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Senin, 02 Mei 2011

Bandwidth VS Troughput

A Guide to Bandwidth and Throughput

Bandwidth and throughput are two networking concepts that are commonly misunderstood. System administrators regularly use these two concepts to help plan, design, and build new networks. Networking exams also include a few bandwidth and throughput questions, so brushing up on these two subjects is a good idea before exam day.

What is Bandwidth ?


You probably already have a fairly good idea on what bandwidth is. It is technically defined as the amount of information that can flow through a network at a given period of time. This is, however, theoretical- the actual bandwidth available to a certain device on the network is actually referred to as throughput (which we’ll discuss further on in this section). Bandwidth can be compared to a highway in many respects. A highway can only allow for a certain amount of vehicles before traffic becomes congested. Likewise, we refer to bandwidth as finite- it has a limit to its capability. If we accommodate the highway with multiple lanes, more traffic could get through. This also applies to networks- we could perhaps upgrade a 56K modem to a DSL modem and get much higher transfer speeds. Bandwidth is measured in bits per second (bps). This basic unit of measurement is fairly small, however, and you’ll more than likely see bandwidth expressed as kilobits, megabits, and gigabits.

units of bandwidth












Make sure you make the distinction between bits and bytes. A megabyte is certainly not the same as a megabit, although they are abbreviated quite similarly. Since we know there are 8 bits in a byte, you can simply divide the number of bits by 8 to find the byte equivalent (or to convert from bytes to bits, multiply by 8).

megabit megabyte

Lastly, it’s important to also make the distinction between speed and bandwidth. Bandwidth is simply how many bits we can transmit a second, not the speed at which they travel. We can use the water pipe analogy to grasp this concept further. More water could be transported by buying a larger pipe- but the speed at which the water flows is less affected.

The Difference between Throughput and Bandwidth

Although bandwidth can tell us about how much information a network can move at a period of time, you’ll find that actual network speeds are much lower. We use the term throughput to refer to the actual bandwidth that is available to a network, as opposed to theoretical bandwidth.
Several different things may affect the actual bandwidth a device gets. The number of users accessing the network, the physical media, the network topology, hardware capability, and many other aspects can affect bandwidth. To calculate data transfer speeds, we use the equation Time = Size / Theoretical Bandwidth.

bandwidth throughput

Keep in mind that the above equation is actually what we use to find the “best download.” It assumes optimal network speeds and conditions since we use theoretical bandwidth. So to get a better idea on the typical download speed, we use a different equation: Time = Size / Actual Throughput.

actual throughput

Rabu, 27 April 2011

Cisco Catalyst 6500 Family


Flagship Platform of the Catalyst Family

With more than 35,000 customers, the Cisco Catalyst 6500 Series Switch is the benchmark for innovation and investment protection in networking. To support Borderless Networks, the switches deliver high performance and a broad feature set suitable for campus, data center, WAN, and Metro Ethernet deployments.

Increased Uptime

Catalyst 6500 E-Series Switches support modular Cisco IOS Software to decrease unplanned downtime and simplify software changes through in-service software upgrades.

Security

The Cisco Catalyst 6500 E-Series integrates the Cisco Catalyst 6500 Series Supervisor Engine 720 and the Cisco Catalyst 6500 Series Adaptive Security Service Module to take advantage of the existing infrastructure and deliver integrated security services with increased VPN session counts and efficient power consumption in a single blade.

Mobility

Catalyst 6500 E-Series Wireless Service Module 2 easily integrates wired and wireless networks and provides security, mobility, and redundancy for business-critical WLANs.

Network Management

The Catalyst 6500 E-Series Network Analysis Module 3, optimized for 10 Gb performance, improves resource utilization, troubleshooting, and the end-user experience.

Application Performance

The Catalyst 6500 E-Series Application Control Engine 30 increases availability, accelerates performance, and enhances security.

Virtualization

The Catalyst Virtual Switching System (VSS) increases operational efficiency by simplifying the network with a single point of management, while still providing redundancy. VSS activates all available bandwidth across redundant Catalyst 6500 Series Switches and eliminates asymmetric routing.

Rabu, 13 April 2011

Cisco Nexus 7000 Series

Build the network foundation you need for your next-generation data center. Cisco Nexus 7000 Series Switches are a modular switching system designed to deliver 10 Gigabit Ethernet and unified fabric in the data center.

Single End-to-End Platform

The Cisco Nexus 7000 Series offers an end-to-end solution for data center core, aggregation, and high-density end-of-row and top-of-rack server connectivity in a single platform.

The Cisco Nexus 7000 Series platform is run by Cisco NX-OS software. It was specifically designed for the most mission-critical place in the network, the data center.

Design Principles

The Cisco Nexus 7000 was designed around three principles:
  • Infrastructure scalability
  • Operational continuity
  • Transport flexibility
Infrastructure Scalability

These switches use virtualization, efficient power and cooling, density, and performance to support efficient growth in data center infrastructure.

Operational Continuity

The Cisco Nexus design integrates hardware, software, and management to support zero-downtime environments.

Transport Flexibility

You can incrementally and cost-effectively adopt new innovations and technologies, such as:
  • Cisco Overlay Transport Virtualization (OTV)
  • Cisco FabricPath
  • Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE)
  • Cisco Locator/ID Separation Protocol (LISP)
  • Cisco IOS Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS)