Ethernet
Ethernet is a family of protocols used in LANs, described by a set of standards together called IEEE 802 published by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. It has a flat addressing scheme and is mostly situated at levels 1 and 2 of the OSI model. For home users today, the most well-known member of this protocol family is IEEE 802.11, otherwise known as Wireless LAN
(WLAN). However, the complete protocol suite deals with a multitude of
networking aspects not only for home use, but especially when the
technology is deployed to support a diverse range of business needs. MAC bridging (IEEE 802.1D) deals with the routing of Ethernet packets using a Spanning Tree Protocol, IEEE 802.1Q describes VLANs, and IEEE 802.1X defines a port-based Network Access Control
protocol, which forms the basis for the authentication mechanisms used
in VLANs, but it is also found in WLANs – it is what the home user sees
when the user has to enter a "wireless access key".
No comments:
Post a Comment