|
|---|
| 4B/5B | | The physical layer (PHY) coding scheme for FDDI.
|
|---|
| 802.1 IEEE | | A set of standards for governing the OSI Data Link
layer and the OSI physical layer. For example, 802.1d is the standard
for bridging between the LAN standards
|
|---|
| 802.2 IEEE | | Standards that govern the Logical Link Control (LLC)
within the Data Link layer of the OSI model. LLC frames carry user
infobetween two stations. These standards are common across the
various lower level standards within the Data Link and the Physical
layers.
|
|---|
A
|
|---|
| adapter | | A device, usually in the form of a user interface
card, that physically connects an endstation to the network medium;
for example, twisted pair, coaxial, fiber.
|
|---|
| ANSI (American National Standards Institute) | | Organization which coordinates, develops, and publishes
standards used in the United States.
|
|---|
| Application layer | | The seventh layer in the OSI model for data communications.
It defines protocols for user or application programs.
|
|---|
| ARP (Address Resolution Protocol) | | A TCP/IP protocol used to dynamically translate
the IP address of a network host to its LAN hardware (MAC) address.
This action is limited to LANs that support hardware broadcasts.
|
|---|
| Assert | | A signal is asserted by driving it to a logical
true state. For positive-true signals this state is high logic voltage,
and for negative-true signals this state is the low logic voltage.
|
|---|
| attenuation | | Signal power lost in a transmission medium as the
signal travels from sender to receiver.
|
|---|
B
|
|---|
| backbone | | A network configuration that connects LANs into
an integrated network.
|
|---|
| bandwidth | | Bandwidth typically indicates the data transmission
capacity of a network through a given circuit. Generally, the greater
the bandwidth, the more information can be sent through a circuit
during a given amount of time.
|
|---|
| baud | | Measurement of signaling speed indicating line changes
per second, where line changes can represent one or more bits. The
baud is equal to bits-per-second only for line changes representing
a single bit.
|
|---|
| beacon | | A special frame used by media access control to
announce to the other stations that the ring is broken. The resulting
action attempts to restructure the network to account for the probable
fault.
|
|---|
| bridge | | An internetworking device used to connect two or
more computer networks and to forward packets among the networks.
Bridges operate at the Link layer of the OSI model.
|
|---|
| Bus Latency | | Elapsed time from bus master request until bus master
is given control of the bus.
|
|---|
| bypass | | The ability of a station to be optically or electronically
isolated from the network while maintaining the integrity of the
ring.
|
|---|
C
|
|---|
| CFM (Configuration Management) | | That portion of the Connection Management (CMT)
within the Station Management (SMT) function of an FDDI station
that provides for the configuration of PHY and MAC entities within
a node.
|
|---|
| claim process | | A technique used to determine which station will
initialize the FDDI ring.
|
|---|
| CMT (Connection Management) | | That portion of the Station Management (SMT) function
within an FDDI station that controls the insertion, removal, and
connection of the PHY and MAC entities within that station.
|
|---|
| concentrator | | An FDDI node that provides attachment points (through
M ports) for stations that are not connected directly to the dual
ring. The concentrator is the focal point of the dual ring of trees
topology.
|
|---|
| counter-rotating ring | | An arrangement where two signal paths, whose directions
are opposite, exist in a ring topology.
|
|---|
| CPU (Central Processing Unit) | | A computer's main microprocessor chip.
|
|---|
| CRC (Cyclic Redundancy Check) | | An error checking procedure in which bytes at the
end of a frame are used by the receiving node to detect a transmission
problem.
|
|---|
D
|
|---|
| DAC (Dual Attachment Concentrator | | A concentrator that offers two connections to the
FDDI network capable of accommodating the FDDI dual (counter-rotating)
ring, and additional ports for the connection of other concentrators
or FDDI stations.
|
|---|
| DAS (Dual Attachment Station) | | An FDDI station that offers two connections to the
FDDI dual counter-rotating ring.
|
|---|
| Differential Manchester encoding | | A signaling method that encodes clock and data information
into bit symbols. Each bit symbol is divided into two halves, where
the second half is the inverse of the first half. A zero is represented
by a polarity change at the start of the bit time; a one is represented
by no polarity change at the start of the bit time.
|
|---|
| DMA (Direct Memory Access) | | A fast method of moving data between two processor
subsystems without processor intervention.
|
|---|
| DMA Controller | | Provides control of the larger part of the system's
DMA (Direct Memory Access) facility. The DMA controller responds
to requests from the DMA device and provides address and control
signals to the memory slaves and DMA device.
|
|---|
| DMA Device | | The DMA device is typically located on a peripheral
board on the EISA or ISA bus. The DMA device initiates DMA transfers,
which are controlled by signals generated by the system DMA controller.
