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    Collision Domain - In POS

    Water Closet
    wrcombs network+ pos
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    • scottalanmillerS
      scottalanmiller @WrCombs
      last edited by

      @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

      @marcinozga said in Collision Domain - In POS:

      @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

      @brianlittlejohn said in Collision Domain - In POS:

      On switches you can't have a collision, they are layer 2 devices with queues. Collision domains were a problem back in the day of hubs because 2 devices could send at the same time. Hubs operated on layer 1 and you would split collision domains with a device called a bridge, it would take packets and store and forward them between the collision domains. A switch is just a multiport bridge, each connection on a switch is its own collision domain since the device will store and forward for each segment.

      Odds are your issue are a cabling issue, or a bad NIC on the server, or a bad switch/port on switch somewhere.

      It also could be a software issue on the server causing the issues.

      Right - The reason I was under the impression it's a collision domain issue is there's one Port being used by all of the terminals that connect to the Server, So even if switches that connect the terminal on the front of house act as a bridge, it's still sending all the information back and forth to the terminals on One line..

      Maybe I'm not understanding my own thoughts here.

      Your problem is that you're learning obsolete information. All these Network+, Security+, etc. are filled with information that was relevant in 80's or earlier. Instead of relaying on that, use your brain. Can POS terminals be sending so much data that they saturate 1Gbit network? Or even 100Mbit? Highly unlikely. So faulty hardware or software is your most likely problem.

      I dont know why they leave that stuff in there, but, you're right, it's highly unlikely.
      gonna have to rethink a few things about the cabling.

      Because it's really important to understand how networks work and why they are the way that they are and how different technologies would work under different conditions. Wifi still works 100% like this, so knowing why it is bad is great. But you need to be aware of where you are applying the knowledge.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • scottalanmillerS
        scottalanmiller @brianlittlejohn
        last edited by

        @brianlittlejohn said in Collision Domain - In POS:

        On switches you can't have a collision, they are layer 2 devices with queues. Collision domains were a problem back in the day of hubs because 2 devices could send at the same time. Hubs operated on layer 1 and you would split collision domains with a device called a bridge, it would take packets and store and forward them between the collision domains. A switch is just a multiport bridge, each connection on a switch is its own collision domain since the device will store and forward for each segment.

        Odds are your issue are a cabling issue, or a bad NIC on the server, or a bad switch/port on switch somewhere.

        It also could be a software issue on the server causing the issues.

        Worth adding a little colour to this, IMHO...

        Not only did a bridge split the collision domains, but a switch is a multiport switch (discussed in another thread.) So moving to "switched Ethernet" as we call it, is when we use zero hubs and use a bridge port for every single device, thereby eliminating all layer 1 devices and taking out all possibilities of collisions.

        Originally switches were at the top of your rack and connected many hubs together, so each switch port had its won collision domain of 5-200 devices. But today, we go switch to switch, you can't buy hubs, so the idea of collision domains requires hardware that you can't procure today.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • scottalanmillerS
          scottalanmiller @marcinozga
          last edited by

          @marcinozga said in Collision Domain - In POS:

          @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

          @brianlittlejohn said in Collision Domain - In POS:

          On switches you can't have a collision, they are layer 2 devices with queues. Collision domains were a problem back in the day of hubs because 2 devices could send at the same time. Hubs operated on layer 1 and you would split collision domains with a device called a bridge, it would take packets and store and forward them between the collision domains. A switch is just a multiport bridge, each connection on a switch is its own collision domain since the device will store and forward for each segment.

          Odds are your issue are a cabling issue, or a bad NIC on the server, or a bad switch/port on switch somewhere.

          It also could be a software issue on the server causing the issues.

          Right - The reason I was under the impression it's a collision domain issue is there's one Port being used by all of the terminals that connect to the Server, So even if switches that connect the terminal on the front of house act as a bridge, it's still sending all the information back and forth to the terminals on One line..

          Maybe I'm not understanding my own thoughts here.

