17 years helping Australian businesses
choose better software
Network Topology
Network topology describes the physical or logical arrangement of nodes and connections in a network. Physical network topology defines the placement of nodes and their interconnections; logical topology describes the ways data is transferred between nodes. These nodes include devices such as switches and servers. Network topologies follow six basic models, as well as a hybrid combination of one or more models: point-to-point, bus, star, ring, tree, and mesh.
What Small and Midsize Businesses Need to Know About Network Topology
Since the layout of a network directly impacts network functionality, selecting the right topology is important. SMBs can improve performance and data efficiency, optimize resource allocation, and reduce operational costs with the right network topology.
Related terms
- Haptics
- WAN (Wide-Area Network)
- Intranet
- SLO (Service-Level Objective)
- Security Orchestration, Automation and Response (SOAR)
- Scalability
- Service-Level Agreement (SLA)
- Software as a Service (SaaS)
- Identity and Access Management (IAM)
- Data Center
- Augmented Reality (AR)
- Synchronous
- Multitenancy
- Chief Information Officer (CIO)
- IT Services
- Authorization
- Service-oriented Architecture (SOA)
- Platform as a Service (PaaS)
- Managed Service Provider (MSP)
- Security Information and Event Management (SIEM)