What Is
the OSI (Open Systems Interconnection) Model?
The OSI model defines internetworking in terms of a
vertical stack of seven layers. Upper
layers of the OSI model
represent software that implements network services like encryption and
connection management. Lower
layers of the OSI model
implement more primitive, hardware-oriented functions like routing, addressing,
and flow control.
Data communication in the OSI model starts with the top layer of
the stack at the sending side, travels down the stack to the sender's lowest
(bottom) layer, then traverses the physical network connection to the bottom layer on the
receiving side, and up its OSI model stack.
The OSI model was introduced in 1984. Designed
to be an abstract model and teaching tool, the OSI model remains a useful for
learning about today’s popular network technologies like Ethernet and protocols like IP.
The Open Systems Interconnect (OSI)
model has seven layers. This article describes and explains them, beginning
with the 'lowest' in the hierarchy (the physical) and proceeding to the
'highest' (the application). The layers are stacked this way:
·
Application
·
Presentation
·
Session
·
Transport
·
Network
·
Data Link
·
Physical
PHYSICAL LAYER
The physical layer, the lowest layer
of the OSI model, is concerned with the transmission and reception of the
unstructured raw bit stream over a physical medium. It describes the
electrical/optical, mechanical, and functional interfaces to the physical
medium, and carries the signals for all of the higher layers. It provides:
·
Data encoding: modifies the simple digital signal pattern (1s and
0s) used by the PC to better accommodate the characteristics of the physical
medium, and to aid in bit and frame synchronization. It determines:
·
What signal state represents a binary 1
·
How the receiving station knows when a "bit-time" starts
·
How the receiving station delimits a frame
·
Physical medium attachment, accommodating various possibilities in
the medium:
·
Will an external transceiver (MAU) be used to connect to the
medium?
·
How many pins do the connectors have and what is each pin used
for?
·
Transmission technique: determines whether the encoded bits will
be transmitted by baseband (digital) or broadband (analog) signaling.
·
Physical medium transmission: transmits bits as electrical or optical
signals appropriate for the physical medium, and determines:
·
What physical medium options can be used
·
How many volts/db should be used to represent a given signal
state, using a given physical medium
DATA LINK LAYER
The data link layer provides error-free
transfer of data frames from one node to another over the physical layer,
allowing layers above it to assume virtually error-free transmission over the
link. To do this, the data link layer provides:
·
Link establishment and termination: establishes and terminates the
logical link between two nodes.
·
Frame traffic control: tells the transmitting node to
"back-off" when no frame buffers are available.
·
Frame sequencing: transmits/receives frames sequentially.
·
Frame acknowledgment: provides/expects frame acknowledgments.
Detects and recovers from errors that occur in the physical layer by
retransmitting non-acknowledged frames and handling duplicate frame receipt.
·
Frame delimiting: creates and recognizes frame boundaries.
·
Frame error checking: checks received frames for integrity.
·
Media access management: determines when the node "has the
right" to use the physical medium.
NETWORK LAYER
The network layer controls the
operation of the subnet, deciding which physical path the data should take
based on network conditions, priority of service, and other factors. It
provides:
·
Routing: routes frames among networks.
·
Subnet traffic control: routers (network layer intermediate
systems) can instruct a sending station to "throttle back" its frame
transmission when the router's buffer fills up.
·
Frame fragmentation: if it determines that a downstream router's
maximum transmission unit (MTU) size is less than the frame size, a router can
fragment a frame for transmission and re-assembly at the destination station.
·
Logical-physical address mapping: translates logical addresses, or
names, into physical addresses.
·
Subnet usage accounting: has accounting functions to keep track of
frames forwarded by subnet intermediate systems, to produce billing
information.
Communications
Subnet
The network layer software must build
headers so that the network layer software residing in the subnet intermediate
systems can recognize them and use them to route data to the destination
address.
This layer relieves the upper layers of the need to know anything about the data transmission and intermediate switching technologies used to connect systems. It establishes, maintains and terminates connections across the intervening communications facility (one or several intermediate systems in the communication subnet).
In the network layer and the layers below, peer protocols exist between a node and its immediate neighbor, but the neighbor may be a node through which data is routed, not the destination station. The source and destination stations may be separated by many intermediate systems.
