressing•2 parts▫Identify the network▫Identify the host

•Network portion is same for all devices on a local network

•209.120.5.72

Page 62: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

IP Network Example

Page 63: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Lab 3.3.6•Determine the IP Address of the Computer• Let’s do this together

•How do we find the IP Address through the command prompt?▫Ipconfig /all

•Why is an IP address important?

Page 64: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Handout•3 Layer Model & Addressing Activity

Page 65: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Review1. What is the process of placing one format into

another (like a letter into an envelope to be sent in the mail)?▫ Encapsulation

2. Which device is typically at the Distribution Layer?▫ Router

3. When a PC receives a message, which address is used to determine if it for that PC?▫ Destination MAC

Page 66: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Review1. Which organization creates & maintains the

standards?▫ IEEE▫ Why?

2. A frame contains which 2 addresses?▫ Source & Destination MAC

3. What does FCS stand for & what does it do?▫ Frame Check Sequence, checks for errors

Page 67: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Hubs•At Access Layer•Simple Device (DUMB)▫Message in one port, out all others▫Does not send to specific device▫Sends one message at a time

Collisions can occur They wait for silence, & then resend randomly Too many collisions slow the network Keep these collision domains SMALL

Page 68: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Pictures of Hubs

Page 69: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Hub Example

Page 70: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Hub & Collision Domain

Page 71: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Handout•Hubs

Page 72: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Switches•Access Layer•Connects multiple hosts like a hub▫Forwards a message to a specific host!▫Reads the destination MAC

•Has a MAC address table▫Ports & MAC addresses on them

•Creates a virtual circuit to destination•No bandwidth sharing between hosts•No collisions!

Page 73: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

How a switch works

Page 74: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

More about Switches…•What if destination MAC is NOT in the table?▫Floods message out all ports, except one it came in on▫Compare the destination MAC in frame▫Correct one processes the message

Page 75: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Switch Table•How does the switch add the MAC address to its

table?▫It examines the source MAC & port it came in on▫When it responds to a message, it adds it

•Updates table for every message

Page 76: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Example•Go to Slide 3.4.3-2

• Look at example

Page 77: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

What else about Switches?

•Hub attached to switch port scenario •Separate collision domains for each switch port

Page 78: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Switch Handout

Page 79: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Review1. Hubs & Switches are at which design layer?

▫ Access Layer2. Which device creates a virtual circuit from the

source to destination?▫ Switch

3. Which device sends data in one port & out all ports regardless of the destination?▫ Hub

Page 80: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Review1. Which address does a NIC read when deciding if the

message is for itself?▫ Destination MAC

2. In 100Base-T, what does the 100 mean?▫ 100Mbps▫ How about the T?

Twisted Pair Cabling3. If a switch receives a frame & doesn’t have the dest.

MAC in its table, what happens?▫ Floods it out all ports, except one it came in on

Page 81: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Broadcasts•One host can send messages to all other LOCAL hosts▫Find info from others▫Tell others something

•One destination MAC in a frame only▫There’s a special MAC address that all hosts will

receive & process▫48 bits, all binary 1’s▫In hexadecimal, FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF

• Look at 3.4.4

Page 82: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Broadcast Domain•Too many hosts in a domain, causes traffic backup▫This is why you divide into smaller LAN’s

Page 83: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Let’s Practice Together•Slide 3.4.5

Page 84: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

MAC & IP•What if you want to send data, but only know

their IP address and not their MAC?▫ARP (Address Resolution Protocol)

Page 85: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

ARP•Host sends out a broadcast frame w/ the IP address

of the destination host▫FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF

•Each host receives & compares the IP address to see if it is their own

•Matching host sends its MAC address back to source•Source then adds it to its ARP table•Then it can send the message

Page 86: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

ARP Example

Page 87: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

ARP Example

Page 88: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Review1. A broadcast frame contains which MAC address?

▫ All F’s2. How many bits is a MAC address?

▫ 483. Describe a broadcast4. What separates broadcasts?

Page 89: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Distribution Layer•Separates & connects your small networks▫Connects your Access Layer networks▫Can filter traffic & provide security

Page 90: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Routers•Distribution Layer•Connects different local networks•Reads the packet encaps. in frame▫Destination IP Address (network portion)▫Subnet Mask

•Finds best path to that destination network

Page 91: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Routers- The Path…•Each port connects a different local network•Rips open to find destination IP• Looks in Routing Table▫In the table:

Encapsulates in new frame Sends it out port towards or connected to that

destination•Routers DO NOT forward broadcasts!

Page 92: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Path Example- H1 to H4

Page 93: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Default Gateway•When sending a message on your local network you

use ARP to find dest. MAC•When sending a message on another network▫You encapsulate:

Source IP Source MAC Destination IP You don’t know the destination MAC! So you include the MAC of the router port! Router will receive & process this MAC, BUT NOT THE ARP

MAC broadcast!

Page 94: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Default Gateway•This IP is set in TCP/IP settings•Router port that your host connects to- same local

network▫ If the host knows the IP, it will use ARP to find out the MAC

address on router port

▫Example on next slide

Page 95: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Default Gateway

Page 96: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Default Gateway

Page 97: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Lab•Complete 3.5.3-2

Page 98: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Routing Tables•Networks & best path to reach them•Knows this info by:▫Dynamically learned from other routers▫Manually entered by admin

•No route in table?▫Drop it OR▫Default Route is set by admin

Page 99: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Routing Tables

Page 100: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Where does data go?•Directly to the network destined for•To another router

•When router forwards the frame, it MUST include a destination MAC▫If it is connected, it will use the dest MAC from its ARP

table▫If not, it will sub MAC address of connected router’s

port•ARP table for each port/local network

Page 101: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Look at…•3.5.4.2•3.5.4.3 activity

Page 102: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

LAN•Network over a small area▫Under one administration▫Router will separate

Page 103: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

How many local networks?

Page 104: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Adding hosts to a LAN•Advantages/Disadvantages?

Page 105: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Adding hosts to a LAN•Advantages/Disadvantages?

Page 106: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Planning a Network•Ethernet is most popular•Planning is key!•First, gather this info:▫The number & type of hosts to be connected▫The applications to be used▫Sharing & Internet connectivity requirements▫Security & privacy considerations▫Reliability & uptime expectations▫Connectivity requirements including, wired and

wireless

Page 107: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Plan & Document•Maps of topology•Physical environment▫Temperature▫Power

•Physical configuration▫ Location of network devices▫ Length of cables▫Hardware config

• Logical Configuration▫Broadcast & collision domains▫ IP & Naming Scheme

Page 108: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Physical Topology•How many broadcast, collision & networks?

Page 109: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Review1. Describe a default gateway.2. Each router port has an _______ table that hold

the MAC addresses of devices connected to each port.▫ ARP

3. Which one device will separate or segment a network?▫ Router

4. Describe a routing table.

Page 110: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Multifunction Devices• Integrated Routers▫Usually for SOHO▫Switch/router/access point

in one▫Single point of failure

•Cisco ISR▫Separate components to

add/replace

Page 111: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Linksys

Page 112: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Linksys

Page 113: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Connecting the Linksys•All connected to switch

ports MUST be in same IP network to communicate

•Display IP configuration settings▫Ipconfig▫Ipconfig /all

Page 114: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Lab•3.6.4

Page 115: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

Sharing Resources• XP has simple file sharing▫You can set more specific▫Full Control▫Modify▫Read & Execute▫ List Folder Contents▫Read▫Write

• Look at 3.6.5

Page 116: Fundamentals of Networking Discovery 1, Chapter 3 Connecting to the Network.

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