Computer Networks - Two Marks
QUESTION BANK--(PART A)
TWO MARKS
UNIT-I
1. What are the three criteria necessary for an
effective and efficient network?
The most important criteria are performance, reliability and
security.
Performance of the
network depends on number of users, type of transmission medium, and the
capabilities of the connected h/w and the efficiency of the s/w.
Reliability is
measured by frequency of failure, the time it takes a link to recover from the
failure and the network’s robustness in a catastrophe.
Security issues
include protecting data from unauthorized access and viruses.
2. Group the OSI layers by function?
The seven layers of the OSI model belonging to three subgroups.
Physical, data
link and network layers are the network
support layers; they deal with the physical aspects of moving data from
one device to another.
Session,
presentation and application layers are the user
support layers; they allow interoperability among unrelated software
systems.
The transport
layer ensures end-to-end reliable data
transmission.
3. What are header and trailers and how do they get
added and removed?
Each layer in the sending machine adds its own information to the
message it receives from the layer just above it and passes the whole package
to the layer just below it. This information is added in the form of headers or
trailers. Headers are added to the message at the layers 6,5,4,3, and 2. A
trailer is added at layer2. At the receiving machine, the headers or trailers
attached to the data unit at the corresponding sending layers are removed, and
actions appropriate to that layer are taken.
4. What are the features provided by layering?
Two nice features:
·
It decomposes the problem of
building a network into more manageable components.
·
It provides a more modular
design.
5. Why are protocols needed?
In networks, communication occurs between the entities in different
systems. Two entities cannot just send bit streams to each other and expect to
be understood. For communication, the entities must agree on a protocol. A
protocol is a set of rules that govern data communication.
6. What are the
two interfaces provided by protocols?
·
Service interface
·
Peer interface
Service
interface- defines the operations that local
objects can perform on the protocol.
Peer
interface- defines the form and meaning of messages
exchanged between protocol peers to implement the communication service.
7. Mention the different
physical media?
·
Twisted pair(the wire that your
phone connects to)
·
Coaxial cable(the wire that
your TV connects to)
·
Optical fiber(the medium most
commonly used for high-bandwidth, long-distance links)
·
Space(the stuff that radio
waves, microwaves and infra red beams propagate through)
8. Define Signals?
Signals
are actually electromagnetic waves traveling at the speed of light. The speed
of light is, however, medium dependent-electromagnetic waves traveling through
copper and fiber do so at about two-thirds the speed of light in vacuum.
9. What is wave’s
wavelength?
The distance
between a pair of adjacent maxima or minima of a wave, typically measured in
meters, is called wave’s wavelength.
10. Define Modulation?
Modulation -varying the frequency, amplitude
or phase of the signal to effect the transmission of information. A simple
example of modulation is to vary the power (amplitude) of a single wavelength.
11. Explain the two types
of duplex?
·
Full duplex-two bit streams can be
simultaneously transmitted over the links at the same time, one going in each
direction.
·
Half duplex-it supports data flowing in
only one direction at a time.
12. What is CODEC?
A device that
encodes analog voice into a digital ISDN link is called a CODEC, for coder/decoder.
13. What is spread
spectrum and explain the two types of spread spectrum?
Spread spectrum is
to spread the signal over a wider frequency band than normal in such a way as
to minimize the impact of interference from other devices.
·
Frequency Hopping
·
Direct sequence
14. What are the different encoding techniques?
·
NRZ
·
NRZI
·
Manchester
·
4B/5B
15. How does
NRZ-L differ from NRZ-I?
In the NRZ-L sequence, positive and negative voltages have specific
meanings: positive for 0 and negative for 1. in the NRZ-I sequence, the
voltages are meaningless.
Instead, the
receiver looks for changes from one level to another as its basis for
recognition of 1s.
16. What are the responsibilities of data link layer?
Specific responsibilities of data link layer include the following.
a) Framing b) Physical addressing c) Flow control d) Error control e) Access
control.
17. What are the ways to address the framing problem?
·
Byte-Oriented Protocols(PPP)
·
Bit-Oriented Protocols(HDLC)
·
Clock-Based Framing(SONET)
18. Distinguish between peer-to-peer relationship and
a primary-secondary relationship. peer -to- peer relationship?
All
the devices share the link equally.
Primary-secondary
relationship: One device controls traffic and the
others must transmit through it.
