Segments can be divided to reduce the number of
users and increase the bandwidth available to each
user in the segment. Each new segment created
results in a new collision domain. Traffic from one
segment or collision domain does not interfere with
other segments, thereby increasing the available
bandwidth of each segment. In the following figure,
each segment has greater bandwidth, but all segments
are still on a common backbone and must
share the available bandwidth. This approach works
best when care is taken to make sure that the largest
users of bandwidth are placed in separate segments.
There are a few basic methods for segmenting an
Ethernet LAN into more collision domains:
• Use bridges to split collision domains.
• Use switches to provide dedicated domains to
each host.
• Use routers to route traffic between domains
(and to not route traffic that does not matter to
the other domain).
This sheet discusses segmenting using bridges and
routers (switching is covered in the next chapter). 53