EMS Summit 2000
Provided by - William Ott
Networking Glossary
A
- Access Method
- The rules by which
a network device gains the rights to transmit a communication on the network.
Common methods include carrier sense multiple access with collision detection
(CSMA/CD), token passing, and demand priority.
- Adapter
- Another name for a
Network Interface Card (NIC)
- Address Resolution
Protocol (ARP)
- In TCP/IP, a Network
layer protocol used by an end station to determine the physical address
of another station on the same LAN.
- Alignment Error
- Alignment errors are
caused by frames that do not contain an integral number of bytes. Such a
frame does not end on a byte boundary, and is some odd number of bits in
length.
- ARP
- see Address Resolution
Protocol
- Asynchronous
- Transmission where
sending and receiving devices are not synchronized. Data must carry signals
to indicate data division.
- Attachment Unit Interface
(AUI)
- The IEEE 802.3 standard
name for the cable connecting an Ethernet transceiver (MAU) to a networked
device. An AUI cable is equipped with a 15-pin connector that mates with
a 15-pin connector on the networked device.
- Attenuation
- The decrease in magnitude
of a signal as it travels through any transmission medium such as a cable
or optical fiber. Measured in dB per unit of length.
- Attenuation Crosstalk
Ratio (ACR)
- The difference between
attenuation and crosstalk, measured in dB, at a given frequency. A quality
factor for cabling to assure that signal sent down a twisted pair is stronger
at the receiving end of the cable than any interference imposed on the same
pair by crosstalk from other pairs.
- AUI
- see Attachment Unit
Interface.
- Auto-Negotiation
- The algorithm that
allows two devices at either end of a link segment to negotiate common data
service functions (i.e. transmission rate, half vs. full duplex, etc.)
- AWG
- American Wire Gage
- A wire diameter specification. The smaller the AWG number, the larger
the wire diameter.
B
- Backbone
- A cable connection
between telecommunication or wiring closets, floor distribution terminals,
entrance facilities, and equipment rooms either within or between buildings.
In star networks, the backbone cable interconnects hubs and similar devices,
as opposed to cables running between hub and station. In a bus network,
the bus cable.
- Backoff
- The process by which
a station then remains silent for a random period of time following a collision
before attempting to transmit again. See also Binary Exponential Backoff.
- Backoff Delay
- The length of time
that a station on a CSMA/CD (Ethernet) network must wait before attempting
to retransmit a frame after detecting a collision.
- Balanced Cable, Balanced
Line
- A cable having two
identical conductors that carry voltages of opposite polarities and equal
magnitude with respect to ground. The conductors are twisted to maintain
balance over a distance.
- Balanced Transmission
- A mode of signal transmission
in which each conductor carries the signal of equal magnitude, but opposite
polarity. A 5 volt signal for example, appears as a +2.5 Volts on one conductor
and -2.5 Volts on the other.
- Balun
- An impedance matching
transformer that converts the impedance of one interface to the impedance
of another interface. Sometimes used to adapt 150 ohm shielded twisted pair
(STP) cabling for use with 100 ohm Ethernet systems. The term is derived
from "balanced / unbalanced". May also be called a "media
filter".
- Baseband
- A transmission method
in which the entire bandwidth of the transmission medium is used to transmit
a single digital signal. The signal is driven directly onto the transmission
medium without modulation of any kind. Baseband is simpler, cheaper and
less sophisticated than Broadband. All Ethernet media types are baseband
except for 10Broad36 which is broadband.
- Bandwidth
- The range of frequencies
required for proper transmission of a signal. Expressed in Hertz (cycles
per second). The higher the bandwidth, the more information that can be
carried. A continuous range starting from zero is said to be "baseband",
while a range starting substantially above zero is "broadband".
- Baud
- The number of changes
in signal per second. A given baud rate does not necessarily transmit an
equal number of bits/sec. For example, a signal with four voltage levels
may be used to transfer two bits of information for every baud.
- BEB
- see Binary Exponential
Backoff
- Bend Loss
- A form of increased
attenuation in an optical fiber caused by an excessively small bend radius.
