Detailed goals of the course EP2120/DD2392 and DD2393
After the course, the student should be able to:
- Generally describe the architecture of the Internet, its services
and protocols, including the administration and organization of
global Internet resources, such as domain names, IP addresses and
Internet standards.
- In technical detail explain the central protocols that constitute
the Internet, including IP, UDP, TCP, ARP, ICMP, SNMP, DNS and SMTP.
- Describe abstractions and principles for network design, including
layering, the end-to-end principle, the hourglass model,
encapsulation and multiplexing.
- Describe how the procotols are implemented in end systems and
routers. Explain how packet forwarding is achieved in a router,
including routing, forwarding and error handling.
- Assess different methods for naming, addressing, routing
and error detection and explain how they are used in bridged and routed networks.
- In detail explain how reliability is provided by the Internet
transport protocols, such as TCP and SCTP. Describe algorithms for
connection control, flow control, congestion control and error
handling. The student should also be able to describe the protocol
behaviour by studying a packet trace.
- In detail describe how name lookup works in the Internet and be able
to configure a simple name server.
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Describe security aspects of networking and how firewalls and
address translation work and why they are necessary.
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On a general level describe how routing works internally, and
between autonomous systems, as well as explain how the most common
VPN technologies work.