Working of Router
The Internet is one of the 20th century's greatest communications
developments. It allows people around the world to send Email to one another in a matter of seconds, and it lets you read,
among other things. We're all used to seeing the various parts of the Internet that come into our homes and offices -- the
webpages , e-mail messages and downloaded files that make the Internet a dynamic and valuable medium. But none of these parts
would ever make it to your computer without a piece of the Internet that you've probably never seen. In fact, most people
have never stood "face to machine" with the technology most responsible for allowing the Internet to exist at all: the router.
Routers are specialized computers that send your messages and those of every other Internet user speeding to their destinations
along thousands of pathways. In this article, we'll look at how these behind-the-scenes machines make the Internet work.
Keeping the Messages Moving
When you send email to a friend on the other side of the
country, how does the message know to end up on your friend's computer, rather than on one of the millions of other computers
in the world? Much of the work to get a message from one computer to another is done by routers, because they're the crucial
devices that let messages flow between networks, rather than within networks.
Let's look at what a very simple router
might do. Imagine a small company that makes animated 3-D graphics for local television stations. There are 10 employees of
the company, each with a computer. Four of the employees are animators, while the rest are in sales, accounting and management.
The animators will need to send lots of very large files back and forth to one another as they work on projects. To do this,
they'll use a network.
When one animator sends a file to another, the very large file will use up most of the network's
capacity, making the network run very slowly for other users. One of the reasons that a single intensive user can affect the
entire network stems from the way that Ethernet works. Each information packet sent from a computer is seen by all the other
computers on the local network. Each computer then examines the packet and decides whether it was meant for its address. This
keeps the basic plan of the network simple, but has performance consequences as the size of the network or level of network
activity increases. To keep the animators' work from interfering with that of the folks in the front office, the company sets
up two separate networks, one for the animators and one for the rest of the company. A router links the two networks and connects
both networks to the Internet.
Directing Traffic
The router is the only device that sees every message sent by
any computer on either of the company's networks. When the animator in our example sends a huge file to another animator,
the router looks at the recipient's address and keeps the traffic on the animator's network. When an animator, on the other
hand, sends a message to the bookkeeper asking about an expense-account check, then the router sees the recipient's address
and forwards the message between the two networks.
One of the tools a router uses to decide where a packet should go is
a configuration table. A configuration table is a collection of information, including:
Information on which connections
lead to particular groups of addresses
Priorities for connections to be used
Rules for handling both routine and special
cases of traffic
A configuration table can be as simple as a half-dozen lines in the smallest routers, but can grow to
massive size and complexity in the very large routers that handle the bulk of Internet messages.
A router, then, has two
separate but related jobs:
The router ensures that information doesn't go where it's not needed. This is crucial for keeping
large volumes of data from clogging the connections of "innocent bystanders."
The router makes sure that information does
make it to the intended destination.
In performing these two jobs, a router is extremely useful in dealing with two separate
computer networks. It joins the two networks, passing information from one to the other and, in some cases, performing translations
of various protocols between the two networks. It also protects the networks from one another, preventing the traffic on one
from unnecessarily spilling over to the other. As the number of networks attached to one another grows, the configuration
table for handling traffic among them grows, and the processing power of the router is increased. Regardless of how many networks
are attached, though, the basic operation and function of the router remains the same. Since the Internet is one huge network
made up of tens of thousands of smaller networks, its use of routers is an absolute necessity.
Transmitting Packets
When you make a telephone call to someone on the other side
of the country, the telephone system establishes a stable circuit between your telephone and the telephone you're calling.
The circuit might involve a half dozen or more steps through copper cables, switches, fiber optics, microwaves and satellites,
but those steps are established and remain constant for the duration of the call. This circuit approach means that the quality
of the line between you and the person you're calling is consistent throughout the call, but a problem with any portion of
the circuit -- maybe a tree falls across one of the lines used, or there's a power problem with a switch -- brings your call
to an early and abrupt end. When you send an e-mail message with an attachment to the other side of the country, a very different
process is used.