The attenuation may be permanent if microfractures caused by the bend continue
to affect transmission of the light signal.
- Bend Radius
- Radius of curvature
that a fiber optic or metallic cable can bend before the risk of breakage
or increased attenuation occurs.
- BER
- see Bit Error Rate
- Binary Exponential
Backoff (BEB)
- Algorithm used with
CSMA/CD (Ethernet) networks to schedule retransmissions after a collision.
So called because the backoff delay expands exponentially (becomes longer)
with repeated collisions.
- Binary Logarithmic
Arbitration Method (BLAM)
- A proposed enhancement
of the Binary Exponential Backoff algorithm designed to eliminate the unfairness
caused by the "capture effect". Although implemented by some Ethernet
products, BLAM was never approved as part of the Ethernet standard.
- Bit
- One binary digit.
- Bit Error Rate
- A measure of data integrity,
expressed as the ratio of received bits that are in error, relative to the
amount of bits received. Often expressed as a negative power of ten.
- Bit Stream
- A continuous transfer
of bits over some medium.
- Bit Time
- The length of time
required to transmit one bit of information.
- BLAM
- see Binary Logarithmic
Arbitration Method
- BNC
- A coaxial connector
that uses a "bayonet" style turn and lock mating method. Used
with RG-58 or smaller coaxial cable. Used with 10Base2 Ethernet thin coaxial
cable. BNC is an acronym for Bayonet-Neill-Concelman or Bayonet-Navy-Connector.
- BPS
- Bits per second.
- Braid
- Fine wires interwoven
to form a tubular flexible structure that may be applied over one or more
wires for the purpose of shielding. May also be formed into a flattened
conductor to be used as a grounding strap.
- Branch Cable
- In 10Broad36, the AUI
Cable interconnecting the data terminal equipment and transceiver (MAU)
system components.
- Bridge
- A device which connects
two or more networks at the data link layer (layer 2). Bridge devices are
specified in the IEEE 802.1D standard. Bridges are not form part of the
collision domain (i.e. Bridges may be used to split a network into multiple
collision domains).
- Broadband
- A transmission facility
having a bandwidth sufficient to carry multiple voice, video or data channels
simultaneously. Each channel occupies (is modulated to) a different frequency
bandwidth on the transmission medium and is demodulated to its original
frequency at the receiving end. Channels are separated by "guardbands"
(empty spaces) to ensure that each channel will not interfere with its neighboring
channels. This technique is used to provide many CATV channels on one coaxial
cable. 10Broad36 is the only broadband Ethernet media type. All other Ethernet
media types are "baseband".
- Broadcast
- The act of sending
a frame to all stations. Also describes the class of media for which CSMA/CD
Ethernet is designed, in which all stations are capable of receiving a signal
transmitted by any other station.
- Broadcast Address
- A multicast address
identifying the group of all stations on a network.
- Broadcast Domain
- Segments joined together
by bridges form a broadcast domain.
- Broadcast Storm
- A condition that may
occur in networks that can cause a large number of broadcast packets to
be propagated unnecessarily across an enterprise-wide network, thereby causing
network overload.
- Bus Topology
- A network structure
in which each station is directly attached to a common communications channel.
The following Ethernet media systems use a bus topology: 10Base5, 10Base2,
and 10Broad36.
- Byte
- A group of 8 bits.
Also known as an "octet".
C
- c
- A small "c"
is the symbol for the speed of light in a vacuum.
- Cable
- A group of insulated
conductors enclosed within a common jacket.
- Cable Sheath
- A covering over the
conductor assembly that may include one or more metallic members, strength
members, or jackets.
- Campus
- The buildings and grounds
of a complex, such as a university, college, industrial park or military
establishment.
- Capture Effect
- A condition where the
backoff delays selected by different stations following the same collision
can become very lopsided, resulting in an unfairness problem. Also called
"channel capture".
- Carrier
- An electrical signal
of a set frequency that can be modulated in order to carry data.
