1. What are the functions of MAC?
MAC
sub layer resolves the contention for the shared media. It contains
synchronization, flag, flow and error control specifications necessary to move
information from one place to another, as well as the physical address of the
next station to receive and route a packet.
2. What are the functions of LLC?
The IEEE project
802 models take the structure of an HDLC frame and divides it into 2 sets of
functions. One set contains the end user portion of the HDLC frame – the
logical address, control information, and data. These functions are handled by
the IEEE 802.2 logical link control (LLC) protocol.
3. What is Ethernet?
Ethernet
is a multiple-access network, meaning that a set of nodes send and receive
frames over a shared link.
4. Define the term carrier sense in CSMA/CD?
All
the nodes can distinguish between idle and a busy-link and “collision detect”
means that a node listens as it transmits and can therefore detect when a frame
it is transmitting has interfered (collided) with a frame transmitted by
another node.
5. Define Repeater?
A
repeater is a device that forwards digital signals, much like an amplifier
forwards analog signals. However, no more than four repeaters may be positioned
between any pairs of hosts, meaning that an Ethernet has a total reach of only
2,500m.
6. Define collision detection?
In
Ethernet, all these hosts are competing for access to the same link, and as a
consequence, they are said to be in the same collision detection.
7. Why Ethernet is said to be a I-persistent
protocol?
An
adaptor with a frame to send transmits with probability ‘1 ‘whenever a busy
line goes idle.
8. What is exponential back off?
Once
an adaptor has detected a collision and stopped its transmission, it waits a
certain amount of time and tries again. Each time it tries to transmit but
fails, the adaptor doubles the amount of time it waits before trying again.
This strategy of doubling the delay interval between each transmission attempt
is a general technique known as exponential back off.
9. What is token holding time (THT)?
It
defines that how much data a given node is allowed to transmit each time it possesses
the token or equivalently, how long a given node is allowed to hold the token.
10. What are the two classes of traffic in FDDI?
·
Synchronous
·
Asynchronous
11. What are the four prominent wireless technologies?
·
Bluetooth
·
Wi-Fi(formally known as 802.11)
·
WiMAX(802.16)
·
Third generation or 3G cellular wireless.
12. Define Bluetooth?
Bluetooth
fills the niche of very short-range communication between mobile phones, PDAs,
notebook computers, and other personal or peripheral devices. For example,
Bluetooth can be used to connect mobile phones to a headset, or a notebook
computer to a printer.
13. What are the four steps involves in scanning?
1.
The node sends a Probe frame.
2.
All APs within reach reply with a Probe Response frame.
3.
The node selects one of the access points, and sends
that AP an Association Request frame.
4.
The AP replies with an Association Response frame.
No comments:
Post a Comment