Internet data, whether in the form of a Webpage, a downloaded file or an email message, travels over
a system known as a packet-switching network. In this system, the data in a message or file is broken up into packages about
1,500 bytes long. Each of these packages gets a wrapper that includes information on the sender's address, the receiver's
address, the package's place in the entire message, and how the receiving computer can be sure that the package arrived intact.
Each data package, called a packet, is then sent off to its destination via the best available route -- a route that might
be taken by all the other packets in the message or by none of the other packets in the message. This might seem very complicated
compared to the circuit approach used by the telephone system, but in a network designed for data there are two huge advantages
to the packet-switching plan.
The network can balance the load across various pieces of equipment on a millisecond-by-millisecond
basis.
If there is a problem with one piece of equipment in the network while a message is being transferred, packets
can be routed around the problem, ensuring the delivery of the entire message.
The Path of a Packet
The routers that make up the main part of the Internet can reconfigure
the paths that packets take because they look at the information surrounding the data packet, and they tell each other about
line conditions, such as delays in receiving and sending data and traffic on various pieces of the network. Not all routers
do so many jobs, however. Routers come in different sizes. For example:
If you have enabled Internet Connection Sharing
between two Windows 98-based computers, you're using one of the computers (the computer with the Internet connection) as a
simple router. In this instance, the router does so little -- simply looking at data to see whether it's intended for one
computer or the other -- that it can operate in the background of the system without significantly affecting the other programs
you might be running.
Slightly larger routers, the sort used to connect a small office network to the Internet, will do
a bit more. These routers frequently enforce rules concerning security for the office network (trying to secure the network
from certain attacks). They handle enough traffic that they're generally stand-alone devices rather than software running
on a server.
The largest routers, those used to handle data at the major traffic points on the Internet, handle millions
of data packets every second and work to configure the network most efficiently. These routers are large stand-alone systems
that have far more in common with supercomputers than with your office server.
Routing Packets: An Example
Let's take a look at a medium-sized router -- the router
we use in the office. In our case, the router only has two networks to worry about: The office network, with about 50 computers
and devices, and the Internet. The office network connects to the router through an Ethernet connection, specifically a 100
base-T connection (100 base-T means that the connection is 100 megabits per second, and uses a twisted-pair cable like an
8-wire version of the cable that connects your telephone to the wall jack). There are two connections between the router and
our ISP (Internet service provider). One is a T-1 connection that supports 1.5 megabits per second. The other is an ISDN line
that supports 128 kilobits per second. The configuration table in the router tells it that all out-bound packets are to use
the T-1 line, unless it's unavailable for some reason (perhaps a backhoe digs up the cable). If it can't be used, then outbound
traffic goes on the ISDN line. This way, the ISDN line is held as "insurance" against a problem with the faster T-1 connection,
and no action by a staff member is required to make the switch in case of trouble. The router's configuration table knows
what to do.
In addition to routing packets from one point to another, the askdretech router has rules limiting how computers
from outside the network can connect to computers inside the network, how the askdretech network appears to the outside world,
and other security functions. While most companies also have a special piece of hardware or software called a firewall to
enforce security, the rules in a router's configuration table are important to keeping a company's (or family's) network secure.
One of the crucial tasks for any router is knowing when a packet of information stays on its local network. For this,
it uses a mechanism called a subnet mask. The subnet mask looks like an IP address and usually reads "255.255.255.0." This
tells the router that all messages with the sender and receiver having an address sharing the first three groups of numbers
are on the same network, and shouldn't be sent out to another network. Here's an example: The computer at address 15.57.31.40
sends a request to the computer at 15.57.31.52. The router, which sees all the packets, matches the first three groups in
the address of both sender and receiver (15.57.31), and keeps the packet on the local network. (You'll learn more about how
the addresses work in the next section.)
