10.1 Networking Overview
Most
computers today handle network traffic much as the post office
handles mail. Think, for example, of the steps involved in sending
and receiving a letter. Your postal carrier must know where to drop
off and where to pick up mail. So your home must have some kind of
recognizable interface; we call this a mailbox. And whereas your
postal carrier may know your neighborhood quite well, delivery in
other areas will require other carriers. Mail is passed to these
other carriers through a gateway; we call this the post office.
Although you can think of the whole postal system as one big network,
it's easier to understand if you think of it as a
hierarchy of subnetworks (or subnets): the postal system is divided
into states, states are divided into counties and cities with a range
of Zip Codes, Zip Codes contain a number of streets, and each street
contains a unique set of addresses.
Computer networking mirrors this model. Let's trace
an email message from you to a coworker. You compose the message and
click Send. Your computer passes the message to a network interface.
This interface may be a modem by which you dial up an Internet
service provider (ISP), or it may be via an Ethernet connection on a
LAN. Either way, on the other side of the interface is a gateway
machine. The gateway knows how to look at the address of the
recipient of the email message and interpret that message in terms of
networks and subnets. Using this information, the gateway passes the
message to other gateways until the message reaches the gateway for
the destination machine. That gateway in turn delivers the message
via a recognizable interface (such as a modem or Ethernet link) to
the recipient's inbox.
If you review this story, you can easily see which parts of
networking you'll need to configure on your Linux
system. You'll need to know the address of your
machine. Just as the town name Sebastopol and
the Zip Code 95472 are two different names for
the same location, you may have both a name, called a
hostname, and a number, called an
IP number or
IP address, that serve
as the address for your machine.
To translate between these two notations, you may need to know the
address of a Domain Name Server (DNS). This is a machine that matches
IP addresses with hostnames. You'll also need to
know the address of a gateway machine through which network traffic
will be routed. Finally, you'll need to be able to
bring up a network interface on your system, and
you'll need to assign a route from that interface to
the gateway.
While all of this can seem complex, it really isn't
any more complex than the postal system, and it functions in much the
same way. Fortunately, Linux comes with tools to help you automate
network configuration.
|