19. Mention the types of errors and define the terms?
There are 2 types of errors
·
Single-bit error.
·
Burst-bit error.
Single bit error: The term single bit error means that only one bit
of a given data unit (such as byte character/data unit or packet) is changed
from 1 to 0 or from 0 to 1.
Burst error: Means that 2 or
more bits in the data unit have changed from 1 to 0 from 0 to 1.
20. List out
the available detection methods.
There are 4 types of redundancy checks
are used in data communication.
·
Vertical redundancy checks
(VRC).
·
Longitudinal redundancy checks
(LRC).
·
Cyclic redundancy checks (CRC).
·
Checksum.
21. Write short notes on VRC.
The most common and least expensive mechanism for error detection is
the vertical redundancy check (VRC) often called a parity check. In this
technique a redundant bit called a parity bit, is appended to every data unit
so, that the total number of 0’s in the unit (including the parity bit) becomes
even.
22. Write short notes on LRC.
In longitudinal redundancy check (LRC), a block of bits is divided
into rows and a redundant row of bits is added to the whole block.
23. Write short notes on CRC.
The third and most powerful of the redundancy checking techniques is
the cyclic redundancy checks (CRC) CRC is based on binary division. Here a
sequence of redundant bits, called the CRC remainder is appended to the end of
data unit.
24. Write short notes on CRC checker.
A CRC checker functions exactly like a generator. After receiving
the data appended with the CRC it does the same modulo-2 division. If the
remainder is all 0’s the CRC is dropped and the data accepted. Otherwise, the
received stream of bits is discarded and the dates are resent.
25. Define checksum.
The error detection method used by the higher layer protocol is
called checksum. Checksum is based on the concept of redundancy.
26. What are the steps followed in checksum generator?
The sender follows these steps a) the units are divided into k
sections each of n bits. b) All sections are added together using 2’s
complement to get the sum. c) The sum is complemented and become the checksum.
d) The checksum is sent with the data.
27. Mention the types of error correcting methods.
There are 2 error-correcting methods.
·
Single bit error correction
·
Burst error correction.
28. Write short notes on error correction?
It
is the mechanism to correct the errors and it can be handled in 2 ways.
·
When an error is discovered, the
receiver can have the sender retransmit the entire data unit.
·
A receiver can use an error
correcting coder, which automatically corrects certain errors.
29. What is the purpose of hamming code?
A hamming code can be designed to correct burst errors of certain
lengths. So the simple strategy used by the hamming code to correct single bit
errors must be redesigned to be applicable for multiple bit correction.
30. What is redundancy?
It is the error detecting mechanism, which means a shorter group of
bits or extra bits may be appended at the destination of each unit.
31. Define flow control?
Flow control refers to a set of procedures used to restrict the
amount of data. The sender can send before waiting for acknowledgment.
32. Mention the categories of flow control?
There are 2 methods have been developed to control flow of data
across communication links. a) Stop and wait- send one from at a time. b)
Sliding window- send several frames at a time.
33. What is a buffer?
Each receiving device has a block of memory called a buffer,
reserved for storing incoming data until they are processed.
UNIIT-II
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.
14. Explain the term handoff?
If the phone is involved in a call
at the time , the call must be transferred to the new base station in what is
called a hand off.
15. Define satphones?
Satphones use communication
satellites as base stations, communicating on frequency bands that have been
reserved internationally for satellite use.
16. How to mediate access to a shared link?
Ethernet,token ring, and several
wireless protocols. Ethernet and token ring media access protocols have no
central arbitrator of access. Media access in wireless networks is made more
complicated by the fact that some nodes may be hidden from each other due to
range limitations of radio transmission.
17. Define Aggregation points?
It collects and processes the data
they receive from neighboring nodes, and then transmit the processed data. By
processing the data incrementally, instead of forwarding all the raw data to
the base station, the amount of traffic in the network is reduced.
18. Define Beacons?
Beacon to determine their own
absolute locations based on GPS or manual configuration. The majority of nodes
can then derive their absolute location by combining an estimate of their
position relative to the beacons with the absolute location information
provided by the beacons.
19. What is the use of Switch?
It is used to forward the packets
between shared media LANs such as Ethernet. Such switches are sometimes known
by the obvious name of LAN switches.
