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Internet History.ppt

1、1: Introduction,1,Internet History,1961: Kleinrock - queueing theory shows effectiveness of packet-switching 1964: Baran - packet-switching in military nets 1967: ARPAnet conceived by Advanced Reearch Projects Agency 1969: first ARPAnet node operational,1972: ARPAnet demonstrated publicly NCP (Netwo

2、rk Control Protocol) first host-host protocol first e-mail program ARPAnet has 15 nodes,1961-1972: Early packet-switching principles,1: Introduction,2,Internet History,1970: ALOHAnet satellite network in Hawaii 1973: Metcalfes PhD thesis proposes Ethernet 1974: Cerf and Kahn - architecture for inter

3、connecting networks late70s: proprietary architectures: DECnet, SNA, XNA late 70s: switching fixed length packets (ATM precursor) 1979: ARPAnet has 200 nodes,Cerf and Kahns internetworking principles: minimalism, autonomy - no internal changes required to interconnect networks best effort service mo

4、del stateless routers decentralized control define todays Internet architecture,1972-1980: Internetworking, new and proprietary nets,1: Introduction,3,Internet History,1983: deployment of TCP/IP 1982: smtp e-mail protocol defined 1983: DNS defined for name-to-IP-address translation 1985: ftp protoco

5、l defined 1988: TCP congestion control,new national networks: Csnet, BITnet, NSFnet, Minitel 100,000 hosts connected to confederation of networks,1980-1990: new protocols, a proliferation of networks,1: Introduction,4,Internet History,Early 1990s: ARPAnet decomissioned 1991: NSF lifts restrictions o

6、n commercial use of NSFnet (decommissioned, 1995) early 1990s: WWW hypertext Bush 1945, Nelson 1960s HTML, http: Berners-Lee 1994: Mosaic, later Netscape late 1990s: commercialization of the WWW,Late 1990s: est. 50 million computers on Internet est. 100 million+ users backbone links runnning at 1 Gb

7、ps,1990s: commercialization, the WWW,1: Introduction,5,ATM: Asynchronous Transfer Mode nets,Internet: todays de facto standard for global data networking 1980s: telcos develop ATM: competing network standard for carrying high-speed voice/data standards bodies: ATM Forum ITU,ATM principles: small (48

8、 byte payload, 5 byte header) fixed length cells (like packets) fast switching small size good for voice virtual-circuit network: switches maintain state for each “call” well-defined interface between “network” and “user” (think of telephone company),1: Introduction,6,ATM layers,ATM Adaptation Layer

9、 (AAL): interface to upper layers end-system segmentation/reassembly ATM Layer: cell switching Physical,1: Introduction,7,Summary on Introduction,Covered a “ton” of material! Internet overview whats a protocol? network edge, core, access network performance: loss, delay layering and service models b

10、ackbones, NAPs, ISPs history ATM network,You now hopefully have: context, overview, “feel” of networking more depth, detail later in course,1: Introduction,8,Application Layer,Goals: conceptual + implementation aspects of network application protocols client server paradigm service models learn abou

11、t protocols by examining popular application-level protocols,More goals specific protocols: http ftp smtp pop dns programming network applications socket programming,1: Introduction,9,Applications and application-layer protocols,Application: communicating, distributed processes running in network ho

12、sts in “user space” exchange messages to implement app e.g., email, file transfer, the Web Application-layer protocols one “piece” of an app define messages exchanged by apps and actions taken user services provided by lower layer protocols,1: Introduction,10,Client-server paradigm,Typical network a

13、pp has two pieces: client and server,Client: initiates contact with server (“speaks first”) typically requests service from server, e.g.: request WWW page, send email Server: provides requested service to client e.g., sends requested WWW page, receives/stores received email,1: Introduction,11,Applic

14、ation-layer protocols (cont).,API: application programming interface defines interface between application and transport layer socket: Internet API two processes communicate by sending data into socket, reading data out of socket,Q: how does a process “identify” the other process with which it wants

15、 to communicate? IP address of host running other process “port number” - allows receiving host to determine to which local process the message should be delivered, lots more on this later.,1: Introduction,12,What transport service does an app need?,Data loss some apps (e.g., audio) can tolerate som

16、e loss other apps (e.g., file transfer, telnet) require 100% reliable data transfer,Timing some apps (e.g., Internet telephony, interactive games) require low delay to be “effective”,Bandwidth some apps (e.g., multimedia) require minimum amount of bandwidth to be “effective” other apps (“elastic app

17、s”) make use of whatever bandwidth they get,1: Introduction,13,Transport service requirements of common apps,Applicationfile transfer e-mail Web documents real-time audio/videostored audio/video interactive games financial apps,Data lossno loss no loss no loss loss-tolerantloss-tolerant loss-toleran

18、t no loss,Bandwidthelastic elastic elastic audio: 5Kb-1Mb video:10Kb-5Mb same as above few Kbps up elastic,Time Sensitiveno no no yes, 100s msecyes, few secs yes, 100s msec yes and no,1: Introduction,14,Internet apps: their protocols and transport protocols,Applicatione-mail remote terminal access W

19、eb file transfer streaming multimediaremote file server Internet telephony,Application layer protocolsmtp RFC 821 telnet RFC 854 http RFC 2068 ftp RFC 959 proprietary (e.g. RealNetworks) NSF proprietary (e.g., Vocaltec),Underlying transport protocolTCP TCP TCP TCP TCP or UDPTCP or UDP typically UDP,

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