Computer Networks and
the Internet

Today’s Internet is arguably the largest engineered system ever created by mankind,
with hundreds of millions of connected computers, communication links, and
switches; with billions of users who connect via laptops, tablets, and smartphones;
and with an array of new Internet-connected devices such as sensors, Web cams,
game consoles, picture frames, and even washing machines. Given that the Internet
is so large and has so many diverse components and uses, is there any hope of
understanding how it works? Are there guiding principles and structure that can provide
a foundation for understanding such an amazingly large and complex system?
And if so, is it possible that it actually could be both interesting and fun to learn
about computer networks? Fortunately, the answers to all of these questions is a
resounding YES! Indeed, it’s our aim in this book to provide you with a modern
introduction to the dynamic field of computer networking, giving you the principles
and practical insights you’ll need to understand not only today’s networks, but
tomorrow’s as well.
This first chapter presents a broad overview of computer networking and the
Internet. Our goal here is to paint a broad picture and set the context for the rest of
this book, to see the forest through the trees. We’ll cover a lot of ground in this introductory
chapter and discuss a lot of the pieces of a computer network, without losing
sight of the big picture.
We’ll structure our overview of computer networks in this chapter as follows.
After introducing some basic terminology and concepts, we’ll first examine the
basic hardware and software components that make up a network. We’ll begin at
the network’s edge and look at the end systems and network applications running
in the network. We’ll then explore the core of a computer network, examining the
links and the switches that transport data, as well as the access networks and physical
media that connect end systems to the network core. We’ll learn that the Internet
is a network of networks, and we’ll learn how these networks connect with
each other.
After having completed this overview of the edge and core of a computer network,
we’ll take the broader and more abstract view in the second half of this chapter.
We’ll examine delay, loss, and throughput of data in a computer network and
provide simple quantitative models for end-to-end throughput and delay: models
that take into account transmission, propagation, and queuing delays. We’ll then
introduce some of the key architectural principles in computer networking, namely,
protocol layering and service models. We’ll also learn that computer networks are
vulnerable to many different types of attacks; we’ll survey some of these attacks and
consider how computer networks can be made more secure. Finally, we’ll close this
chapter with a brief history of computer networking.

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