The DMA device either presents or receives data during a DMA transfer
and uses several signals to inform the DMA controller of the staus
of the transfer.
|
|---|
| downstream | | A term that refers to the relative position of two
stations in a ring. A station is downstream of its neighbor if it
receives the token after its neighbor receives the token.
|
|---|
| dual homing | | A method of cabling concentrators and stations that
permits an alternate or backup path to the dual ring in case the
primary connection fails. Can be used in a tree or dual ring of
trees configuration.
|
|---|
| dual ring | | An FDDI network topology that uses two redundant
rings to overcome fiber-optic failures between two nodes.
|
|---|
| dual ring of trees | | A topology of concentrators and nodes that cascade
from concentrators on a dual ring.
|
|---|
E
|
|---|
| ECM (Entity Coordination Management) | | That portion of the Connection Management (CMT)
within the Station Management (SMT) function of an FDDI station
that provides for controlling bypass relays, signaling to PCM (Physical
Connection Management) that the medium is available, and coordinating
trace functions.
|
|---|
| encapsulating bridge | | A proprietary hardware device that encapsulates
packets into specialized frames, usually by adding a header and
a trailer to the frame.
|
|---|
| encode | | The act of changing data into a series of electrical
or optical pulses that can travel efficiently over a medium.
|
|---|
| extended LAN | | A collection of local area networks (similar or
dissimilar) interconnected with a bridge.
|
|---|
F
|
|---|
| FDDI (Fiber Distributed Data Interface) | | An ANSI standard (X3T9.5) for 100 Mbps LANs based
on the token-passing access method. It is often used to bridge several
Ethernet segments at high speed.
|
|---|
| fiber optic cable | | A transmission medium designed to transmit digital
signals in the form of pulses of light.
|
|---|
| fiber optics | | The technique of using fiber optic transmitters,
receivers, and cables for the transmission of data.
|
|---|
| Float | | Signal is placed in the high impedance state.
|
|---|
| fragment | | In FDDI, pieces of a frame left on the ring; caused
by a station stripping a frame from the ring.
|
|---|
| fragmentation | | A process in which large frames from one network
are broken up into smaller frames that are compatible with the frame
size requirements of the network to which they will be forwarded.
|
|---|
| frame | | A Protocol Data Unit (PDU) transmitted between cooperating
MAC entities on an FDDI ring, consisting of a variable number of
bytes and control symbols.
|
|---|
G
|
|---|
| graded index | | A characteristic of fiber optic cable in which the
core refraction index is varied so that it is high at the center
and matches the refractive index of the cladding at the core-cladding
boundary.
|
|---|
H
|
|---|
| header | | Control information added at the data source to
allow data to reach its destination. At the destination, layers
corresponding to those at the source that created the header read
and remove it, so that only the data reaches the final destination.
|
|---|
| host | | Generally, any computer on a network.
|
|---|
| Host CPU | | The main system processor. The host CPU typically
has its own local bus allowing the CPU to access cache or local
memory without using the EISA bus. The host CPU accesses the EISA
bus like any other bus master, with the exception of a few special
features. The data size of the host CPU does not determine the EISA
bus size; the CPU can have an 8-, 16-, or 32-bit data bus and still
access the 16- or 32-bit EISA bus.
|
|---|
| host name | | A unique name that identifies each host machine
on a network.
|
|---|
I
|
|---|
| ICMP (Internet Control Message Protocol) | | An integral part of the Internet Protocol (IP) that
handles error and control messages. Specifically, gateways and hosts
use ICMP to send reports of problems with datagrams back to the
original source of the datagram. ICMP includes an echo request/reply
used to test whether a destination is reachable or responding.
|
|---|
| IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronic
Engineers) | | An information exchange organization. As part of
its various functions, it coordinates, develops, and publishes network
standards for use in the United States, following ANSI rules.
|
|---|
| Inter-frame gap | | The interval between frames on the network media.
