If it is connected to another network, then it is a backbone between the two
network rite? Else if it is connect to the Internet, there will not be any
backbone in the network? Rite? Correct me if wrong. Sorry, me new in this
line. So have to seek advice from you all.

Cheers,
Jimmy

""Priscilla Oppenheimer""  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Jimmy wrote:
> >
> > Hi,
> > Just want to clarify something. Let say i have middle-size
> > network which all
> > the switches (around 4) connected together to a router. The
> > backbone of the
> > network should be the toward the WAN side which is from the
> > router onsward
> > rite? Or is it the connection from the switch to the router?
> >
> >
> >
> > Switch-----Switch 1------\
> > Hub   -----Switch 2-------\
> > Switch-----Switch 3-------/ Router ------ (Backbone)
> > Hub    -----Switch 4------/
> >
>
> It's hard to say, but it looks like you have a collapsed backbone and it's
> the router. When multiple links converge into one device, such as a switch
> or router, then it's often called a collapsed backbone.
>
> Where does the WAN go? If it just accesses another network, such as the
> Internet, then it wouldn't normally be called a backbone. But if you have
an
> enterprise network with a core of WAN links that connect campus LANs, you
> could call the WAN core the backbone of the enterprise network.
>
> Usually a backbone has more capacity than the other links in the network,
> however, and so usually a WAN link doesn't act as a backbone for LANs. A
> more usual use of the term would be a Gigabit Ethernet backbone that acts
as
> the backbone for 10 and 100 Mbps Ethernet segments.
>
> It's not really a scientific term, though, and it gets used in many
> different ways. The idea is that when you draw your topolgoy, you will
> undoubtedly have some larger transmission link that aggregates traffic
from
> smaller links. That larger link is a backbone. The drawing should look
like
> the bone in your back that connects other bones. It's just an analogy.
>
> Priscilla




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