20. Explain Bridge?
It is a collection of LANs connected
by one or more bridges is usually said to form an extended LAN. In their
simplest variants, bridges simply accept LAN frames on their inputs and forward
them out on all other outputs.
21. What is Spanning tree?
It is for the bridges to select the
ports over which they will forward frames.
22. What are the three pieces of information in the
configuration messages?
1.
The ID for the bridge that is
sending the message.
2.
The ID for what the sending
bridge believes to the root bridge.
3.
The distance, measured in hops,
from the sending bridge to the root bridge.
23. What is broadcast?
Broadcast is simple – each bridge
forwards a frame with a destination broadcast address out on each active
(selected) port other than the one on which the frame was received.
24. What is multicast?
It can be implemented with each host
deciding for itself whether or not to
accept the message.
25. How does a given bridge learn whether it should
forward a multicast frame over a given port?
It learns exactly the same way that
a bridge learns whether it should forward a unicast frame over a particular
port- by observing the source addresses that it receives over that port.
26. What are the limitations of bridges?
·
scale
·
heterogeneity
UNIT-III
1. Define packet switching?
A packet switch is a device with
several inputs and outputs leading to and from
the hosts that the switch interconnects.
2. What is a virtual circuit?
A
logical circuit made between the sending and receiving computers. The
connection is made after both computers do handshaking. After the connection,
all packets follow the same route and arrive in sequence.
3. What are data grams?
In datagram approach, each packet is treated independently from all
others. Even when one packet represents just a place of a multi packet
transmission, the network treats it although it existed alone. Packets in this
technology are referred to as datagram.
4. What is meant by switched virtual circuit?
Switched virtual circuit format is comparable conceptually to
dial-up line in circuit switching. In this method, a virtual circuit is created
whenever it is needed and exits only for the duration of specific exchange.
5. What is meant by Permanent virtual circuit?
Permanent virtual circuits are comparable to leased lines in circuit
switching. In this method, the same
virtual circuit is provided between two uses on a continuous basis. The circuit
is dedicated to the specific uses.
6. What are the properties in star topology?
·
Even though a switch has a
fixed number of inputs and outputs, which limits the number of hosts that can
be connected to a single switch , large
networks can be built by interconnecting a number of switches.
·
We can connect switches to each
other and to hosts using point-to point links, which typically means that we
can build networks of large geographic scope.
7. What is VCI?
A Virtual Circuit Identifier that
uniquely identifies the connection at this switch, and which will be carried
inside the header of the packets that belongs to this connection.
8. What is hop-by-hop flow control?
Each node is ensured of having the
buffers it needs to queue the packets that arrive on that circuit. This basic
strategy is usually called hop-by-hop flow control.
9. Explain the term best-effort?
If something goes wrong and the
packet gets lost, corrupted, misdelivered, or in any way fails to reach its
intended destination, the network does nothing.
10. What is maximum transmission unit?
MTU- which is the largest IP
datagram that it can carry in a frame .
11. Define Routing?
It is the process of building up the
tables that allow thwe collect output for a packet to be determined.
12. Define ICMP?
Internet Control Message Protocol is
a collection of error messages that are sent back to the source host whenever a
router or host is unable to process an IP datagram successfully
13. Write the keys for understanding the distance
vector routing?
The three keys for understanding the algorithm are,
·
Knowledge about the whole
networks
·
Routing only to neighbors
·
Information sharing at regular
intervals
14. Write the keys for understanding the link state
routing?
The three keys for understanding the algorithm are,
·
Knowledge about the
neighborhood.
·
Routing to all neighbors.
·
Information sharing when there
is a range.
15. How the packet cost referred in distance vector
and link state routing?
In distance vector routing, cost refer to hop count while in case of
link state routing, cost is a weighted value based on a variety of factors such
as security levels, traffic or the state of the link.
16. Define Reliable flooding?
It is the process of making sure
that all the nodes participating in the routing protocol get a copy of the link
state information from all the other nodes.
17. What are the features in OSPF?
·
Authentication of routing
messages.
·
Additional hierarchy.
·
Load balancing.
18. Define Subnetting?
Subnetting provides an elegantly
simple way to reduce the total number of network numbers that are assigned. The
idea is to take a single IP network number and allocate the IP address with
that network to several physical networks, which are now referred to as
subnets.
19. What are the different types of AS?
·
Stub AS
·
Multi homed AS
·
Transit AS
20. What is an Area?
An Area is a set of routers that are
administratively configured to exchange link-state information with each other.
