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As your data travel down from you towards the transmission medium (the cable), they are successively encapsulated at each
layer within a new wrapper (along with a few instructions), ready for transport. Once transmission has been made to the intended
destination, the reverse occurs: Each wrapper is stripped away and the instructions examined until finally only the original data
are left.
So why are Layer 2 and Layer 3 of particular importance when discussing ServSwitch Agility? Because the successful
transmission of data relies upon fast and reliable passage through network switches – and most of these operate at either Layer
2 or Layer 3.
The job of any network switch is to receive each incoming network packet, strip away only the first few wrappers to discover the
intended destination then rewrap the packet and send it in the correct direction.
In simplified terms, the wrapper that is added at Layer 2 (by the sending system) includes the physical address of the intended
recipient system, i.e. the unique MAC address (for example, 09:f8:33:d7:66:12) that is assigned to every networking device at
manufacture. Deciphering recipients at this level is more straightforward than at Layer 3, where the address of the recipient is
represented by a logical IP address (e.g. 192.168.0.10) and requires greater knowledge of the surrounding network structure. Due
to their more complex circuitry, Layer 3 switches are more expensive than Layer 2 switches of a similar build quality and are used
more sparingly within installations.