          Your problem is that you're learning obsolete information. All these Network+, Security+, etc. are filled with information that was relevant in 80's or earlier. Instead of relaying on that, use your brain. Can POS terminals be sending so much data that they saturate 1Gbit network? Or even 100Mbit? Highly unlikely. So faulty hardware or software is your most likely problem.

          I've been pretty critical of these certs being obsolete. And generally, I'd agree. But in this case I think understanding Layer 1 devices, especially as they still exist in wireless deployments, is highly worthwhile, even if you can't deploy it in the real world. There are times when theory makes the world easier to understand in the grand scheme.

          But yes, common sense says that that itty bitty network traffic can't possible saturate any modern networking gear.

          Also, for historical record, in the very early 2000s, hubs were still the standard. Fully switches networks were like 2001 or 2002 that they were more common. In 2004 or so, people were still bragging about having worked on "fully switched Ethernet" instead of having hubs throughout the network, and I was still dealing with customers with hubs deployed well after 2011.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • WrCombsW
            WrCombs @WrCombs
            last edited by

            @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

            @marcinozga said in Collision Domain - In POS:

            @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

            @brianlittlejohn said in Collision Domain - In POS:

            One port isn't an issue unless you are saturating that one line, also it is all going down to one line when it goes to the server. If you saturate more than the switch can store and forward it drops the frame. It would be odd if that was the case giving the small number of devices running on the network. I would check and make sure the switches connected to each other are both negotiating at the full speed of the switch e.g. gigabit if it is a gigabit switch.

            Does the tablet freeze up as well when the other machines do? If so, i would look at the switch in the back as the issue or the line going to the server.

            If it is just the front machines, it may be an issue with the line itself, or the first switch in the bar.

            They're Plug and Play Gigabit Switches from Cisco on the front and a plug and play D-link gigabit switch in the back .

            Tablet does not freeze up while the other terminals do from my understanding - but it's also routed from the firewall to the port that feeds into the switch..

            Just replaced the first switch in the bar a week ago and it didn't help with the issue.

            Can you attack network diagram? My brain is hurting today, I don't want to visualize this network in my head, I'd rather see how it looks.

            Give me a few and I'll get one added to the thread.

            https://i.imgur.com/bEiLmFK.png

            WrCombsW 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • WrCombsW
              WrCombs @WrCombs
              last edited by

              @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

              @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

              @marcinozga said in Collision Domain - In POS:

              @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

              @brianlittlejohn said in Collision Domain - In POS:

              One port isn't an issue unless you are saturating that one line, also it is all going down to one line when it goes to the server. If you saturate more than the switch can store and forward it drops the frame. It would be odd if that was the case giving the small number of devices running on the network. I would check and make sure the switches connected to each other are both negotiating at the full speed of the switch e.g. gigabit if it is a gigabit switch.

              Does the tablet freeze up as well when the other machines do? If so, i would look at the switch in the back as the issue or the line going to the server.

              If it is just the front machines, it may be an issue with the line itself, or the first switch in the bar.

              They're Plug and Play Gigabit Switches from Cisco on the front and a plug and play D-link gigabit switch in the back .

              Tablet does not freeze up while the other terminals do from my understanding - but it's also routed from the firewall to the port that feeds into the switch..

              Just replaced the first switch in the bar a week ago and it didn't help with the issue.

              Can you attack network diagram? My brain is hurting today, I don't want to visualize this network in my head, I'd rather see how it looks.

              Give me a few and I'll get one added to the thread.

              https://i.imgur.com/bEiLmFK.png

              this is the Diagram I came up with based on the equipment and the setup. Hopefully gives a rough understanding of what I'm saying -

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • WrCombsW
                WrCombs
                last edited by

                So it's not a collision Domain because their Obsolete in wired networks due to switches -

                I'm not sure what else could be causing the issue other than bad cabling/ Bad terminals/ Bad switches.
                May be worth replacing the other bar switch and changing out the Cabling under the bar.

                scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @WrCombs
                  last edited by

                  @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                  So it's not a collision Domain because their Obsolete in wired networks due to switches -

                  I'm not sure what else could be causing the issue other than bad cabling/ Bad terminals/ Bad switches.
                  May be worth replacing the other bar switch and changing out the Cabling under the bar.

