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Cp7101 design and management of computer networks-design concepts
1. CP7101-Design and Management of
Computer Networks
Design Concepts
Dr.G.Geetha
Professor /CSE
Jerusalem College of Engineering
2. Design Concepts
• Network analysis provides understanding,
and network architecture provides conceptual
(technology and topology) descriptions of the
network, network design builds upon these to
add physical detail and vendor, product, and
service selections to the network.
3. first-order product
• helps describe what is being evaluated and
how many devices will be needed for a
particular location,and is useful for
procurement and general connectivity
planning.
4. second-order product
• Provide enough detail to fully understand the
network, where devices are in relation to one
another, their general locations, and where services
such as QOS and VOIP should be enabled.
• The greater amount of detail, including product
types, hardware and software revision levels, device
configurations, and a more explicit layout of the
connectivity between devices, as well as with service
providers.
5. Third-order product
• adds location detail
• While a second-order product may provide
general locations (buildings, floors, rooms) a
third-order product adds location detail. For
example, the design could show rack layouts
and where each device is located in a rack (or
equivalent piece of hardware).
6. Design Products
The key products of a network design are:
• Network blueprints
• A component plan
• Vendor, vendor equipment, and service-
provider selections
• Traceability
• Metrics for measuring design success
7. Network blueprints
• describe the physical aspects of your network
design:
• locations of network devices, servers, the cable
plant, physical security and secure locations; how
devices are interconnected, their interface types
and speeds; as well as device specific and service-
specific information. Blueprints usually also show
the support infrastructure for the cable plant:
building entrances, conduit,, and cable runs
8. component plan
• which describes the mechanisms associated with that
function, internal interactions among those
mechanisms, and external interactions among
functions.
• Component plans can be complementary to the
network blueprints, often providing function-specific
information that normally would not be on blueprints.
• For example, a component plan that describes security
for the network might include configuration
information for security devices, such as sets of ACLs or
VPNs, and where in the network each set would be
applied
9. vendor, vendor equipment, and
service provider selections
• These data consist of general and vendor-
specific configuration information and
protocol selections (if necessary).
• For example, sets of ACLs mentioned earlier as
part of the security component plan would be
considered configuration details. Routing
protocols, AS numbers, and specific routing
and peering information would also be
considered configurationdetails.
10. Traceability
• Able to show traceability between design
decisions, architecture decisions,
requirements, and problem statements.
• This is a powerful capability that will help you
to address any questions and challenges that
may arise regarding your design.
11. Metrics
• that are used to describe how you measure
success of the design, in the same way that
metrics were coupled to requirements.
12. Design Process
• The design process consists of vendor,
equipment, and service-provider evaluations
and network layout.