There is one special area- the backbone area, also known as area 0.
21. What is Source Specific Multicast?
SSM , a receiving host specifies
both a multicast group and a specific host .the receiving host would then
receive multicast addressed to the specified group, but only if they are from
the special sender.
22. What is meant by
congestion?
Congestion in a network occurs if user
sends data into the network at a rate greater than that allowed by network
resources.
23. Why the congestion
occurs in network?
Congestion occurs because the
switches in a network have a limited buffer size to store arrived packets.
24. What are the rules of non boundary-level masking?
·
The bytes in the IP address
that corresponds to 255 in the mask will be
repeated in the sub network address
·
The bytes in the IP address
that corresponds to 0 in the mask will change to 0 in the sub network address
·
For other bytes, use the
bit-wise AND operator.
25. What is LSP?
In
link state routing, a small packet containing routing information sent by a
router to all other router by a packet called link state packet.
UNIT-IV
1. Explain the main idea of UDP?
The basic idea is for a source
process to send a message to a port and for the destination process to receive
the message from a port.
2. What are the different fields in pseudo header?
·
Protocol number
·
Source IP address
·
Destination IP addresses.
3. Define TCP?
TCP guarantees the reliable, in
order delivery of a stream of bytes. It is a full-duplex protocol, meaning that
each TCP connection supports a pair of byte streams, one flowing in each
direction.
4. Define Congestion Control?
It involves preventing too much
data from being injected into the network, thereby causing switches or links to
become overloaded. Thus flow control is an end to an end issue, while
congestion control is concerned with how hosts and networks interact.
5. State the two kinds of events trigger a state
transition?
·
A segment arrives from the
peer.
·
The local application process
invokes an operation on TCP.
6. What is meant by segment?
At the sending
and receiving end of the transmission, TCP divides long transmissions into
smaller data units and packages each into a frame called a segment.
7. What is meant by segmentation?
When the size
of the data unit received from the upper layer is too long for the network
layer datagram or data link layer frame to handle, the transport protocol
divides it into smaller usable blocks. The dividing process is called
segmentation.
8. What is meant by
Concatenation?
The size of the
data unit belonging to single sessions are so small that several can fit
together into a single datagram or frame, the transport protocol combines them
into a single data unit. The combining process is called concatenation.
9. What is rate based design?
Rate- based design, in which the
receiver tells the sender the rate-expressed in either bytes or packets per
second – at which it is willing to accept incoming data.
10. Define Gateway.
A device used to
connect two separate networks that use different communication protocols.
11. What is meant by
quality of service?
The quality of
service defines a set of attributes related to the performance of the
connection. For each connection, the user can request a particular attribute
each service class is associated with a set of attributes.
12. What are the two categories of QoS attributes?
The two main
categories are,
·
User Oriented
·
Network Oriented
13. List out the user related attributes?
User related attributes are SCR –
Sustainable Cell Rate PCR – Peak Cell Rate MCR- Minimum Cell Rate CVDT – Cell
Variation Delay Tolerance.
14. What are the networks
related attributes?
The network related attributes are, Cell loss ratio (CLR) Cell
transfer delay (CTD) Cell delay variation (CDV) Cell error ratio (CER).
15. What is RED?
Random Early Detection in each
router is programmed to monitor its own queue length and when it detects that
congestion is imminent, to notify the source to adjust its congestion window.
16. What are the three
events involved in the connection?
For security, the
transport layer may create a connection between the two end ports. A connection
is a single logical path between the source and destination that is associated
with all packets in a message. Creating a connection involves three steps:
·
Connection establishment
·
Data transfer
·
Connection release
UNIT-V
1. What is the function of SMTP?
The TCP/IP protocol supports electronic mail on the Internet is
called Simple Mail Transfer (SMTP). It is a system for sending messages to
other computer users based
on e-mail
addresses. SMTP provides mail exchange between users on the same or different
computers.
2. What is the difference between a user agent (UA)
and a mail transfer agent (MTA)?
The
UA prepares the message, creates the envelope, and puts the message in the
envelope. The MTA transfers the mail across the Internet.
3. How does MIME enhance SMTP?
MIME
is a supplementary protocol that allows non-ASCII data to be sent through SMTP.
