In the lab we only have one Ethernet port and we need to have four. Which device we need to connect that can extend one Ethernet port to four ? Is that Ethernet switch we need to connect ? How it goes with the bandwidth ? Do we get same bandwidth 1000 M on each extended port ?
In the lab we only have one Ethernet port and we need to have four. Which device we need to connect that can extend one Ethernet port to four ? Is that Ethernet switch we need to connect ? How it goes with the bandwidth ? Do we get same bandwidth 1000 M on each extended port ?
Hubs (forwarding the incoming data to all other ports) have been in use for 10BASE-T. I haven't seen a simple hub in the last 20 years. Switches are buffering incoming packets and performing MAC based filtering to specific ports.
Then I guess switch is a better choice to extend one ethernet port in the network to four, so that we can connect four ethernet devices at the same time to the network.
Your units need to be network capable.
Or are your units wifi capable? Then you wouldn't need cables. Wifi does need setup and security measures. It's not necessarily an easier choice than ethernet.
Many wifi routers have 1 ethernet input and 4 ethernet output ports. Often you can disable wifi function if you do not need it. I think that using wifi router as wired router may be cheaper and simpler solution.