What is the different between packet switching and circuit switching with providing examples?

This article will learn the differences between circuit switching and packet switching. Both are types of switching techniques. Initially, we will learn some basics of switching network technologies. After that, we will see differences between both of them.

Circuit switching Network:

A circuit-switched network is one of the simplest data communication methods in which a dedicated path is established between the sending and receiving device. In this physical links connect via a set of switches.

Following figure displays the working of circuit switched network.

What is the different between packet switching and circuit switching with providing examples?

In the above figure it shows a circuit switched network in which computer connect via 4 switches with a point to point connections.

Packet switching Network:

In the Packet switching Network, the message is divide into packets. Each packet contains a header which includes the source address, destination address, and control information.

Following figure displays the working of packet switched network.

What is the different between packet switching and circuit switching with providing examples?

In the above figure, it shows how a data gram approach is used to deliver four packets from station A to station D.

Following are the differences between circuit switching and packet switching networks.

What is the different between packet switching and circuit switching with providing examples?

S.No Parameter Circuit switching Network Packet switching Network
1 Path In circuit switched network a dedicated path is created between two points by setting the switches. In packet switched network no dedicated path is created between two points. Only the virtual circuit exists.
2 Store and forward transmission In circuit switching there is no concept of store and forward transmission. In virtual packet switched network, each node may store incoming packets and forward them after use.
3 Dedicated The links that make a path in circuit switched network are dedicated and cannot be used for other connections. In the virtual circuit network, links that make a route can be dedicated with other connections.
4 Availability of Bandwidth In circuit switching, bandwidth is fixed because it is reserved in advance. In the virtual circuit network, require bandwidth is dynamic because it can be released as it is needed.
5 The route followed by packets The route followed by packets is always the same. The route followed by packets is may or may not be different.
6 Call setup An in-circuit switching call setup is required. In packet switching, call setup is not required.
7 Congestion In circuit switching, congestion can occur at set up time. In packet switching, congestion can occur on every packet.
8 Wastage of Bandwidth In circuit switching, bandwidth is fixed, unused bandwidth on an allocated circuit is wasted. Other packets from an unrelated source may utilize unused bandwidth.
9 Charging In circuit switching, users are charged based on time and the basis of distance. In packet switching, users are charged based on time and number of bytes carried & not based on distance.
10 Application Telephone network for bidirectional, real time transfer of voice signal. Internet for datagram and reliable stream service between computers.
11 Layers Circuit-switched network is implemented at the physical layer. A virtual circuit network is implemented at the data link and a network layer.
12 Reliability Circuit-switched is highly reliable. In packet switching, low reliability, subject to congestion.
13 Overhead bits In Circuit-switched network, no overhead bits after call setup. In packet switching, Overhead bits in each packet.
14 Technologies or types Circuit switching using two technologies
  • Time Division Switching
  • Space Division Switching
Packet Switching using two technologies
  • Datagram circuit approach
  • Virtual circuit Approach
15 Installation Cost Circuit switching's initial cost is low. Packet switching networks have high installation costs.
16 Protocols Circuit switching requires simple protocols for delivery. Packet switching requires complex protocols for delivery.
17 Addressing scheme In Circuit switching, Hierarchical numbering plan scheme is used. In Packet switching, Hierarchical address space is used.
18 End Terminal In this telephone and modem is used as end terminal. In this computer is used as end terminal.
19 Information type In this information type is
Analog voice or PCM digital voices.
In this information type is binary information.
20 Multiplexing scheme In circuit switching, circuit multiplexing is used. In packet switching, packet multiplexing shared media access network in used.
21 Routing Scheme In circuit switching, route selecting during set up. In packet switching, each packet is routed independently.

Next TopicDifference between star and ring topology

What is the different between packet switching and circuit switching with providing examples?
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What is the different between packet switching and circuit switching with providing examples?
What is the different between packet switching and circuit switching with providing examples?
What is the different between packet switching and circuit switching with providing examples?

Definitions: Packet-switched networks move data in separate, small blocks -- packets -- based on the destination address in each packet. When received, packets are reassembled in the proper sequence to make up the message. Circuit-switched networks require dedicated point-to-point connections during calls.

Circuit-switched networks and packet-switched networks have traditionally occupied different spaces within corporations. Circuit-switched networks were used for phone calls and packet-switched networks handled data. But because of the reach of phone lines and the efficiency and low cost of data networks, the two technologies have shared chores for years.

Designed in 1878, circuit-switched networks reserve a dedicated channel for the entire communication.

The primary hardware for a circuit-switched network is the private branch exchange (PBX) system. Computer servers power packet-switched networks.

In modern circuit-switched networks, electronic signals pass through several switches before a connection is established. And during a call, no other network traffic can use those switches.

In packet-based networks, however, the message gets broken into small data packets that seek out the most efficient route as circuits become available. Each packet may go a different route; its header address tells it where to go and describes the sequence for reassembly at the destination computer, says Joel Maloff, president of consultancy Maloff Group International Inc. in Ann Arbor, Mich.

Technologies Converge

Formerly, packet-switched digital networks would connect to circuit-switched ports to gain access to computer networks in different locations. But nowadays, remote dial-up access to corporate computers is usually over the Internet, using global Internet service providers (ISP), says Ron Westfall, an analyst at Current Analysis Inc. in Sterling, Va.

"For a large organization, the payoff is self-evident," says Westfall. "If you can go from paying for one long-distance call from a hotel in Singapore to (paying for) one local call to an ISP in Singapore and another call to the ISP near your headquarters in New York, you're only paying for two local-access charges."

With the expanded use of the Internet for voice and video, analysts predict a gradual shift away from circuit-switched networks.

"A circuit-switched network is good for certain kinds of applications with limited points to go to. If you're doing voice applications solely, it's great," says Maloff. "But if you have multiple locations to get to and large amounts of data to transmit, it's better to break it down into packets."

Voice-over-IP vendors point out that IP-based calls are cheaper than circuit-based ones, but analysts say it will be a long time before corporations abandon proven PBX systems and use packet-based networks for data, voice and video. The biggest impediment to voice-over-IP is poor voice quality and call latency, says analyst Michael Arellano at Degas Communications Group Inc. in Westport, Conn. "With packet-switched networks, what happens if the packets containing voice signals arrive at different times or in a different order? (A congested network) can also drop packets."

"Currently, there's a PBX side of the house and an IT side of the house," Westfall says. "But if you survey IT managers, they're not hopping up and down to put voice on data networks. They have enough challenges maintaining the data network."

"PBX is a proven technology. Although it's proprietary, it's efficient at delivering voice traffic and offering features like voice mail," Westfall says.

"Packet switching is more efficient," Maloff agrees. "But we'll have hybrid systems for the next several years."

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