Bus network
Network topology in which nodes are connected to a common communications medium
A bus network is a network topology in which nodes are directly connected to a common half-duplex link called a bus.[1][2]
A host on a bus network is called a station. In a bus network, every station will receive all network traffic, and the traffic generated by each station has equal transmission priority.[3] A bus network forms a single network segment and collision domain. In order for nodes to share the bus, they use a medium access control technology such as carrier-sense multiple access (CSMA) or a bus master.
References
- ^ "Network Topologies". Teachbook Blog. Archived from the original on 2015-07-20.
- ^ Janssen, Cory. "Bus Topology". Techopedia. Retrieved 2015-08-04.
- ^ Knott, Geoffrey; Waites, Nick (2002). BTEC Nationals for IT Practitioners. Brancepeth Computer Publications. p. 395. ISBN 0-9538848-2-1.
...all stations have equal priority in using the network to transmit.
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Network topologies
Arrangements of the data links and nodes of computer networks
- Bus network
- Grid network
- Mesh network
- Point-to-point
- Ring network
- Arbitrated loop
- Star network
- Switched fabric
- Tree network
- Fat tree
- Hypertree
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