Introduction to Data Communications |
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42. Routers |
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42. Routers
Routers are hardware and software devices. They can be cards that plug into a collapsed backbone, stand-alone devices (rack mount or desktop) or software that would run on a file server with 2 NICs.
The purpose of a router is to connect nodes across an internetwork regardless of the Physical Layer and Data Link Layer protocol used. Routers are hardware and topology independent. Routers are not aware of the type of medium or frame used (Ethernet, Token Ring, FDDI, X.25, etc...). Routers are aware of the Network Layer protocol used: Novell's IPX, Unix's IP, XNS, Apples DDP, etc..
Routers operate on the OSI Model's Network Layer. The internetwork must use the same Network Layer protocol. Routers allow the transportation of the Network Layer PDU through the internetwork even though the Physical and Data Link Frame size and addressing scheme may change.