Between the time these words left the askdretech.com server and the time they
showed up on your monitor, they passed through several routers (it's impossible to know ahead of time exactly how many "several"
might be) that helped them along the way. It's very similar to the process that gets a postal letter from your mailbox to
the mailbox of a friend, with routers taking the place of the mail sorters and handlers along the way.
Knowing Where to Send Data
Routers are one of several types of devices that make up
the "plumbing" of a computer network. Hubs, switches and routers all take signals from computers or networks and pass them
along to other computers and networks, but a router is the only one of these devices that examines each bundle of data as
it passes and makes a decision about exactly where it should go. To make these decisions, routers must first know about two
kinds of information: addresses and network structure.
When a friend mails a birthday card to be delivered to you at your
house, he probably uses an address that looks something like this:
Joe Smith
123 Maple Street
Smalltown, FL 45678
The
address has several pieces, each of which helps the people in the postal service move the letter along to your house. The
ZIP code can speed the process up; but even without the ZIP code, the card will get to your house as long as your friend includes
your state, city and street address. You can think of this address as a logical address because it describes a way someone
can get a message to you. This logical address is connected to a physical address that you generally only see when you're
buying or selling a piece of property. The survey plot of the land and house, with latitude, longitude or section bearings,
gives the legal description, or address, of the property.
Logical Addresses
Every piece of equipment that connects to a network, whether an
office network or the Internet, has a physical address. This is an address that's unique to the piece of equipment that's
actually attached to the network cable. For example, if your desktop computer has a network interface card (NIC) in it, the
NIC has a physical address permanently stored in a special memory location. This physical address, which is also called the
MAC address (for Media Access Control) has two parts, each 3 bytes long. The first 3 bytes identify the company that made
the NIC. The second 3 bytes are the serial number of the NIC itself.
The interesting thing is that your computer can have
several logical addresses at the same time. Of course, you're used to having several "logical addresses" bring messages to
one physical address. Your mailing address, telephone number (or numbers) and home e-mail address all work to bring messages
to you when you're in your house. They are simply used for different types of messages -- different networks, so to speak.
Logical addresses for computer networks work in exactly the same way. You may be using the addressing schemes, or protocols,
from several different types of networks simultaneously. If you're connected to the Internet (and if you're reading this,
you probably are), then you have an address that's part of the TCP/IP network protocol If you also have a Small Network set
up to exchange files between several family computers, then you may also be using the Microsoft NetBEUI protocol. If you connect
to your company's network from home, then your computer may have an address that follows Novell's IPX/SPX protocol. All of
these can coexist on your computer. Since the driver software that allows your computer to communicate with each network uses
resources like memory and CPU time, you don't want to load protocols you won't need, but there's no problem with having all
the protocols your work requires running at the same time.
On the next page, you’ll learn how to find your computer’s
MAC address.
MAC Addresses
The chances are very good that you'll never see the MAC address for
any of your equipment because the software that helps your computer communicate with a network takes care of matching the
MAC address to a logical address. The logical address is what the network uses to pass information along to your computer.
If you'd like to see the MAC address and logical address used by the Internet Protocol (IP) for your Windows computer,
you can run a small program that Microsoft provides. Go to the "Start" menu, click on "Run," and in the window that appears,
type WINIPCFG (IPCONFIG/ALL for Windows 2000/XP). When the gray window appears, click on "More Info" and you'll get this sort
of information:
Windows 98 IP Configuration:
Host Name: NAMEaskdretech
DNS Servers: 208.153.64.20
208.153.0.5
Node Type: Broadcast
NetBIOS
Scope ID:
IP Routing Enabled: Yes
WINS Proxy Enabled: No
NetBIOS Resolution Uses DNS: No
Ethernet adapter:
Description: PPP Adapter
Physical Address: 44-45-53-54-12-34
DHCP Enabled: Yes
IP Address:
227.78.86.288
Subnet Mask: 255.255.255.0
Default Gateway: 227.78.86.288
DHCP Server: 255.255.255.255
Primary WINS
Server:
Secondary WINS Server: Lease Obtained: 01 01 80 12:00:00 AM
Lease Expires: 01 01 80 12:00:00 AM
There's
a lot of information here that will vary depending on exactly how your connection to the Internet is established, but the
physical address is the MAC address of the adapter queried by the program. The IP address is the logical address assigned
to your connection by your ISP or network administrator. You'll see the addresses of other servers, including the DNS Servers
that keep track of all the names of Internet sites (so you can type "www.google.com" rather than "216.239.37.99") and the gateway server that you connect to in order to reach the Internet. When you've finished
looking at the information, click OK. (Note: For security reasons, some of the information about this connection to the Internet
has been changed. You should be very careful about giving your computer's information to other people -- with your address
and the right tools, an unscrupulous person could, in some circumstances, gain access to your personal information and control
your system.
