Definition: Learn what the Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) reference model is and how its seven layers of functions provide vendors and developers with a common language for discussing how messages should be transmitted between any two points in a telecommunication network.
Sponsored News
Buckle Up! The Top Storage Technology Trends for 2015
–NetApp
The End of Tier 1 Storage as We Know It?
–NetApp
See More
Vendor Resources
Routing and switching considerations: What you may be missing
–Cisco Systems, Inc.
Security through Maturity: A Brief on Securing iSCSI Networks
–Dell, Inc.
Related Content
OSI model: Crash Course
– SearchNetworking
Network layer
– SearchNetworking
layer 3
– SearchUnifiedCommunications
OSI (Open Systems Interconnection) is reference model for how applications can communicate over a network. A reference model is a conceptual framework for understanding relationships. The purpose of the OSI reference model is to guide vendors and developers so the digital communication products and software programs they create will interoperate, and to facilitate clear comparisons among communications tools. Most vendors involved in telecommunications make an attempt to describe their products and services in relation to the OSI model. And although useful for guiding discussion and evaluation, OSI is rarely actually implemented, as few network products or standard tools keep all related functions together in well-defined layers as related to the model. The TCP/IP protocols, which define the Internet, do not map cleanly to the OSI model.