It is defined by FDDI standards to prevent one frame from becoming
confused with the next.
|
|---|
| IP (Internet Protocol) | | A network layer protocol that contains addressing
and control information to allow packets to be routed over dissimilar
networks.
|
|---|
| ISO (International Standards Organization) | | An international body that creates networking standards,
including the Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) model.
|
|---|
K
|
|---|
| KB | | Kilobytes. 1024 bytes.
|
|---|
L
|
|---|
| LAN (Local Area Network) | | A data communications network that spans a limited
geographical area. The network provides high bandwidth communication
over coaxial cable, twisted pair, fiber, or microwave media. It
is usually owned by the user.
|
|---|
| local | | Local refers to files and devices, such as disk
drives, that are attached to or on your machine.
|
|---|
| logical ring | | The circular path a token follows in an FDDI network
made up of all the connected MAC sublayers. The physical topology
can be a dual ring of trees, a tree, or a ring.
|
|---|
M
|
|---|
| MAC (Media Access Control) | | The Data Link layer in the ISO model that describes
how devices share access to a network. Ethernet, token-ring, and
FDDI are MAC layer specifications. Wiring hubs deal primarily with
MAC layer equipment.
|
|---|
| Manchester encoding | | A signaling method by which clock and data bit information
can be combined into a single, self-synchronizable data stream.
A transition takes place in the middle of each bit time. A low-to-high
transition represents a one; a high-to-low transition represents
a zero.
|
|---|
| Mbps | | Megabits (1,048,576 bits) per second.
|
|---|
| MIB (Management Information Base) | | A set of variables that describe how data is stored,
monitored, and managed. MIB-I and MIB-II are revisions of the database
used in a TCP/IP network. The original MIB was renamed to MIB-I
when the MIB-II was defined.
|
|---|
| MIC (Media Interface Connector) | | An optical fiber connector pair that links the fiber
media to the FDDI node or another cable. The MIC consists of two
halves. The MIC plug terminates an optical fiber cable. The MIC
receptacle is associated with the FDDI node.
|
|---|
| multicast | | A technique that allows copies of a single packet
or cell to be passed to a selected subset of all possible destinations.
|
|---|
| multimode | | A large-core (62.5 micron) optical fiber through
which multiple modes will propagate.
|
|---|
N
|
|---|
| network | | An interconnection of multiple stations or systems
that are able to send messages to or receive messages from one another.
|
|---|
| Network layer | | Layer 3 in the OSI model; permits communications
between network nodes in an open network.
|
|---|
| NIF (Neighborhood Information Frame) | | Special frames used by the SMT Frame Services within
the Station Management (SMT) function of an FDDI station that periodically
announce their addresses to downstream neighbors. Each station in
the ring makes such an announcement every 30 seconds by sending
a NIF that uses Next Station Addressing (NSA), a special addressing
mode that permits a station to send a frame to the next station
on the token path without knowing the address of that station. This
information can be used to create a logical ring map for the order
in which each station appears within the ring.
|
|---|
| NMS (Network Management Station) | | The system responsible for managing a network or
a portion of a network. The NMS communicates to network management
agents which reside in the managed node using a network management
protocol.
|
|---|
| node | | A device, such as a station or concentrator, connected
to a network.
|
|---|
| NRZ (Nonreturn to Zero) | | A data transmission technique where a polarity level,
high or low, represents a logical 1 or 0.
|
|---|
| NRZI (Nonreturn to Zero Invert on Ones) | | A data transmission technique where a polarity transition
from low to high, or high to low, represents a logical 1. The absence
of a polarity transition represents a 0.
|
|---|
| NSA (Next Station Addressing) | | A special addressing mode in FDDI networks that
permits a station to send a frame to the next station on the token
path without knowing that station's address.
|
|---|
O
|
|---|
| optical receiver | | An opto-electronic circuit that converts an incoming
optical signal to an electrical signal, typically a photodetector.
|
|---|
| optical transmitter | | An opto-electronic circuit that converts an electrical
signal to an optical signal, typically a light emitting diode or
a laser diode.
