Upgrading and Repairing Networks Free Open Book

Upgrading and Repairing Networks

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Hardware Versus Protocol Addresses

When communicating on the same network segment, a computer can communicate directly by sending directed Address Resolution Protocols (ARP) packets to another computer using the network card's unique MAC address. In TCP/IP networks, the ARP is used in a local broadcast domain to determine the hardware address of another computer by sending out a broadcast packet that contains the computer's IP address. When a computer recognizes an ARP packet that has its IP address, it responds to the ARP request with another packet that tells the original computer what the destination computer's MAC address is. For more information about hardware addresses, which are stored in the local ARP cache and ARP, see Chapter 24, "Overview of the TCP/IP Protocol Suite."

The TCP/IP protocol is pretty much the standard today for local area networks. NetBIOS has been adapted to run over IP, and beginning with NetWare 5, IP is now the preferred protocol used in NetWare LANs. To begin, however, let's look at the older NetBIOS namespace and NetBEUI protocol that were used on Microsoft's first offerings in the LAN environment.

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     Main Menu
Upgrading and Repairing Networks
Table of Contents
Copyright
About the Authors
Acknowledgments
We Want to Hear from You!
Reader Services
Part I: Up Front: Network Planning and Design Concepts
Part II: Physical Networking Components
Part III: Low-Level Network Protocols
Part IV: Dedicated Connections and WAN Protocols
Part V: Wireless Networking Protocols
Part VI: Lan and Wan Network, Service, and Application Protocols
Chapter 24. Overview of the TCP/IP Protocol Suite
Chapter 25. Basic TCP/IP Services and Applications
Chapter 26. Internet Mail Protocols: POP3, SMTP, and IMAP
Chapter 27. Troubleshooting Tools for TCP/IP Networks
Chapter 28. BOOTP and Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP)
Chapter 29. Network Name Resolution
Hardware Versus Protocol Addresses
NetBIOS
Installing and Configuring WINS on Windows 2000/2003 Servers
TCP/IP Names
Installing DNS on a Windows Server
Network Information Service
Chapter 30. Using the Active Directory Service
Chapter 31. File Server Protocols
Chapter 32. The Hypertext Transfer Protocol
Chapter 33. Routing Protocols
Chapter 34. The Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) Protocol
Chapter 35. Introduction to the IPv6 Protocol
Part VII: Network User and Resource Management
Part VIII: System and Network Security
Part IX: Troubleshooting Networks
Part X: Upgrading Network Hardware
Part XI: Migration and Integration
Appendixes
Index


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