COMPX204-20B (HAM)

Practical Networking and Cyber Security

15 Points

Edit Header Content
Division of Health Engineering Computing & Science
School of Computing and Mathematical Sciences
Department of Computer Science

Staff

Edit Staff Content

Convenor(s)

Lecturer(s)

Administrator(s)

: rachael.foote@waikato.ac.nz

Placement/WIL Coordinator(s)

Tutor(s)

Student Representative(s)

Lab Technician(s)

Librarian(s)

: debby.dada@waikato.ac.nz

You can contact staff by:

  • Calling +64 7 838 4466 select option 1, then enter the extension.
  • Extensions starting with 4, 5, 9 or 3 can also be direct dialled:
    • For extensions starting with 4: dial +64 7 838 extension.
    • For extensions starting with 5: dial +64 7 858 extension.
    • For extensions starting with 9: dial +64 7 837 extension.
    • For extensions starting with 3: dial +64 7 2620 + the last 3 digits of the extension e.g. 3123 = +64 7 262 0123.
Edit Staff Content

Paper Description

Edit Paper Description Content
This paper provides an overview of the technologies and protocols and security issues involved in computer communications. It will introduce programming issues in communications, including error handling and concurrency. Practical work will look at the Internet Protocols TCP and IP, and include programming exercises using socket interfaces.
Edit Paper Description Content

Paper Structure

Edit Paper Structure Content

Most of the course is delivered in lecture format as online videos with weekly quizzes to reinforce. The lecture slides and videos are available on Moodle at the start of the week they correspond to. The lectures are supplemented with guided laboratory exercises that expand on important topics found in lecture slides and ground the lectures in real-world issues.

Edit Paper Structure Content

Learning Outcomes

Edit Learning Outcomes Content

Students who successfully complete the course should be able to:

  • Students will understand aspects of the Internet such as TCP/IP, DNS, addressing, routing
    Linked to the following assessments:
  • Students will be able to describe physical aspects of computer networks such as Ethernet, clocking, data checking
    Linked to the following assessments:
  • Students will be able to write small communications systems in Java including the use of parallel programming to implement servers that support multiple simultaneous clients
    Linked to the following assessments:
  • Students will have a practical understanding of authentication and encryption
    Linked to the following assessments:
  • Students will have a practical understanding of Internet protocols and debugging
    Linked to the following assessments:
Edit Learning Outcomes Content
Edit Learning Outcomes Content

Assessment

Edit Assessments Content

Assessment Components

Edit Assessments Content

The internal assessment/exam ratio (as stated in the University Calendar) is 100:0. There is no final exam. The final exam makes up 0% of the overall mark.

The internal assessment/exam ratio (as stated in the University Calendar) is 100:0 or 0:0, whichever is more favourable for the student. The final exam makes up either 0% or 0% of the overall mark.

Component DescriptionDue Date TimePercentage of overall markSubmission MethodCompulsory
1. Assignment 1: Intro to Sockets in Java
27 Jul 2020
11:00 AM
5
  • Hand-in: In Lab
  • Online: Submit through Moodle
2. Assignment 2: Sockets and Threads, Building a Web Server
10 Aug 2020
11:00 AM
7
  • Hand-in: In Lab
  • Online: Submit through Moodle
3. Assignment 3: Trivial File Transfer with Datagram Sockets
7 Sep 2020
11:00 AM
8
  • Hand-in: In Lab
  • Online: Submit through Moodle
4. Assignment 4: Transport Layer Security
21 Sep 2020
11:00 AM
8
  • Hand-in: In Lab
  • Online: Submit through Moodle
5. Assignment 5: Network Debugging and Host IP Configuration
5 Oct 2020
11:00 AM
7
  • Hand-in: In Lab
  • Online: Submit through Moodle
6. Assignment 6: Multicast Sockets, Distributed Chat
19 Oct 2020
11:00 AM
5
  • Hand-in: In Lab
  • Online: Submit through Moodle
7. Twelve Weekly Quizzes
12
  • Online: Submit through Moodle
8. Four Tests
18
  • Online: Submit through Moodle
9. Final test
30
  • Online: Submit through Moodle
Assessment Total:     100    
Failing to complete a compulsory assessment component of a paper will result in an IC grade
Edit Assessments Content

Required and Recommended Readings

Edit Required Readings Content

Required Readings

Edit Required Readings Content
Required readings will be identified in class, be publicly available, and found online.
Edit Required Readings Content

Recommended Readings

Edit Recommended Readings Content
Recommended readings will be identified in class, be publicly available, and found online.
Edit Recommended Readings Content

Other Resources

Edit Other Resources Content
Relevant research papers (the content of which will not be assessed) will be identified in Moodle.
Edit Other Resources Content

Online Support

Edit Online Support Content
The course has a dedicated Moodle instance with a Question and Answer forum, which the course lecturer will monitor and support.
Edit Online Support Content

Workload

Edit Workload Content

On average, during the term:

Two hours of lectures a week

Five hours completing laboratory exercises

Three hours of personal study which includes completing moodle quizzes

Edit Workload Content

Linkages to Other Papers

Edit Linkages Content

Prerequisite(s)

Prerequisite papers: COMP104 or COMPX102

Corequisite(s)

Equivalent(s)

Restriction(s)

Restricted papers: COMP202

Edit Linkages Content