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6
Configuring the System Operating Modes
The Hurricane 9200/S can operate as a router, a bridge, or both.
The system operating mode is determined by how you configure the
LAN and WAN interfaces to exchange data within your network and
with your ISP. This chapter provides an overview of how routers
and bridges work, and explains how to configure the device
interfaces and other settings to meet the needs of your network and
ISP connection type.
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Both bridges and routers enable communication between two
networks, such as a home network and ISP’s network of Internet
access servers. Although to an end-user they may appear to
provide the same functionality, bridges and routers operate
differently and provide different services. Some ISPs require their
customers to use a bridge connection, whereas others allow a
routed connection.
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Bridges enable computers on two networks to communicate as if
they are on two segments of the same physical LAN. A bridge
learns the hardware IDs of all computers on each network it is
attached to. (These hardware IDs are assigned by manufacturers to
devices such as network interface cards that enable computers to
connect to networks.) The bridge determines which hardware IDs
are connected on each side of the bridge, and stores these
associations in its bridge forwarding table.
For example, when the Hurricane 9200/S is acting as a bridge, it
learns to associate the hardware IDs of each of your LAN
computers with its LAN interface (e.g., eth-0 or usb-0), and the
hardware IDs of your ISP’s access server(s) with its WAN interface
(e.g., eoa-0).
When the bridge receives a data packet, the bridge compares the
packet’s destination hardware ID to the entries in its bridge
forwarding table. When the packet's destination ID matches one of
the entries, it forwards the packet through the associated interface,
where the computer with the matching hardware ID can claim the
packet. When the bridge does not recognize a packet’s destination
hardware ID, it broadcasts the packet through all of its interfaces –
to each network it is attached to.
Hardware IDs
are also referred to as Media Access Control (MAC)
addresses
.
Ethernet is a commonly used “MAC-layer” network
protocol. Bridges provide a simple way to allow two or more
Ethernet-based networks to share data, without requiring additional
internetworking protocols. Bridges generally cannot link networks
that use different MAC-layer protocols.
Содержание Hurricane 9200/S
Страница 1: ...ADSL Ethernet Router User s Guide Revision 1 0 ...
Страница 9: ...Table of Contents 9 C Glossary 191 Index 199 ...
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Страница 89: ...89 Part 3 Routing and IP Related Features ...
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