Intermec 6710 User Manual

Page 27

Advertising
background image

SECTION 2

"

Features and Functional Overview

6710 Access Point User’s Guide 2-3

Bridges operate at the Media Access Control (MAC)

sublayer of the Data Link Layer (Layer 2) of the

International Organization for Standardization (ISO)

protocol model. Operating at the MAC layer allows bridges

to operate transparently to commonly used network

protocols such as TCP/IP, Novell SPX/IPX, NetBEUI, and

DECnet.
In wired LANs, bridges do the following:

"

Segment traffic for better efficiency and performance.

"

Extend the reach of LANs when cable length or node

limits have been reached.

"

Translate between different LAN types such as IEEE

802.3 Ethernet and 802.5 Token Ring.

A LAN environment normally consists of a collection of

nodes or stations, each identified by a unique 48-bit

physical address (also called an IEEE address or MAC

address). Data is sent on the LAN as frames or packets

that contain the

source address of the station sending the

frame, and the

destination address of the recipient station.

A bridge has at least two

ports, each connected to a

different LAN segment. Bridges

learn which source

addresses are generating traffic on each of their ports. If

the bridge receives a frame with a destination address

corresponding to a source address it has seen on another

port, it

forwards the frame to the port. If it receives a

frame where the source and destination addresses are on

the same port, it ignores

(drops) the frame, since the

destination node receives the original transmission.

Generally, if a bridge receives a frame for an unknown

destination address on any one port, it

floods the frame on

all other ports.

Advertising