|
|---|
| OSI Model (Open Systems Interconnection) | | The 7-layer protocol model defined by the International
Standards Organization (ISO) for data communications.
|
|---|
P
|
|---|
| packet | | Data information that is grouped and transmitted
together, such as messages, commands, and control codes.
|
|---|
| PCM (Physical Connection Management) | | That portion of the Connection Management (CMT)
within the Station Management (SMT) function of an FDDI station
that manages the physical connect between adjacent PHYs. This includes
the signaling of the connection type, link confidence testing, and
the enforcement of connection rules.
|
|---|
| PDU (Protocol Data Unit) | | The unit of data transfer between peer layer entities.
It may contain control information, address information, and/or
data (for example, a Service Data Unit from a higher layer entity).
A valid PDU is at least 24 bits in length. The FDDI MAC PDUs are
tokens and frames.
|
|---|
| peer-to-peer | | Assigning of communications tasks so that data transmission
between logical groups or layers in a network architecture is accomplished
between entities in the same sublayer of the OSI model.
|
|---|
| PHY (Physical Layer Protocol) | | A standard protocol that defines symbols, line states,
clocking requirements, and the encoding of data for transmission.
|
|---|
| Physical layer | | Layer 1 in the OSI model; defines and handles the
electrical and physical connections between systems. The physical
layer can also encode data into a form that is compatible with the
medium (coaxial, twisted pair, fiber, and so on).
|
|---|
| PING (Packet Internet Groper) | | A TCP/IP protocol facility used to test the reachability
of destinations by sending an ICMP (Internet Control Message Protocol)
echo request and waiting for a reply.
|
|---|
| PMD (Physical Layer Medium Dependent) | | A standard that defines the medium and protocols
to transfer symbols between PHYs.
|
|---|
| point-to-point | | Transmission of data between two nodes where one
node is the sender and the other node is the receiver.
|
|---|
| Presentation layer | | Layer 6 in the OSI model; details protocols governing
data formats and conversions.
|
|---|
| propagation delay | | The time it takes for a signal to travel across
the network.
|
|---|
| protocol | | A set of rules and conventions that govern the exchange
of information between communicating parties on a network.
|
|---|
R
|
|---|
| reconfiguration | | The operation by which a station determines the
location of a fault and isolates it by utilizing the redundancy
of the dual FDDI ring.
|
|---|
| repeat frame | | The operation of repeating a group of symbols on
the network in exactly the same manner they were received by the
station.
|
|---|
| repeater | | A level 1 hardware device that performs the basic
actions of restoring signal amplitude, waveform, and timing of signals,
before transmission onto another network segment.
|
|---|
| ring | | Connections between two or more stations that form
a circular topology.
|
|---|
| RMT (Ring Management) | | That portion of the Station Management (SMT) function
within an FDDI station that receives status information from the
Media Access Control (MAC) and the Connection Management (CMT).
The RMT then reports this status to the SMT and higher-level processes.
|
|---|
| router | | A level 3 hardware device that uses layer 3 protocols
to control network communication between stations and forwards messages
to endstations or other routers.
|
|---|
S
|
|---|
| SAC (Single Attachment Concentrator) | | A concentrator that offers one S port for attachment
to the FDDI network and M ports for the attachment of stations or
other concentrators.
|
|---|
| SAS (Single Attachment Station) | | An FDDI station that offers one S port for attachment
to the FDDI ring.
|
|---|
| services | | A set of functions proved by one OSI/ISO layer or
sublayer entity, for use by a higher layer or sublayer entity or
by management entities.
|
|---|
| Session layer | | Layer 5 in the OSI model; defines protocols governing
communications between applications.
|
|---|
| SIF (Station Information Frame) | | Special frames used by the SMT Frame Services within
the Station Management (SMT) function of an FDDI station that contain
more information about the station's configuration and
characteristics than the associated Neighborhood Information Frame
(NIF). This information can be used to create a physical ring map
that shows the position of each station in both the token path and
the network topology.
|
|---|
| single mode | | A small-core (9 micron) optical fiber through which
only one mode can propagate.
|
|---|
| Slave | | A memory or I/O device that uses EISA control signals
to interface to the bus.
