Figure 1-1, The router legacy network 29 – Nortel Networks WEB OS 212777 User Manual

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Web OS 10.0 Application Guide

Chapter 1: Basic IP Routing

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212777-A, February 2002

For example, consider the following topology migration:

Figure 1-1 The Router Legacy Network

In this example, a corporate campus has migrated from a router-centric topology to a faster,
more powerful, switch-based topology. As is often the case, the legacy of network growth and
redesign has left the system with a mix of illogically distributed subnets.

This is a situation that switching alone cannot cure. Instead, the router is flooded with cross-
subnet communication. This compromises efficiency in two ways:

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Routers can be slower than switches. The cross-subnet side trip from the switch to the
router and back again adds two hops for the data, slowing throughput considerably.

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Traffic to the router increases, increasing congestion.

Even if every end-station could be moved to better logical subnets (a daunting task), competi-
tion for access to common server pools on different subnets still burdens the routers.

This problem is solved by using Alteon Web switches with built-in IP routing capabilities.
Cross-subnet LAN traffic can now be routed within the Web switches with wire speed Layer 2
switching performance. This not only eases the load on the router but saves the network
administrators from reconfiguring each and every end-station with new IP addresses.

Admin/Sales

Server
Subnet

Router

Switch

Staff/Eng2

Switch

Eng/Staff2/Sales

Switch

FDDI

Internet

Web Switch

Admin. Subnet

Server
Subnet

Hub

Staff Subnet

Hub

Eng. Subnet

Hub

Internet

FDDI

Router

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