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NETW410 3/24/13 Lab 3: Designing the Infrastructure for the Network Lab Report

Draw a diagram of the new network. (10 points)

Office 135 sq. ft. Class D

Office 77 sq. ft. Class E

Office Class 135 sq.B ft.

Office Class 135 sq.C ft. Office 77 sq. ft.

Office Offices 135 sq. ft.

Office Offices 135 sq. ft.

Class F

Office 97 sq. ft. IT Wing Backup Office Office Administration 184 sq. ft. Class 135 sq.A ft.

Office 156 sq. ft. Gym & Phys Ed

All Classroom connections have been routed to a switch in the IT wing. All Wireless access point have been routed to a swtich in the IT wing.

Office 1950 sq. ft.

IT Wing
The IT wing also houses the following servers; Active Directory Server VoIP PBX server Firewall

2. Will the current horizontal cabling suffice for the new network? If it will not, what type of cable should be used for the horizontal cabling? Provide detailed specifications for this cable. (10 points) The current horizontal cabling will suffice. Good cabling means all cables are secured and not in a walking path. When running Horizontal cable in ceilings it should be plenum rated. 3. Should fiber optic horizontal cabling be installed but not terminated as future proofing for a future higher-speed network? What is the cost difference between copper UTP cable and fiber optic cable? Use this model to compute the relative costhttp://www.fols.org/cost_model/. (10 points) Fiber optics is almost double the cost of copper UTP cable. Fiber Optic cables need to be terminated. If more is needed in the future than new cable would have to be layed down. 4. Does this network require an access layer? What devices would operate at the access layer? Draw a diagram of these devices at the access layer. Label all of

the devices. (10 points)

Office 135 sq. ft. Class D

Office 77 sq. ft. Class E

Office Class 135 sq.B ft.

Office Class 135 sq.C ft. Office 77 sq. ft.

Office Offices 135 sq. ft.

Office Offices 135 sq. ft.

Class F

Office 97 sq. ft. IT Wing Office Office Administration 184 sq. ft. Class 135 sq.A ft.

Office 156 sq. ft. Gym & Phys Ed

This network requires an access layer. The access layer provides better reliability and security. The access layer ensures better performance and less troubleshooting for all end user devices. This is the layer where lower end switches and wireless access points connect. 5. Does this network require a distribution layer? What devices would operate at the distribution layer? What would these devices be responsible for? Could the access and distribution layer be combined into a single layer? Draw a diagram of these devices at the distribution layer. Label all of the devices. (10 points)

Office 135 sq. ft. Class D

Office Class 135 sq.B ft.

Office Class 135 sq.C ft. Office 77 sq. ft.

Office Offices 135 sq. ft.

Office Offices 135 sq. ft.

Class F

Office 97 sq. ft. IT Wing Backup Office Office Administration 184 sq. ft. Class 135 sq.A ft.

Office 156 sq. ft. Gym & Phys Ed

Yes this network would require a distribution layer. This layer applies polocies and rules The access and distribution layers cannot be combined. The distribution layer connects servers. 6. Does this network need a core layer? What devices would operate at the core layer? (10 points) This network does not necessarly need a core layer. Since this is a smaller network the core and distribution layers can be combined. The devices found in this layer are highend switches and routers. 7. Is redundancy required at any layer of this network? If it is, where and how would this redundancy be added to the network? What device or devices would be used to make this network redundant? (10 points) Redundancy is not a necessity but it is recommended. Redundancy helps reduce data loss and provides alternate paths in the case that a segment of the network goes down. The network can be made redundant by using switches and creating a mesh topology.

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