                  So start with the basics and see what you can track down. If you are getting congestion or bad switches / cabling, you'd expect to see it even with a ping. Ping from device to device and see if you ever get latency or drops. If not, likely it's not a networking thing.

                  Can you describe the freezing? Like if you do X which devices freeze. And if you do Y, these other devices freeze.

                  WrCombsW 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • WrCombsW
                    WrCombs @scottalanmiller
                    last edited by

                    @scottalanmiller said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                    @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                    So it's not a collision Domain because their Obsolete in wired networks due to switches -

                    I'm not sure what else could be causing the issue other than bad cabling/ Bad terminals/ Bad switches.
                    May be worth replacing the other bar switch and changing out the Cabling under the bar.

                    So start with the basics and see what you can track down. If you are getting congestion or bad switches / cabling, you'd expect to see it even with a ping. Ping from device to device and see if you ever get latency or drops. If not, likely it's not a networking thing.

                    Can you describe the freezing? Like if you do X which devices freeze. And if you do Y, these other devices freeze.

                    Only information I have is " when we're Busy, and we try to order items on the terminals they run slow and freeze up. then it comes back then it shows up. the delay is anywhere from 15 seconds to 2 minutes"
                    Nothing specific when it comes to what their doing on the terminals.

                    scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • scottalanmillerS
                      scottalanmiller @WrCombs
                      last edited by

                      @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                      @scottalanmiller said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                      @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                      So it's not a collision Domain because their Obsolete in wired networks due to switches -

                      I'm not sure what else could be causing the issue other than bad cabling/ Bad terminals/ Bad switches.
                      May be worth replacing the other bar switch and changing out the Cabling under the bar.

                      So start with the basics and see what you can track down. If you are getting congestion or bad switches / cabling, you'd expect to see it even with a ping. Ping from device to device and see if you ever get latency or drops. If not, likely it's not a networking thing.

                      Can you describe the freezing? Like if you do X which devices freeze. And if you do Y, these other devices freeze.

                      Only information I have is " when we're Busy, and we try to order items on the terminals they run slow and freeze up. then it comes back then it shows up. the delay is anywhere from 15 seconds to 2 minutes"
                      Nothing specific when it comes to what their doing on the terminals.

                      Any reason that there is a network suspicion then, why not suspect the server?

                      WrCombsW 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • WrCombsW
                        WrCombs @scottalanmiller
                        last edited by

                        @scottalanmiller said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                        @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                        @scottalanmiller said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                        @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                        So it's not a collision Domain because their Obsolete in wired networks due to switches -

                        I'm not sure what else could be causing the issue other than bad cabling/ Bad terminals/ Bad switches.
                        May be worth replacing the other bar switch and changing out the Cabling under the bar.

                        So start with the basics and see what you can track down. If you are getting congestion or bad switches / cabling, you'd expect to see it even with a ping. Ping from device to device and see if you ever get latency or drops. If not, likely it's not a networking thing.

                        Can you describe the freezing? Like if you do X which devices freeze. And if you do Y, these other devices freeze.

                        Only information I have is " when we're Busy, and we try to order items on the terminals they run slow and freeze up. then it comes back then it shows up. the delay is anywhere from 15 seconds to 2 minutes"
                        Nothing specific when it comes to what their doing on the terminals.

                        Any reason that there is a network suspicion then, why not suspect the server?

                        Cause it's the exact same image/setup as the other site they have, and the other site doesn't run slow what so ever.

                        WrCombsW scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • WrCombsW
                          WrCombs @WrCombs
                          last edited by

                          @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                          @scottalanmiller said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                          @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                          @scottalanmiller said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                          @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                          So it's not a collision Domain because their Obsolete in wired networks due to switches -

                          I'm not sure what else could be causing the issue other than bad cabling/ Bad terminals/ Bad switches.
                          May be worth replacing the other bar switch and changing out the Cabling under the bar.

