Desirable properties of a network taxonomy

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Authors
McCoy, Earl E.
Carey, Bernard J.
Subjects
Computer Networks, Taxonomy, Interconnection Mechanisms, Fault Tolerance, Hardware Primitives
Advisors
Date of Issue
1980-05
Date
1980-05
Publisher
Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
Language
en_US
Abstract
This paper reviews and analyzes the desirable properties of a computer network taxonomy from the point of view of its usefulness in a design procedure. A key factor that must be considered is that the design environment currently evolving uses functionally high level VLSI-based building blocks to construct various network architectures. This paper begins by reviewing the uses of a taxonomy in a network context, and continues with a review of specifications for network requirements. A set of hardware interconnection primitives is defined next. A review of the Anderson and Jensen taxonomy (Ander75) is then presented, with a discussion of its completeness. The main thrust of this article is given in a section of attributes of a design oriented taxonomy. Finally, extensions are proposed for fault tolerant considerations and protocols. A computer network is defined to be a hetrogeneous collection of computers and the telecommunications subsystem linking them together. Here the properties of the various network architectures are of particular interest; the 'user' computers (or processors) are considered as sources and sinks of messages being transmitted over the network. No distinction as to the geographical scope of the network is made because it does not impact the taxonomy considerations addressed here. (Author)
Type
Technical Report
Description
Series/Report No
Department
Computer Science
Identifiers
NPS Report Number
NPS-52-80-007
Sponsors
supported by the Department of Computer Science, Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, California.
Funder
Format
39 p. : ill. ; 28 cm.
Citation
Distribution Statement
Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited.
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