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Components

A computer network is multiple computers connected together using a telecommunication system for the purpose of communicating and sharing resources.

Experts in the field of networking debate whether two computers that are connected together using some form of communications medium constitute a network. Therefore, some works state that a network requires three connected computers. For example, "Telecommunications: Glossary of Telecommunication Terms" states that a computer network is "A network of data processing nodes that are interconnected for the purpose of data communication", the term "network" being defined in the same document as "An interconnection of three or more communicating entities". A computer connected to a non-computing device (e.g., networked to a printer via an Ethernet link) may also represent a computer network, although this article does not address this configuration.

 Basic components of computer networks

Computers

Many of the components of an average network are individual computers, which are generally either workstations (including personal computers) or servers.

Types of workstations

There are many types of workstations that may be incorporated into a particular network, some of which have high-end displays, multiple CPUs, large amounts of RAM, large amounts of hard drive storage space, or other enhancements required for special data processing tasks, graphics, or other resource intensive applications. (See also network computer).

Types of servers

The following lists some common types of servers and their purpose.

File server

Stores various types of files and distributes them to other clients on the network.

Print server

Controls and manages one or more printers and accepts print jobs from other network clients, spooling the print jobs, and performing most or all of the other functions that a workstation would perform to accomplish a printing task if the printer were connected directly to the workstation's printer port.

Mail server

Stores, sends, receives, routes, and performs other email related operations for other clients on the network.

Fax server

Stores, sends, receives, routes, and performs other functions necessary for the proper transmission, reception, and distribution of faxes.

Telephony server

Performs telephony related functions such as answering calls automatically, performing the functions of an interactive voice response system, storing and serving voice mail, routing calls between the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) and the network or the Internet (e.g., voice over IP (VoIP) gateway), etc.

Proxy server

Performs some type of function on behalf of other clients on the network to increase the performance of certain operations (e.g., prefetching and caching documents or other data that are requested very frequently) or as a security precaution to isolate network clients from external threats.

Remote Access Server (RAS)

Monitors modem lines or other network communications channels for requests to connect to the network from a remote location, answers the incoming telephone call or acknowledges the network request, and performs the necessary security checks and other procedures necessary to log a user onto the network.

Application server

Performs the data processing or business logic portion of a client application, accepting instructions for operations to perform from a workstation and serving the results back to the workstation, while the workstation performs the user interface or GUI portion of the processing (i.e., the presentation logic) that is required for the application to work properly.

Web server

Stores HTML documents, images, text files, scripts, and other Web related data (collectively known as content), and distributes this content to other clients on the network on request.

Backup server

Has network backup software installed and has large amounts of hard drive storage or other forms of storage (tape, etc.) available to it to be used for the purpose of ensuring that data loss does not occur in the network.'''

Printers

Many printers are capable of acting as part of a computer network without any other device, such as a print server, to act as an intermediary between the printer and the device that is requesting a print job to be completed.

Thin Clients

Many networks use thin clients instead of workstations either for data entry and display purposes or in some cases where the application runs entirely on the server.

Other devices

There are many other types of devices that may be used to build a network, many of which require an understanding of more advanced computer networking concepts before they are able to be easily understood (e.g., hubs, routers, bridges, switches, hardware firewalls, etc.). On home and mobile networks, connecting consumer electronics devices such as video game consoles is becoming increasingly common.

 

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