Compare cert salaries and plan your next career move
Daniel333 wrote: It's understanding, that a device can run in full-duplex as long as there is no chance for collisions, right? But does it have to? e.g. If I have two switches plugged into each other with a cross-over cat5, I should get full duplex by default. Can I cut that to half duplex? Theoretical question here, suppose I have two 12' lengths of cat5 and I wanted to interconnect two switches that are 24' apart. Could I use a dumb hub as a coupler in that situation, since it would cross over the cable for me? as long as nothing else is on the hub, it should still work in full duplex, right? Or am I misunderstanding something here? thanks as always,
Ed Rooney wrote: You will get half-duplex. Switch 1 to hub is a collision domain. Switch 2 to hub is a collision domain. A hub is a single collision domain, therefore the whole mess in one collision domain. Full duplex is only possible with 2 stations in a point to point, like on a switch. Data from switch1 to switch 2 will be pumped right back out through both links. Take all of the hubs in your enterprise and throw them in the garbage. Hubs cause loops and duplex mismatches which are a cancer to your network.
litehedded wrote: Ed Rooney wrote: You will get half-duplex. Switch 1 to hub is a collision domain. Switch 2 to hub is a collision domain. A hub is a single collision domain, therefore the whole mess in one collision domain. Full duplex is only possible with 2 stations in a point to point, like on a switch. Data from switch1 to switch 2 will be pumped right back out through both links. Take all of the hubs in your enterprise and throw them in the garbage. Hubs cause loops and duplex mismatches which are a cancer to your network. it won't be pumped right back if you disable the loopback circuitry by forcing full duplex in the nic driver right?
Ed Rooney wrote: litehedded wrote: Ed Rooney wrote: You will get half-duplex. Switch 1 to hub is a collision domain. Switch 2 to hub is a collision domain. A hub is a single collision domain, therefore the whole mess in one collision domain. Full duplex is only possible with 2 stations in a point to point, like on a switch. Data from switch1 to switch 2 will be pumped right back out through both links. Take all of the hubs in your enterprise and throw them in the garbage. Hubs cause loops and duplex mismatches which are a cancer to your network. it won't be pumped right back if you disable the loopback circuitry by forcing full duplex in the nic driver right? What nic driver? We're dealing with 2 switches connected by a hub.
daniel333 wrote: Theoretical question here, suppose I have two 12' lengths of cat5 and I wanted to interconnect two switches that are 24' apart. Could I use a dumb hub as a coupler in that situation, since it would cross over the cable for me?
Compare salaries for top cybersecurity certifications. Free download for TechExams community.