Data and computer communications / (Record no. 1611)
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000 -LEADER | |
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fixed length control field | 07190cam a22001814a 4500 |
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER | |
International Standard Book Number | 0132433109 |
040 ## - CATALOGING SOURCE | |
Transcribing agency | CUS |
082 00 - DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER | |
Classification number | 004.6 |
Item number | STA/D |
100 1# - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME | |
Personal name | Stallings, William. |
245 10 - TITLE STATEMENT | |
Title | Data and computer communications / |
Statement of responsibility, etc. | William Stallings. |
250 ## - EDITION STATEMENT | |
Edition statement | 8th ed. |
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT) | |
Place of publication, distribution, etc. | Upper Saddle River, N.J. : |
Name of publisher, distributor, etc. | Pearson/Prentice Hall, |
Date of publication, distribution, etc. | 2007. |
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION | |
Extent | xviii, 834 p. ill. : |
Dimensions | 25 cm. |
505 ## - FORMATTED CONTENTS NOTE | |
Formatted contents note | PART ONE OVERVIEW 1<br/>Chapter 1 Data Communications, Data Networking, and the Internet 1<br/>1.1 Data Communications and Networking for Today's Enterprise 3<br/>1.2 A Communications Model 7<br/>1.3 Data Communications 10<br/>1.4 Networks 13<br/>1.5 The Internet 16<br/>1.6 An Example Configuration 20<br/>Chapter 2 Protocol Architecture, TCP/IP, and Internet-Based Applications 23<br/>2.1 The Need for a Protocol Architecture 24<br/>2.2 The TCP/IP Protocol Architecture 25<br/>2.3 The OSI Model 33<br/>2.4 Standardization within a Protocol Architecture 35<br/>2.5 Traditional Internet-Based Applications 39<br/>2.6 Multimedia 39<br/>2.7 Recommended Reading 44<br/>2.8 Problems 45<br/>Appendix 2A The Trivial File Transfer Protocol 47<br/>PART TWO DATA COMMUNICATIONS 52<br/>Chapter 3 Data Transmission 52<br/>3.1 Concepts and Terminology 54<br/>3.2 Analog and Digital Data Transmission 65<br/>3.3 Transmission Impairments 73<br/>3.4 Channel Capacity 78<br/>3.5 Recotmnended Reading 83<br/>3.6 Problems 83<br/>Appendix 3A Decibels and Signal Strength 86<br/>Chapter 4 Transmission Media 89<br/>4,1. Guided Transmission Media 91<br/>4.2 Wireless Transmission 104<br/>4.3 Wireless Propagation 112<br/>4.4 Line-of-Sight Transmission 116<br/>4.5 Recommended Reading 120<br/>4.6 Problems 121<br/>Chapter 5 Signal Encoding Techniques 124<br/>5.1 Digital Data, Digital Signals 127<br/>5.2 Digital Data, Analog Signak 137<br/>5.3 Analog Data, Digital Signals 148<br/>5.4 Analog Data, Analog Signals 154<br/>5.5 Recommended Reading 161<br/>5.6 Problems 161<br/>Chapter 6 Digital Data Communicaticn Techniques 165<br/>5.1 Asynchronous and Synchronous Transmission 167<br/>6.2 Types of Errors 171<br/>6.3 Error Detection 171<br/>6.4 Error Correction 181<br/>6.5 Line Configurations 186<br/>6.6 Recommended Reading 188<br/>6.7 Problems 189<br/>Chapter 7 Data Link Control Protocols 192<br/>7.1 Flow Control 194<br/>7.2 Error Control 201<br/>7.3 High-Level Data Link Control (HDLC) 207<br/>7.4 Recommended Reading 213<br/>7.5 Problems 214<br/>Appendix 7A Performance Issues 216<br/>Chapter 8 Multiplexing 223<br/>8.1 Frequency-Division Multiplexing 226<br/>8.2 Synchronous Time-Division Multiplexing 232<br/>8.3 Statistical Time-Division Multiplexing 242<br/>8.4 Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line 249<br/>8.5 xDSL 252<br/>8.6 Recommended Reading 253<br/>8.7 Problems 254<br/>Chapter 9 Spread Spectrum 257<br/>9.1 The Concept of Spread Spectrum 259<br/>9.2 Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum 260<br/>9.3 Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum 265<br/>9.4 Code-Division Multiple Access 270<br/>9.5 Recommended Reading 273<br/>9.6 Problems 273<br/>PART THREE WIDE AREA NETWORKS 277<br/>Chapter 10 Circuit Switching and Packet Switching 277<br/>10.1 Switched Communications Networks 279<br/>10.2 Circuit Switching Networks 281<br/>10.3 Circuit Switching Concepts 284<br/>10.4 Softswitch Architecture 287<br/>10.5 Packet-Switching Principles 289<br/>10.6 X.25 297<br/>10.7 Frame Relay 299<br/>10.8 Recommended Reading 304<br/>10.9 Problems 304<br/>Chapter 11 Asynchronous Transfer Mode 307<br/>11.1 Protocol Architecture 308<br/>11.2 ATM Logical Connections 310<br/>11.3 ATM Cells 314<br/>11.4 Transmission of ATM Cells 319<br/>11.5 ATM Service Categories 324<br/>11.6 Recommended Reading 327<br/>11.7 Problems 328<br/>Chapter 