Network+ Guide to Networks answer: Bridge, Switch, Router
A switch or bridge. A router will also separate collision domains.
Switch
router
A switch or router.
switches and bridges
switch
router
Bridges, Switches and Routers will all separate collision domains.
a collision domain is a group of devices where traffic from any one of them could collide with traffic from any other member of the same group. some devices help to shrink collision domains, like switches, while other devices can extend the size of a collision domain (like a hub).
switches and your mama.!! lol haha
Hubs do not reduce collision domains. All devices connected to the hub are in a single collision domain, where as on a switch, each port is its own collision domain.
No
in my opinion there is no any collision domain in the router......but switch has collision domains for each interfaces & hub has one collision domain
Since Hubs are Physical-layer devices and do not segment collision domains (which switches do), the answer is "one". Since switch DO segement collision domains, a switch can pass as many frames as it has ports.
On shared-media networks (i.e. hubs or pure ethernets), routers break up broadcast domains and bridges break up collision domains. Routers also break up collision domains. On switched networks, routers break up broadcast domains, and every switch port is its own separate collision domain.
router
Not only do bridges and switches separate collision domains but routers also perform this task.
Hubs are not collision domains but a networking device. Hubs have single collision domain that makes them very undesirable for modern networks.
A Router