CM30078: Networking
Academic Year: | 2019/0 |
Owning Department/School: | Department of Computer Science |
Credits: | 6 [equivalent to 12 CATS credits] |
Notional Study Hours: | 120 |
Level: | Honours (FHEQ level 6) |
Period: |
|
Assessment Summary: | EX 100% |
Assessment Detail: |
|
Supplementary Assessment: |
|
Requisites: | |
Description: | Aims: To understand the Internet, and associated background and theory, to a level sufficient for a competent domain manager. Learning Outcomes: Students should be able to: 1. Explain the acronyms and concepts of the Internet and how they relate; 2. State and apply the steps required to connect a domain to the Internet and explain the issues involved to both technical and nontechnical audiences; 3. Discuss the ethical issues involved with the internet, and have an "intelligent layman's" grasp of the legal issues and uncertainties. 4. Be aware of the fundamental security issues; 5. Be able to advise on the configuration issues surrounding a firewall. Skills: IT - Networking, Legal Awareness (T, A). Content: The ISO 7-layer model. The Internet: its history and evolution - Predictions for the future. The TCP/IP stack: IP, ICMP, TCP, UDP, DNS, XDR, NFS and SMTP. Berkeley. Introduction to packet layout: source routing etc. Various link levels: SLIP, 802.5 and Ethernet, satellites, the "fat pipe", ATM. Performance issues: bandwidth, MSS and RTT; caching at various layers. Who 'owns' the Internet and who 'manages' it: RFCs, service Providers, domain managers, IANA, UKERNA, MANs, commercial British activities. Routing protocols and default routers. HTML and Electronic publishing. Legal and ethical issues: slander/libel, copyright, pornography, Publishing versus carrying. Security and firewalls. |
Programme availability: |
CM30078 is Optional on the following programmes:Department of Computer Science
|
Notes:
|