12 Routing in Switched Networks 330<br/>12.1 Routing in Packet-Switching Networks 331<br/>12.2 Examples: Routing in ARPANET 341<br/>12.3 Least-Cost Algorithms 346<br/>12.4 Recommended Reading 351<br/>12.5 Problems 352<br/>Chapter 13 Congestion Control in Data Networks 355<br/>13.1 Effects of Congestion 357<br/>13.2 Congestion Control 361<br/>13.3 Traffic Management 364<br/>13.4 Congestion Control in Packet-Switching Networks 365<br/>13.5 Frame Relay Congestion Control 366<br/>13.6 ATM Traffic Management 372<br/>13.7 ATM-GFR Traffic Management 384<br/>13.8 Recommended Reading 387<br/>13.9 Problems 388<br/>Chapter 14 Cellular Wireless Networks 391<br/>14.1 Principles of Cellular Networks 393<br/>14.2 First Generation Analog 405<br/>14.3 Second Generation CDMA 407<br/>14.4 Third Generation Systems 415<br/>14.5 Recommended Reading 418<br/>14.6 Problems 419<br/>PART FOUR LOCAL AREA NETWORKS 421<br/>Chapter 15 Local Area Network Overview 421<br/>15.1 Background 423<br/>15.2 Topologies and Transmission Media 426<br/>15.3 LAN Protocol Architecture 432<br/>15.4 Bridges 440<br/>15.5 Layer 2 and Layer 3 Switches 448<br/>15.6 Recommended Reading 453<br/>15.7 Problems 454<br/>X CONTENTS<br/>Chapter 16 High-Speed LANs 456<br/>16.1 The Emergence of High-Speed LANs 457<br/>16.2 Ethernet 459<br/>16.3 Fibre Channel 474<br/>16.4 Recommended Reading 478<br/>16.5 Problems 480<br/>Appendix 16A Digital Signal Encoding for LANs 481<br/>Appendix 16B Performance Issues 487<br/>Appendix 16C Scrambhng 492<br/>Chapter 17 Wireless LANs 495<br/>17.1 Overview 496<br/>17.2 Wireless LAN Technology 501<br/>17.3 IEEE 802.11 Architecture and Services 504<br/>17.4 IEEE 802.11 Medium Access Control 508<br/>17.5 IEEE 802.1 IPhysical Layer 516<br/>17.6 IEEE 802.11 Security Considerations 522<br/>17.7 Recommended Reading 523<br/>17.8 Problems 524<br/>PART FIVE INTERNET AND TRANSPORT PROTOCOLS 526<br/>Chapter 18 Internetwork Protocols 526<br/>18.1 Basic Protocol Functions 528<br/>18.2 Principles of Internetworking 536<br/>18.3 Internet Protocol Operation 539<br/>18.4 Internet Protocol 546<br/>18.5 IPv6 556<br/>18.6 Virtual Private Networks and IP Security 566<br/>18.7 Recommended Reading 569<br/>18.8 Problems 570<br/>Chapter 19 Internetwork Operation 573<br/>19.1 Multicasting 575<br/>19.2 Routing Protocols 584<br/>19.3 Integrated Services Architecture 595<br/>19.4 Differentiated Services 606<br/>19.5 Service Level Agreements 615<br/>19.6 IP Performance Metrics 616<br/>19.7 Recommended Reading 619<br/>19.8 Problems 621<br/>Chapter 20 Transport Protocols 624<br/>20.1 Connection-Oriented Transport Protocol Mechanisms 626<br/>20.2 TCP 643<br/>20.3 TCP Congestion Control 652<br/>20.4 UDP 662<br/>20.5 Recommended Reading 664<br/>20.6 Problems 664<br/>PART SIX INTERNET APPLICATIONS 667<br/>Chapter 21 Network Security 667<br/>21.1 Security Requirements and Attacks 669<br/>21.2 Confidentiality with Conventional Encryption 671<br/>21.3 Message Authentication and Hash Functions 679<br/>21.4 Public-Key Encryption and Digital Signatures 686<br/>21.5 Secure Socket Layer and Transport Layer Security 693<br/>21.6 IPv4 and IPv6 Security 698<br/>21.7 Wi-Fi Protected Access 703<br/>21.8 Recommended Reading 705<br/>21.9 Problems 706<br/>Chapter 22 Internet Applications—^Electronic Mail and Network Management 708<br/>22.1 Electronic Mail: SMTP and MIME 710<br/>22.2 Network Management: SNMP 725<br/>22.3 Recommended Reading 735<br/>22.4 Problems 736<br/>Chapter 23 Internet Applications—Internet Directory Service and World Wide Web 738<br/>23.1 Internet Directory Service: DNS 739<br/>23.2 Web Access: HTTP 749<br/>23.3 Recommended Reading 760<br/>23.4 Problems 761<br/>Chapter 24 Internet Applications—^Multimedia 763<br/>24.1 Audio and Video Compression 764<br/>24.2 Real-Time Traffic 772<br/>24.3 Voice Over IP and Multimedia Support—SIP 775<br/>24.4 Real-Time Transport Protocol (RTP) 784<br/>24.5 Recommended Reading 795<br/>24.6 Problems 796 |
650 00 - SUBJECT | |
Keyword | Data Transmission Systems. |
650 00 - SUBJECT | |
Keyword | Computer Networks. |
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA) | |
Koha item type | General Books |
Withdrawn status | Lost status | Damaged status | Not for loan | Home library | Current library | Shelving location | Date acquired | Full call number | Accession number | Date last seen | Date last checked out | Koha item type |
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Central Library, Sikkim University | Central Library, Sikkim University | General Book Section | 31/05/2016 | 004.6 STA/D | P33331 | 14/07/2018 | 14/07/2018 | General Books |