|
|---|
| Slot Specific Signal | | Each connector has a unique variant of the signal
(instead of a single signal that is bused to all connnectors).
|
|---|
| SMT (Station Management) | | An entity within a network station on an FDDI ring
that monitors station activity and exercises control over station
activity. The standard defines how to manage the Physical Layer
Medium Dependent (PMD), the Physical Layer Protocol (PHY), and the
Media Access Control (MAC) portions of FDDI.
|
|---|
| SMT Frame Services | | That portion of Station Management (SMT) that provides
the means to control and observe the FDDI network. The service uses
Neighborhood Information Frames (NIF) and Station Information Frames
(SIF) to pass an announcement, a request, and the response to a
request.
|
|---|
| SNMP (Simple Network Management Protocol) | | A high level standards-based protocol for network
management, usually used in TCP/IP networks. An SNMP monitor controls
and measures the activities of SNMP agents that are embedded in
nodes and network devices on the network. SNMP relies on Management
Information Bases (MIBs) embedded in the network resources to monitor
and control the network's topology.
|
|---|
| spanning tree | | A method of creating a loop-free logical topology
on an extended LAN. Formation of a spanning tree topology for transmission
of messages across bridges is based on the industry standard spanning
tree algorithm defined in IEEE 802.1d.
|
|---|
| station | | An addressable node on the network capable of transmitting
and receiving data. In an FDDI ring, the station can repeat data.
A station has at least one instance of SMT, at least one instance
of PHY and PMD, and an optional MAC entity.
|
|---|
| stuck beacon | | The condition where a station is locked into sending
continuous beacon frames.
|
|---|
T
|
|---|
| TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet
Protocol) | | A set of communications protocols that define how
different types of computers talk to each other. It is the standard
architecture for internetworking multiple organizations, and the
common link that ties the huge Internet together.
|
|---|
| token | | A bit pattern consisting of a unique symbol sequence
that circulates around the ring following a data transmission. The
token grants stations the right to transmit.
|
|---|
| token holding timer | | A timer that controls the amount of time a station
may hold the token in order to transmit asynchronous frames.
|
|---|
| token passing | | A method where each node, in turn, receives and
passes on the right to use the channel. The nodes are usually configured
in a logical ring.
|
|---|
| Token Ring | | A network topology utilizing a token-passing media
access protocol in a ring topology. 100 Mbps FDDI and ANSI 802.5
4- and 16-Mbps Token Ring are token ring technologies.
|
|---|
| trace | | A diagnostic process to recover from a stuck-beacon
condition. The fault is localized to the beaconing MAC and its upstream
neighbor MAC.
|
|---|
| Transport layer | | Layer 4 in the OSI model; defines protocols governing
message structure and some error checking.
|
|---|
| TRT (Token Rotation Timer) | | A clock that times the period between the receipt
of tokens.
|
|---|
| TTP (Timed-Token Protocol) | | The rules defining how the target token rotation
time is set, the length of time a station can hold the token, and
how the ring is initialized.
|
|---|
| TTRT (Target Token Rotation Time) | | The value used by the MAC receiver to time the operations
of the MAC layer. The TTRT value varies, depending on whether or
not the ring is operational.
|
|---|
| TVX (Valid Transmission Timer) | | A timer that times the period between valid transmissions
on the ring; used to detect excessive ring noise, token loss, and
other faults.
|
|---|
U
|
|---|
| upstream | | A term that refers to the relative position of two
stations in a ring. A station is upstream of its neighbor if it
receives the token before its neighbor receives the token.
|
|---|
| UTP (Unshielded Twisted Pair) | | Type 3 cable with one or more twisted pairs where
the wiring is not protected from electromagnetic and radio frequency,
but covered with plastic or PVC.
|
|---|
W
|
|---|
| WAN (Wide Area Network) | | A network spanning a large geographical area that
provides communications among devices on a regional, national or
international basis.
|
|---|
| workgroup | | A network configuration characterized by a small
number of attached devices spread over a limited geographical area.
|
|---|
| workstation | | A networked computer typically reserved for end-user
applications.
|
|---|
X
|
|---|
| X3T9.5 ANSI | | The standard specification for an FDDI network operating
at 100 Mbps in a ring topology that can extend to hundreds of stations
over tens of kilometers without degrading the system.
|
|---|