Ch. 2: Fundamentals of Ethrnet LANs Flashcards

1
Q

Ethernet

A

A series of LAN standards defined by the IEEE, originally invented by Xerox Corporation and developed jointly by Xerox, Intel, and Digital Equipment Corporation.

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2
Q

IEEE

A

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. A professional organization that develops communications and network standards, among other activities.

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3
Q

wired LAN

A

A local-area network (LAN) that physically transmits bits using cables, often the wires inside cables. A term for local-area networks that use cables, emphasizing the fact that the LAN transmits data using wires (in cables) instead of wireless radio waves.

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4
Q

Ethernet frame

A

A term referring to an Ethernet data-link header and trailer, plus the data encapsulated between the header and trailer.

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5
Q

10BASE-T

A

The 10-Mbps baseband Ethernet specification using two pairs of twisted-pair cabling (Categories 3, 4, or 5): one pair transmits data and the other receives data. 10BASE-T, which is part of the IEEE 802.3 specification, has a distance limit of approximately 100 m (328 feet) per segment.

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6
Q

100BASE-T

A

A name for the IEEE Fast Ethernet standard that uses two-pair copper cabling, a speed of 100 Mbps, and a maximum cable length of 100 meters.

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7
Q

1000BASE-T

A

A name for the IEEE Gigabit Ethernet standard that uses four-pair copper cabling, a speed of 1000 Mbps (1 Gbps), and a maximum cable length of 100 meters.

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8
Q

Fast Ethernet

A

The common name for all the IEEE standards that send data at 100 megabits per second.

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9
Q

Gigabit Ethernet

A

The common name for all the IEEE standards that send data at 1 gigabit per second.

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10
Q

Ethernet link

A

A generic term for any physical link between two Ethernet nodes, no matter what type of cabling is used.

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11
Q

RJ-45

A

A popular type of cabling connector used for Ethernet cabling. It is similar to the RJ-11 connector used for telephone wiring in homes in the United States. It allows the connection of eight wires.

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12
Q

Ethernet port

A

A generic term for the opening on the side of any Ethernet node, typically in an Ethernet NIC or LAN switch, into which an Ethernet cable can be connected.

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13
Q

network interface card (NIC)

A

A computer card, sometimes an expansion card and sometimes integrated into the motherboard of the computer, that provides the electronics and other functions to connect to a computer network. Today, most are specifically Ethernet, and most have an RJ-45 port, the most common type of Ethernet port.

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14
Q

straight-through cable

A

In Ethernet, a cable that connects the wire on pin 1 on one end of the cable to pin 1 on the other end of the cable, pin 2 on one end to pin 2 on the other end, and so on.

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15
Q

crossover cable

A

An Ethernet cable that swaps the pair used for transmission on one device to a pair used for receiving on the device on the opposite end of the cable. In 10BASE-T and 100BASE-TX networks, this cable swaps the pair at pins 1,2 to pins 3,6 on the other end of the cable, and the pair at pins 3,6 to pins 1,2 as well.

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16
Q

Ethernet address

A

A 48-bit (6-byte) binary number, usually written as a 12-digit hexadecimal number, used to identify Ethernet nodes in an Ethernet network. Ethernet frame headers list a destination and source address field, used by the Ethernet devices to deliver Ethernet frames to the correct destination.

17
Q

MAC address

A

A standardized data-link layer address that is required for every device that connects to a LAN. Ethernet MAC addresses are 6 bytes long and are controlled by the IEEE. Also known as a hardware address, a MAC layer address, and a physical address.

18
Q

unicast address

A

Generally, any address in networking that represents a single device or interface, instead of a group of addresses (as would be represented by a multicast or broadcast address).

19
Q

broadcast address

A

Generally, any address that represents all devices, and can be used to send one message to all devices.

20
Q

Frame Check Sequence

A

A field in many data-link trailers used as part of the error-detection process.

21
Q

transceiver

A

A term formed from the words transmitter and receiver. The hardware used to both send (transmit) energy over some communications medium (e.g., wires in a cable), as well as to process received energy signals to interpret as a series of 1s and 0s.

22
Q

multimode fiber

A

A type of fiber cable that works well with transmitters like LEDs that emit multiple angles of light into the core of the cable; to accommodate the multiple angles of incident, the cable has a larger core in comparison to single-mode fiber cables.

23
Q

single-mode fiber

A

A type of fiber cable that works well with transmitters like lasers that emit a single angle of light into the core of the cable, allowing for a smaller core in comparison to multimode fiber cables.

24
Q

electromagnetic interference (EMI)

A

The name of the effect in which electricity passes through one cable as normal, inducing a magnetic field outside the conductor. That magnetic field, if it passes through another conductor, like a nearby cable, induces new electrical current in the second cable, interfering with the use of electricity to transmit data on the second cable.

25
Q

core

A

In fiber-optic cabling, the center cylinder of the cable, made of fiberglass, through which light passes.

26
Q

cladding

A

In fiber-optic cabling, the second layer of the cable, surrounding the core of the cable, with the property of reflecting light back into the core.

27
Q

fiber-optic cable

A

A type of cabling that uses glass fiber as a medium through which to transmit light.