Technologies In Use

Technology Description How it is Used on Campus
TCP/IP A suite of communication protocols that include the Transmission Control Protocol, Internet Protocol and many others. TCP/IP defines the logical addressing scheme as well as traffic routing, error-correction and flow control methods used on the Internet. Each network node (computer, printer, game console) is assigned an IP address from the address space owned by the college. This space is usually expressed as 138.78.0.0/16 and has roughly 65k addresses.
FTP/sFTP The File Transfer Protocol (FTP) and Secure File Transfer Protocols (sFTP) define methods for transferring data between computers. Both protocols utilize TCP/IP for addressing, error correction and flow control. Additionally, sFTP provides encryption to protect the data while it is in transit. Using clients that support these protocols, FTP/sFTP can to be used to access to home drives (G: ) and some other shared folders from the residence hall network, wireless network or the Internet.
Traffic Shaping Generic Traffic Shaping or rate-limiting is used to ensure that no one network node or type of traffic can over utilize a network connection. GTS is also used to smooth traffic before transmittal over a WAN link Used to approximate fair-use on the Colleges Internet connection
iSCSI SAN (Internet SCSI Storage Area Network) A Storage Area Network is a high-speed network used to interconnect storage devices and the servers that utilize the storage. iSCSI or SCSI-over-IP is used to transmit the server-to-storage module commands over any network medium that supports TCP/IP The College operates an iSCSI based SAN with an aggregate capacity of 5.25 TB. Faculty, Staff and Student home drives (G:) as well as department shared drives and other data are stored on the SAN.