LAN Segmentation
This page will discuss the advantages of LAN segmentation and
will describe LAN segmentation using bridges, switches, and routers.
Also described will be the benefits of using each of these three
internetworking devices.
Describe
the advantages of LAN segmentation
When separate networks are needed or if a network has reached its
physical limitations, segmentation is used. Segmenting a LAN
can extend the network, reduce congestion, isolate network problems,
and improve security.
- Extending the network -- When the maximum physical
limitations of a network has been reached, routers may be added
to create new segments to allow additional hosts onto the LAN.
- Reduce Congestion -- As the number of hosts on a
single network increases, the bandwidth required also increases.
By segmenting the LAN, you can reduce the number of hosts per
network. If traffic consists of communications between
hosts on the same segment, then bandwidth usage is substantially
reduced.
- Isolate network problems -- By dividing the network
into smaller segments, you reduce the overflow of problems from
one segment to the next. Hardware and software failures
are some of the problems that can be reduced to affect smaller
portions of the network.
- Improve Security -- By utilizing segments, a network
administrator can ensure that the internal structure of the
network will not be visible from an outside source.
Privileged packets will only be broadcast on the subnet it
originated from, not throughout the network.
Describe
LAN segmentation using bridges.
The term bridging refers to a technology in which a device (known
as a bridge) connects two or more LAN segments. A bridge
transmits datagrams from one segment to their destinations on other
segments.
Bridges are capable of filtering frames based on any Layer 2
fields. A bridge, for example, can be programmed to reject
(not forward) all frames sourced from a particular network. Because
link-layer information often includes a reference to an upper-layer
protocol, bridges usually can filter on this parameter.
Furthermore, filters can be helpful in dealing with unnecessary
broadcast and multicast packets. Because only a certain
percentage of traffic is forwarded, a bridge or switch diminishes
the traffic experienced by devices on all connected segments.
The bridge or switch will act as a firewall for some potentially
damaging network errors, and both accommodate communication between
a larger number of devices than would be supported on any single LAN
connected to the bridge.
Describe
LAN segmentation using routers.
Because routers use Layer 3 addresses, which typically have
structure, routers can use techniques (such as address
summarization) to build networks that maintain performance and
responsiveness as they grow in size. Segments are
interconnected by routers to enable communication between LANs while
blocking other types of traffic. Routers also allow for the
interconnection of disparate LAN and WAN technologies while also
implementing broadcast filters and logical firewalls. In
general, if you need advanced internetworking services, such as
broadcast firewalling and communication between dissimilar LANs,
routers are necessary.
Describe
LAN segmentation using switches.
Switches are data link layer devices that, like bridges, enable
multiple physical LAN segments to be interconnected into a single
larger network. Similar to bridges, switches forward and flood
traffic based on MAC addresses. Because switching is performed
in hardware instead of in software, however, it is significantly
faster. Switches use either store-and-forward switching or
cut-through switching when forwarding traffic.
Segmenting shared-media LANs divides the users into two or more
separate LAN segments, reducing the number of users contending for
bandwidth. LAN switching technology, which builds upon this
trend, employs microsegmentation, which further segments the LAN to
fewer users and ultimately to a single user with a dedicated LAN
segment. Each switch port provides a dedicated, 10MB Ethernet
segment. Segments are interconnected by internetworking
devices that enable communication between LANs while blocking other
types of traffic. Switches have the intelligence to monitor
traffic and compile address tables, which then allows them to
forward packets directly to specific ports in the LAN.
Switches also usually provide nonblocking service, which allows
multiple conversations (traffic between two ports) to occur
simultaneously.
LAN switches can be used to segment networks into logically
defined virtual workgroups (VLANs). This logical segmentation,
commonly referred to as VLAN communication, offers a fundamental
change in how LANs are designed, administered, and managed. Logical
segmentation provides substantial benefits in LAN administration,
security, and management of network broadcast across the enterprise.
Superior throughput performance, higher port density, lower
per-port cost, and greater flexibility have contributed to the
emergence of switches as replacement technology for bridges and as
complements to routing technology.
Describe the benefits of network segmentation with
bridges.
Transparent bridges successfully isolate intrasegment traffic,
thereby reducing the traffic seen on each individual segment. This
usually improves network response times, as seen by the user.
- Bridges and switches extend the effective length of a LAN,
permitting the attachment of distant stations that were not
previously permitted.
- Bridges can connect more than two LANs and use the Spanning
Tree Algorithm to eliminate loops while still allowing
connectivity and redundancy between them.
- Bridges can compensate for speed discrepancies of WAN and
LAN connections by using its buffering capabilities. This
is done by storing the incoming data in on-board buffers and
sending it over the serial link at a rate that the serial link
can accommodate.
- Some bridges are MAC-layer bridges, which bridge between
homogeneous networks (for example, IEEE 802.3 and IEEE 802.3),
while other bridges can translate between different link-layer
protocols (for example, IEEE 802.3 and IEEE 802.5).
Describe the benefits of network segmentation with
routers.
Routers offer the following benefits in LAN segmentation:
- Media Transition--Routers are used to connect
networks of different media types, taking care of the Layer 3
address translations and fragmentation requirements.
- Broadcast control--By default, routers don't pass
broadcasts and therefore restrict the broadcast domain. In
addition to preventing broadcasts from radiating throughout the
network, routers are also responsible for generating services to
each LAN segment. The following are examples of services that
the router provides to the network for a variety of protocols:
- IP---Proxy ARP and Internet Control Message Protocol
(ICMP)
- IPX---SAP table updates
- AppleTalk---ZIP table updates
- Network management---SNMP queries
- Packet Filtering--Routers can filter packets either
inbound or outbound between LAN segments or LAN and WAN
segments.
- VLAN Communications--Routers remain vital for
switched architectures configured as VLANs because they provide
the communication between VLANs.
- Large Packets--Routers can handle large packets by
fragmenting them into smaller pieces, sending them across the
network, and reassembling them whereas bridges discard frames
that are too large.
Describe the benefits of network segmentation with
switches.
Layer 2 switches offer some or all of the following benefits:
- Unlike hubs and repeaters, switches allow multiple data
streams to pass simultaneously.
- LAN switches are used to interconnect multiple LAN segments.
LAN switching provides dedicated, collision-free communication
between network devices, with support for multiple simultaneous
conversations.
- Collisions--Switches reduce collisions on network
segments because they provide dedicated bandwidth to each
network segment and each connected segment is in a separate
collision domain.
- Bandwidth---LAN switches provide excellent
performance for individual users by allocating dedicated
bandwidth to each switch port (for example, each network
segment). This technique is known as microsegmenting. An
Ethernet LAN switch improves bandwidth by separating collision
domains and selectively forwarding traffic to the appropriate
segments.
- Dedicated Bandwidth---Switches deliver dedicated
bandwidth to users through high-density group switched and
switched 10BaseT or 100BaseT Ethernet.
- VLANs---LAN switches can group individual ports into
logical switched workgroups called VLANs, thereby restricting
the broadcast domain to designated VLAN member ports.
VLANs are also known as switched domains and autonomous
switching domains. Communication between VLANs requires a
router.
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