Understanding the Protocols
The first and most basic job of the router is to know
where to send information addressed to your computer. Just as the mail handler on the other side of the country knows enough
to keep a birthday card coming toward you without knowing where your house is, most of the routers that forward an e-mail
message to you don't know your computer's MAC address, but they know enough to keep the message flowing.
Routers are programmed
to understand the most common network protocols. That means they know the format of the addresses, how many bytes are in the
basic package of data sent out over the network, and how to make sure all the packages reach their destination and get reassembled.
For the routers that are part of the Internet's main "backbone," this means looking at, and moving on, millions of information
packages every second. And simply moving the package along to its destination isn't all that a router will do. It's just as
important, in today's computerized world, that they keep the message flowing by the best possible route.
In a modern network,
every e-mail message is broken up into small pieces. The pieces are sent individually and reassembled when they're received
at their final destination. Because the individual pieces of information are called packets and each packet can be sent along
a different path, like a train going through a set of switches, this kind of network is called a packet-switched network.
It means that you don't have to build a dedicated network between you and your friend on the other side of the country. Your
e-mail flows over any one of thousands of different routes to get from one computer to the other.
Depending on the time
of day and day of the week, some parts of the huge public packet-switched network may be busier than others. When this happens,
the routers that make up this system will communicate with one another so that traffic not bound for the crowded area can
be sent by less congested network routes. This lets the network function at full capacity without excessively burdening already-busy
areas. You can see, though, how Denial of Service attacks (described in the next section), in which people send millions and
millions of messages to a particular server, will affect that server and the routers forwarding message to it. As the messages
pile up and pieces of the network become congested, more and more routers send out the message that they're busy, and the
entire network with all its users can be affected.
Tracing a Message
If you're using a Microsoft Windows-based system, you can see just
how many routers are involved in your Internet traffic by using a program you have on your computer. The program is called
Traceroute, and that describes what it does -- it traces the route that a packet of information takes to get from your computer
to another computer connected to the Internet. To run this program, click on the "MS-DOS Prompt" icon on the "Start" menu.
Then, at the "C:\WINDOWS>" prompt, type "tracert www.askdretech.com ".
The first number shows how many routers are between your computer and the router shown. In this instance, there were
a total of 14 routers involved in the process (number 15 is the askdretech.com Web server). The next three numbers show how
long it takes a packet of information to move from your computer to the router shown and back again. Next, in this example,
starting with step six, comes the "name" of the router or server. This is something that helps people looking at the list
but is of no importance to the routers and computers as they move traffic along the Internet. Finally, you see the Internet
Protocol (IP) address of each computer or router. The final picture of this trace route shows that there were 14 routers between
the Web server and me and that it took, on average, a little more than 2.5 seconds for information to get from my computer
to the server and back again.
You can use Traceroute to see how many routers are between you and any other computer you
can name or know the IP address for. It can be interesting to see how many steps are required to get to computers outside
your nation. Since I live in the United States, I decided to see how many routers were between my computer and the Web server
for the British Broadcasting Corporation. At the C:\WINDOWS> prompt, I typed tracert www.bbc.com. The result was this:
You can see that it took only one more step to reach a Web server on the other side of the Atlantic
Ocean than it did to reach a server two states away!