MIME transforms non-ASCII data at the sender site to NVT ASCII data and
deliverers it to the client SMTP to be sent through the Internet. The server
SMTP at the receiving side receives the NVT ASCII data and delivers it to MIME
to be transformed back to the original data.
4. Why is an application such as POP needed
for electronic messaging?
Workstations interact with the SMTP host, which receives the mail on
behalf of every host in the organization, to retrieve messages by using a
client-server protocol such as Post Office Protocol, version 3(POP3). Although
POP3 is used to download messages from the server, the SMTP client still needed
on the desktop to forward messages from the workstation user to its SMTP mail
server.
6. What is the purpose of Domain Name System?
Domain Name System can map a name to an address and conversely an
address to name.
7. Discuss the three main division of the domain name
space.
Domain name space is divided into three different sections: generic
domains, country domains & inverse domain.
Generic
domain: Define registered hosts according to their
generic behavior, uses generic suffixes.
Country
domain: Uses two characters to identify a country
as the last suffix.
Inverse
domain: Finds the domain name given the IP address.
8. Discuss the TCP connections needed in FTP.
FTP establishes two connections between the hosts. One connection is
used for data transfer, the other for control information. The control
connection uses very simple rules of communication. The data connection needs
more complex rules due to the variety of data types transferred.
9. Discuss the basic model of FTP.
The client has three components: the user interface, the client
control process, and the client data transfer process. The server has two
components: the server control process and the server data transfer process.
The control connection is made between the control processes. The data
connection is made between the data transfer processes.
10. Name four factors needed for a secure network?
Privacy: The
sender and the receiver expect confidentiality.
Authentication: The receiver is sure of the sender’s identity and that an imposter
has not sent the message.
Integrity: The data must arrive at the receiver exactly as it was sent.
Non-Reputation: The receiver must able to prove that a received message came from
a specific sender.
11. How is a secret key different from public key?
In secret key, the same key is used by both parties. The sender uses
this key and an encryption algorithm to encrypt data; the receiver uses the
same key and the corresponding decryption algorithm to decrypt the data. In
public key, there are two keys: a private key and a public key. The private key
is kept by the receiver. The public key is announced to the public.
12. What is a digital signature?
Digital signature is a method to authenticate the sender of a
message. It is similar to that of signing transactions documents when you do
business with a bank. In network transactions, you can create an equivalent of
an electronic or digital signature by the way you send data.
13. What are the advantages & disadvantages of
public key encryption?
Advantages:
a) Remove the restriction of a shared secret key
between two entities. Here each entity can create a pair of keys, keep the
private one, and publicly distribute the other one.
b) The no. of
keys needed is reduced tremendously. For one million users to communicate, only
two million keys are needed.
Disadvantage:
If you use large numbers the method to be effective.
Calculating the cipher text using the long keys takes a lot of time. So it is
not recommended for large amounts of text.
14. What are the advantages & disadvantages of
secret key encryption?
Advantage:
Secret Key algorithms are efficient: it takes less
time to encrypt a message. The reason is that the key is usually smaller. So it
is used to encrypt or decrypt long messages.
Disadvantages:
a) Each pair of users must have a secret key. If N
people in world want to use this method, there needs to be N (N-1)/2 secret
keys. For one million people to communicate, a half-billion secret keys are
needed.
b) The distribution of the keys between two parties
can be difficult.
15. Define permutation.
Permutation
is transposition in bit level.
Straight
permutation: The no. of bits in the input and
output are preserved.
Compressed permutation: The no. of bits is reduced (some of the bits are dropped).
Expanded permutation: The no. of bits is increased (some bits are repeated).
16. Define substitution
& transposition encryption?
. Substitution: A character level
encryption in which each character is replaced by another character in the set.
Transposition: A Character level encryption in which the characters retain their
plaintext but the position of the character changes.
17. Define CGI?
. CGI is a standard for communication
between HTTP servers and executable programs. It is used in crating dynamic
documents.
18. What are the requests messages support SNMP and
explain it?
·
GET
·
SET
The former is used to retrieve a piece of state from some node and
the latter is used to store a new piece of state in some node.
19. Define PGP?
Pretty Good Privacy is used to
provide security for electronic mail. It provides authentication,
confidentiality, data integrity, and non repudiation.
20. Define SSH?
Secure Shell is used to provide a
remote login, and used to remotely execute commands and transfer files and also
provide strong client/server authentication / message integrity.
Thanks.........
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