Network Bridge
A network bridge, also known as a layer 2 switch, is a hardware device
used to create a connection between two separate computer networks or to
divide one network into two. Both networks usually use the same
protocol; Ethernet is an example of a protocol. Network devices include,
but are not limited to, Personal Computers (PCs), printers, routers,
switches and hubs. Devices connected to a network via an Ethernet
adapter card have what is known as a Media Access Control (MAC) address,
also called a physical or hardware address. It is this address that
uniquely identifies a device to a bridge that can then determine to
which network the device is connected.
The principal function of a network bridge is to forward data based on
the MAC address of the sending and receiving devices. This operation
helps to eliminate what are known as collision domains. One way of
defining a collision domain is a network in which one device, also
called a node, forces every other device to listen when it is
transmitting data packets. Another definition states that a collision
domain exists when two or more devices attempt to transmit information
at the exact same time. Networks running Carrier Sense Multiple
Access/Collision Detection (CSMA/CD) should, in theory, be protected
from collisions occurring, but CSMA/CD can fail.
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