On the next page, we'll go into detail about Denial of Service attacks.
Denial of Service Attacks
In the first quarter of 2000, there were several
attacks on very popular Web sites. Most of these were "Denial of Service" attacks -- attacks that served to prevent regular
readers and customers of the sites from getting a response to their requests. How did someone manage to do this? They did
it by flooding the servers, and their attached routers, with requests for information at a rate far too great for the system
to handle.
Most routers have rules in the configuration table that won't allow millions of requests from the same sending
address. If too many requests from one address are received in a short period of time, the router simply discards them without
forwarding. The people responsible for the attacks knew this, so they illicitly planted programs on many different computers.
These programs, when triggered, began sending thousands of requests a minute to one or more Web sites. The programs "spoofed"
the IP address of the sender, placing a different false IP address on each packet so that the routers' security rules wouldn't
be triggered.
When the packet floods were triggered, millions of requests for information began to hit the targeted Web
sites. While the servers were being heavily taxed by the requests, the real impact was to the routers just "upstream" from
the servers. Suddenly these routers, which were robust but of a size appropriate for normal traffic, were getting the levels
of requests normally associated with Internet backbone routers. They couldn't handle the massive number of packets, and began
discarding packets and sending status messages to other routers stating that the connection was full. As these messages cascaded
through the routers leading to attacked servers, all paths to the servers were clogged, legitimate traffic couldn't get through
the logjam, and the attackers' goals were accomplished.
Web content providers and router companies have placed new rules
designed to prevent such an attack in the configuration tables, and the companies and universities whose computers were used
to launch the attacks have worked to prevent their systems being used maliciously. Whether their defenses, or the new attacks
designed by criminals, will prevail remains to be seen.
Backbone of the Internet
In order to handle all the users of even a large private
network, millions and millions of traffic packets must be sent at the same time. Some of the largest routers are made by Cisco
Systems, Inc. , a company that specializes in networking hardware. Cisco's Gigabit Switch Router 12000 series of routers is
the sort of equipment that is used on the backbone of the Internet. These routers use the same sort of design as some of the
most powerful supercomputers in the world, a design that ties many different processors together with a series of extremely
fast switches. The 12000 series uses 200-MHz MIPS R5000 processors, the same type of processor used in the workstations that
generate much of the computer animation and special effects used in movies. The largest model in the 12000 series, the 12016,
uses a series of switches that can handle up to 320 billion bits of information per second and, when fully loaded with boards,
move as many as 60 million packets of data every second. Beyond the computing power of the processors, these routers can handle
so much information because they are very highly specialized. Relieved of the burden of displaying 3-D graphics and waiting
for mouse input, modern processors and software can cope with amazing amounts of information.
Even with the computing
power available in a very large router, how does it know which of the many possibilities for outbound connection a particular
packet should take? The answer lies back in the configuration table. The router will scan the destination address and match
that IP address against rules in the configuration table. The rules will say that packets in a particular group of addresses
(a group that may be large or small, depending on precisely where the router is) should go in a specific direction. Next the
router will check the performance of the primary connection in that direction against another set of rules. If the performance
of the connection is good enough, the packet is sent, and the next packet handled. If the connection is not performing up
to expected parameters, then an alternate is chosen and checked. Finally, a connection will be found with the best performance
at a given moment, and the packet will be sent on its way. All of this happens in a tiny fraction of a second, and this activity
goes on millions of times a second, around the world, 24 hours every day.
Knowing where and how to send a message is the
most important job of a router. Some simple routers do this and nothing more. Other routers add additional functions to the
jobs they perform. Rules about where messages from inside a company may be sent and from which companies messages are accepted
can be applied to some routers. Others may have rules that help minimize the damage from "denial of service" attacks. The
one constant is that modern networks, including the Internet, could not exist without the router.