LAN Switching
A LAN switch is a device that provides much higher port density
at a lower cost than traditional bridges. For this reason, LAN
switches can accommodate network designs featuring fewer users per
segment, thereby increasing the average available bandwidth per
user. LAN switches are being used to replace hubs in the
wiring closet because user applications are demanding greater
bandwidth.
The trend toward fewer users per segment is known as
microsegmentation. Microsegmentation allows the creation of
private or dedicated segments, that is, one user per segment.
Each user receives instant access to the full bandwidth and does not
have to contend for available bandwidth with other users. As a
result, collisions do not occur. A LAN switch forwards frames
based on either the frame's Layer 2 address (Layer 2 LAN switch), or
in some cases, the frame's Layer 3 address (multi-layer LAN switch).
A LAN switch is also called a frame switch because it forwards Layer
2 frames, whereas an ATM switch forwards cells.
LAN Switch Operation
LAN switches are similar to transparent bridges in functions such
as learning the topology, forwarding, and filtering. These switches
also support several new and unique features, such as dedicated
communication between devices, multiple simultaneous conversation,
full-duplex communication, and media-rate adaption.
Dedicated collision-free communication between network devices
increases file-transfer throughput. Multiple simultaneous
conversations can occur by forwarding, or switching, several packets
at the same time, thereby increasing network capacity by the number
of conversations supported. Full-duplex communication
effectively doubles the throughput, while with media-rate adaption,
the LAN switch can translate between 10 and 100 Mbps, allowing
bandwidth to be allocated as needed. Deploying LAN switches
requires no change to existing hubs, network interface cards (NICs),
or cabling.
LAN Switching Forwarding
LAN switches can be characterized by the forwarding method they
support. In the store-and-forward switching method, error checking
is performed and erroneous frames are discarded. With the
cut-through switching method, latency is reduced by eliminating
error checking.
With the store-and-forward switching method, the LAN
switch copies the entire frame into its onboard buffers and computes
the cyclic redundancy check (CRC). The frame is discarded if
it contains a CRC error or if it is a runt (less than
64 bytes including the CRC) or a giant (more than 1518
bytes including the CRC). If the frame does not contain any
errors, the LAN switch looks up the destination address in its
forwarding, or switching, table and determines the outgoing
interface. It then forwards the frame toward its destination.
With the cut-through switching method, the LAN switch
copies only the destination address (the first 6 bytes following the
preamble) into its onboard buffers. It then looks up the
destination address in its switching table, determines the outgoing
interface, and forwards the frame toward its destination. A
cut-through switch provides reduced latency because it begins to
forward the frame as soon as it reads the destination address and
determines the outgoing interface.
LAN Switching Bandwidth
LAN switches also can be characterized according to the
proportion of bandwidth allocated to each port. Symmetric
switching provides evenly distributed bandwidth to each port, while
asymmetric switching provides unlike, or unequal, bandwidth between
some ports.
An asymmetric LAN switch provides switched connections
between ports of unlike bandwidths, such as a combination of 10BaseT
and 100BaseT. This type of switching is also called 10/100
switching. Asymmetric switching is optimized for client-server
traffic flows where multiple clients simultaneously communicate with
a server, requiring more bandwidth dedicated to the server port to
prevent a bottleneck at that port.
A symmetric switch provides switched connections between
ports with the same bandwidth, such as all 10BaseT or all 100BaseT.
Symmetric switching is optimized for a reasonably distributed
traffic load, such as in a peer-to-peer desktop environment.
LAN Switching and the OSI Model
LAN switches can be categorized according to the OSI layer at
which they filter and forward, or switch, frames. These
categories are: Layer 2, Layer 2 with Layer 3 features, or
multi-layer.
A Layer 2 LAN switch is operationally similar to a
multiport bridge but has a much higher capacity and supports many
new features, such as full-duplex operations. A Layer 2 LAN
switch performs switching and filtering based on the OSI Data Link
layer MAC address. As with bridges, it is completely
transparent to network protocols and user applications.
A Layer 2 LAN switch with Layer 3 features can make
switching decisions based on more information than just the Layer 2
MAC address. Such a switch might incorporate some Layer 3
traffic-control features, such as broadcast and multicast traffic
management, security through access lists, and IP fragmentation.
A multi-layer switch makes switching and filtering
decisions on the basis of OSI data link layer (Layer 2) and OSI
network-layer (Layer 3) addresses. This type of switch
dynamically decides whether to switch (Layer 2) or route (Layer 3)
incoming traffic. A multi-layer LAN switch switches within a
workgroup and routes between different workgroups.
LAN Switching Summary
LAN switching technology improves the performance of traditional
Ethernet, FDDI, and Token Ring technologies without requiring costly
wiring upgrades or time-consuming host reconfiguration. The low
price per port allows the deployment of LAN switches so that they
decrease segment size and increase available bandwidth. VLANs make
it possible to extend the benefit of switching over a network of LAN
switches and other switching devices.
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