                          So start with the basics and see what you can track down. If you are getting congestion or bad switches / cabling, you'd expect to see it even with a ping. Ping from device to device and see if you ever get latency or drops. If not, likely it's not a networking thing.

                          Can you describe the freezing? Like if you do X which devices freeze. And if you do Y, these other devices freeze.

                          Only information I have is " when we're Busy, and we try to order items on the terminals they run slow and freeze up. then it comes back then it shows up. the delay is anywhere from 15 seconds to 2 minutes"
                          Nothing specific when it comes to what their doing on the terminals.

                          Any reason that there is a network suspicion then, why not suspect the server?

                          Cause it's the exact same image/setup as the other site they have, and the other site doesn't run slow what so ever.

                          Only difference is, they have 2 less terminals at the other location ; same setup as this one *

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • IRJI
                            IRJ
                            last edited by

                            Collision domains are super simple

                            Every port on a switch is it's own collision domain, which is why they are no longer relevant. The only time they are relevant is when you are using a hub (which you will never see).

                            WrCombsW 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • scottalanmillerS
                              scottalanmiller @WrCombs
                              last edited by

                              @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                              @scottalanmiller said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                              @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                              @scottalanmiller said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                              @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                              So it's not a collision Domain because their Obsolete in wired networks due to switches -

                              I'm not sure what else could be causing the issue other than bad cabling/ Bad terminals/ Bad switches.
                              May be worth replacing the other bar switch and changing out the Cabling under the bar.

                              So start with the basics and see what you can track down. If you are getting congestion or bad switches / cabling, you'd expect to see it even with a ping. Ping from device to device and see if you ever get latency or drops. If not, likely it's not a networking thing.

                              Can you describe the freezing? Like if you do X which devices freeze. And if you do Y, these other devices freeze.

                              Only information I have is " when we're Busy, and we try to order items on the terminals they run slow and freeze up. then it comes back then it shows up. the delay is anywhere from 15 seconds to 2 minutes"
                              Nothing specific when it comes to what their doing on the terminals.

                              Any reason that there is a network suspicion then, why not suspect the server?

                              Cause it's the exact same image/setup as the other site they have, and the other site doesn't run slow what so ever.

                              Still, many times more likely to be a hard drive or something.

                              WrCombsW stacksofplatesS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 2
                              • WrCombsW
                                WrCombs @scottalanmiller
                                last edited by

                                @scottalanmiller said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                                @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                                @scottalanmiller said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                                @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                                @scottalanmiller said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                                @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                                So it's not a collision Domain because their Obsolete in wired networks due to switches -

                                I'm not sure what else could be causing the issue other than bad cabling/ Bad terminals/ Bad switches.
                                May be worth replacing the other bar switch and changing out the Cabling under the bar.

                                So start with the basics and see what you can track down. If you are getting congestion or bad switches / cabling, you'd expect to see it even with a ping. Ping from device to device and see if you ever get latency or drops. If not, likely it's not a networking thing.

                                Can you describe the freezing? Like if you do X which devices freeze. And if you do Y, these other devices freeze.

                                Only information I have is " when we're Busy, and we try to order items on the terminals they run slow and freeze up. then it comes back then it shows up. the delay is anywhere from 15 seconds to 2 minutes"
                                Nothing specific when it comes to what their doing on the terminals.

                                Any reason that there is a network suspicion then, why not suspect the server?

                                Cause it's the exact same image/setup as the other site they have, and the other site doesn't run slow what so ever.

                                Still, many times more likely to be a hard drive or something.

                                apparently, Our Des Moines Office did this setup , we did the other sites set up which would be inconsistent on our end. My boss is claiming that Their image was broken, and we fixed it in house before it went out to the site, which would mean, Scott, You're correct that it's a Server issue.

                                You know the saying to many hands in the cookie jar?
                                that's what seemed to happen here, so Now I gotta rethink this whole situation.

                                FFS the more information I get the more I just want to just leave this place.

                                But I'm still learning and Can't say that I'm understanding.