This layer relieves the upper layers of the need to know anything about the data transmission and intermediate switching technologies used to connect systems. It establishes, maintains and terminates connections across the intervening communications facility (one or several intermediate systems in the communication subnet).
In the network layer and the layers below, peer protocols exist between a node and its immediate neighbor, but the neighbor may be a node through which data is routed, not the destination station. The source and destination stations may be separated by many intermediate systems.
TRANSPORT LAYER
The transport layer ensures that
messages are delivered error-free, in sequence, and with no losses or
duplications. It relieves the higher layer protocols from any concern with the
transfer of data between them and their peers.
The size and complexity of a transport protocol depends on the type of service it can get from the network layer. For a reliable network layer with virtual circuit capability, a minimal transport layer is required. If the network layer is unreliable and/or only supports datagrams, the transport protocol should include extensive error detection and recovery.
The transport layer provides:
The size and complexity of a transport protocol depends on the type of service it can get from the network layer. For a reliable network layer with virtual circuit capability, a minimal transport layer is required. If the network layer is unreliable and/or only supports datagrams, the transport protocol should include extensive error detection and recovery.
The transport layer provides:
·
Message segmentation: accepts a message from the (session) layer
above it, splits the message into smaller units (if not already small enough),
and passes the smaller units down to the network layer. The transport layer at
the destination station reassembles the message.
·
Message acknowledgment: provides reliable end-to-end message
delivery with acknowledgments.
·
Message traffic control: tells the transmitting station to
"back-off" when no message buffers are available.
·
Session multiplexing: multiplexes several message streams, or
sessions onto one logical link and keeps track of which messages belong to
which sessions (see session layer).
Typically, the transport layer can
accept relatively large messages, but there are strict message size limits
imposed by the network (or lower) layer. Consequently, the transport layer must
break up the messages into smaller units, or frames, prepending a header to
each frame.
The transport layer header information must then include control information, such as message start and message end flags, to enable the transport layer on the other end to recognize message boundaries. In addition, if the lower layers do not maintain sequence, the transport header must contain sequence information to enable the transport layer on the receiving end to get the pieces back together in the right order before handing the received message up to the layer above.
The transport layer header information must then include control information, such as message start and message end flags, to enable the transport layer on the other end to recognize message boundaries. In addition, if the lower layers do not maintain sequence, the transport header must contain sequence information to enable the transport layer on the receiving end to get the pieces back together in the right order before handing the received message up to the layer above.
End-to-end
layers
Unlike the lower "subnet"
layers whose protocol is between immediately adjacent nodes, the transport
layer and the layers above are true "source to destination" or
end-to-end layers, and are not concerned with the details of the underlying
communications facility. Transport layer software (and software above it) on
the source station carries on a conversation with similar software on the
destination station by using message headers and control messages.
SESSION LAYER
The session layer allows session
establishment between processes running on different stations. It provides:
·
Session establishment, maintenance and termination: allows two
application processes on different machines to establish, use and terminate a
connection, called a session.
·
Session support: performs the functions that allow these processes
to communicate over the network, performing security, name recognition,
logging, and so on.
PRESENTATION
LAYER
The presentation layer formats the
data to be presented to the application layer. It can be viewed as the
translator for the network. This layer may translate data from a format used by
the application layer into a common format at the sending station, then
translate the common format to a format known to the application layer at the
receiving station.
The presentation layer provides:
The presentation layer provides:
·
Character code translation: for example, ASCII to EBCDIC.
·
Data conversion: bit order, CR-CR/LF, integer-floating point, and
so on.
·
Data compression: reduces the number of bits that need to be
transmitted on the network.
·
Data encryption: encrypt data for security purposes. For example,
password encryption.
APPLICATION
LAYER
The application layer serves as the window for users and application processes to access network services. This layer contains a variety of commonly needed functions:
·
Resource sharing and device redirection
·
Remote file access
·
Remote printer access
·
Inter-process communication
·
Network management
·
Directory services
·
Electronic messaging (such as mail)
·
Network virtual terminals
Helpful
ReplyDeleteVery useful.
ReplyDeletePerfect
ReplyDelete