Subject: Re: bridges,switch
To: Bill Studenmund <wrstuden@nas.nasa.gov>
From: Andrew Brown <atatat@atatdot.net>
List: tech-net
Date: 04/19/1999 18:54:32
>> >> In the modern world, there is no difference between a bridge and a switch.
>> >> I don't think it's even possible to find a bridge that isn't a "learning
>> >> bridge" these days.
>> >
>> >Well, bridges always tend to have exactly two ports. :-)
>>
>> i thought that was a repeater. :-/
>
>Not in my understanding, though repeaters also have two ports. Bridges and
>switches are about the same thing - just differeing in sales terms. The
>main thing is that they record which ethernet addresses are on which
>ports. When they receive an ethernet packet on a particular wire, if they
>know that address is on a different port, they relay the packet. If that
>address is on the wire segment they received the message on (that address
>already has gotten the packet), they do nothing.
>
>Repeaters repeat everthing they hear.
so...regarding hubs, bridges, switches, and repeaters:
* hubs and repeaters repeat everything they hear, whereas bridges and
switches "learn" not to.
* hubs and switches have more than two ports, whereas bridges and
repeaters don't.
did i miss anything? :)
>"Switch"es are the same thing, except that they always have multiple
>ports. Someone else mentioned bridges which had more than two ports - now
>adays the sales folks call them switches.
i think we should just call a spade a spade. all the bridges i've
driven over only go point to point, never point to multi-point.
--
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