                                scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • IRJI
                                  IRJ @WrCombs
                                  last edited by

                                  @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                                  They are having a huge issue when their busy, and all terminals are in use, where they will start to freeze for a few seconds, its only a problem when they are running more than one terminal on either side of the bar.
                                  If their using 2 terminals on the same side of the bar it runs a little bit faster but there's still a delay.

                                  Is this really the issue or is this what you are being told? End users are wrong alot, and not always intentionally.

                                  With how small that network is there is no way there is a bandwith issue from using POS terminals.

                                  Also your diagram is probably inaccurate, I doubt they have 3 separate switches for 6 systems.

                                  WrCombsW scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                  • WrCombsW
                                    WrCombs @IRJ
                                    last edited by

                                    @IRJ said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                                    Collision domains are super simple

                                    Every port on a switch is it's own collision domain, which is why they are no longer relevant. The only time they are relevant is when you are using a hub (which you will never see).

                                    I want to explain why I thought this was the issue:

                                    With using a single port on either switch, They would be on 1 collision domain - or so I thought.
                                    That was stupid of me to think that, cause there's 2 ports make 2 different collision domains - and there's nowhere near enough Data to saturate those ports enough.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • WrCombsW
                                      WrCombs @IRJ
                                      last edited by WrCombs

                                      @IRJ said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                                      @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                                      They are having a huge issue when their busy, and all terminals are in use, where they will start to freeze for a few seconds, its only a problem when they are running more than one terminal on either side of the bar.
                                      If their using 2 terminals on the same side of the bar it runs a little bit faster but there's still a delay.

                                      Is this really the issue or is this what you are being told? End users are wrong alot, and not always intentionally.

                                      With how small that network is there is no way there is a bandwith issue from using POS terminals.

                                      Also your diagram is probably inaccurate, I doubt they have 3 separate switches for 6 systems.

                                      no there are 3 separate switches.. One on either side of the bar, and one in the back office that feeds to the firewall and the sever.

                                      IRJI scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • IRJI
                                        IRJ @WrCombs
                                        last edited by

                                        @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                                        @IRJ said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                                        @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                                        They are having a huge issue when their busy, and all terminals are in use, where they will start to freeze for a few seconds, its only a problem when they are running more than one terminal on either side of the bar.
                                        If their using 2 terminals on the same side of the bar it runs a little bit faster but there's still a delay.

                                        Is this really the issue or is this what you are being told? End users are wrong alot, and not always intentionally.

                                        With how small that network is there is no way there is a bandwith issue from using POS terminals.

                                        Also your diagram is probably inaccurate, I doubt they have 3 separate switches for 6 systems.

                                        no there are 3 separate switches.. One on either side of the bar, and one in the back office that feeds to the firewall and the sever.

                                        Not ideal, but it should still work that way.

                                        I think investigating at the OS level would be best. I doubt it doesnt only happen when its busy. Its only when they care or notice the delay.

                                        WrCombsW 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • WrCombsW
                                          WrCombs @IRJ
                                          last edited by

                                          @IRJ said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                                          @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                                          @IRJ said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                                          @WrCombs said in Collision Domain - In POS:

                                          They are having a huge issue when their busy, and all terminals are in use, where they will start to freeze for a few seconds, its only a problem when they are running more than one terminal on either side of the bar.
                                          If their using 2 terminals on the same side of the bar it runs a little bit faster but there's still a delay.

                                          Is this really the issue or is this what you are being told? End users are wrong alot, and not always intentionally.

                                          With how small that network is there is no way there is a bandwith issue from using POS terminals.

                                          Also your diagram is probably inaccurate, I doubt they have 3 separate switches for 6 systems.

                                          no there are 3 separate switches.. One on either side of the bar, and one in the back office that feeds to the firewall and the sever.

                                          Not ideal, but it should still work that way.

                                          I think investigating at the OS level would be best. I doubt it doesnt only happen when its busy. Its only when they care or notice the delay.

                                          Probably accurate.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • travisdh1T
                                            travisdh1
                                            last edited by

                                            I have to ask the dumb question. How are tablets being connected to a wired network?

                                            WrCombsW 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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