- Carrier Sense
- A method of detecting
the presence of signal activity on a common channel. With Ethernet, a method
of detecting whether another station is transmitting.
- Carrier Sense Multiple
Access with Collision Detection
- A network access method
used by Ethernet in which a station listens for traffic before transmitting.
If two stations transmit simultaneously, a collision is detected and both
stations wait a brief time before attempting to transmit again. So called
because it a) allows multiple stations to access the broadcast channel at
will, b) avoids contention via carrier sense and deference, and c) resolves
contention via collision detection and retransmission.
- Category 1, Cat 1
- Unshielded twisted
pair used for transmission of audio frequencies. Used as speaker wire, door
bell wire, etc. Not suitable for networking applications.
- Category 2, Cat 2
- Unshielded twisted
pair used for transmission at frequencies up to 1.5 Mhz. Used in analog
telephone applications. Not suitable for networking applications.
- Category 3, Cat 3
- Unshielded twisted
pair with 100 ohm impedance and electrical characteristics supporting transmission
at frequencies up to 16 MHz. Defined by the TIA/EIA 568-A specification.
- Category 4, Cat 4
- Unshielded twisted
pair with 100 ohm impedance and electrical characteristics supporting transmission
at frequencies up to 20 MHz. Defined by the TIA/EIA 568-A specification.
- Category 5, Cat 5
- Unshielded twisted
pair with 100 ohm impedance and electrical characteristics supporting transmission
at frequencies up to 100 MHz. Defined by the TIA/EIA 568-A specification.
- Category 5e, Cat 5e,
Enhanced Cat 5
- Category 5e is a new
standard that will specify transmission performance that exceeds Cat 5.
Cat 5e has improved specifications for NEXT, PSELFEXT, and Attenuation.
Like Cat 5, it consists of unshielded twisted pair with 100 ohm impedance
and electrical characteristics supporting transmission at frequencies up
to 100 MHz. To be defined in the TIA 568-A-5 update.
- Category 6, Cat 6
- Category 6 is a proposed
standard that aims to support transmission at frequencies up to 250 MHz
over 100 ohm twisted pair.
- Category 7, Cat 7
- Category 7 is a proposed
standard that aims to support transmission at frequencies up to 600 MHz
over 100 ohm twisted pair.
- CATV
- Community antenna television,
or "Cable TV". CATV is a broadband transmission facility which
generally uses a 75 Ohm coaxial cable to carry numerous frequency-divided
TV channels simultaneously.
- Channel
- A logical medium in
a communication system over which data is transmitted.
- Channel Capture
- same as "Capture
Effect".
- Channel Insertion Loss
- For fiber optic links,
the static loss of a link between a transmitter and receiver. It includes
the loss of the fiber, connectors, and splices.
- Characteristic Impedance
- The impedance that
an infinitely long transmission line would have at its input terminal. If
a transmission line is terminated in its characteristic impedance, it will
appear (electrically) to be infinitely long, thus minimizing signal reflections
from the end of the line.
- Cheapernet
- Another name for thin
Ethernet or 10Base2 systems.
- Circuit
- 1. A system of conducting
media designed to pass a signal or voltage between two points. 2. A bi-directional
communications path between two pieces of associated equipment.
- Cladding
- The material surrounding
the core of a fiber optic cable. The cladding must have a lower index of
refraction than the core in order to contain the light in the core.
- Class A
- ISO/IEC 11801 designation
for twisted pair cabling rated to 100 KHz. Used in voice and low frequency
applications. Comparable to Category 1 cabling. Not suitable for networking
applications
- Class B
- ISO/IEC 11801 designation
for twisted pair cabling rated to 1 MHz. Used in medium bit rate applications.
Comparable to Category 2 cabling. Not suitable for networking applications
- Class C
- ISO/IEC 11801 designation
for twisted pair cabling rated to 16 MHz. Used in high bit rate applications.
Corresponds to TIA/EIA Category 3 cabling.
- Class D
- ISO/IEC 11801 designation
for twisted pair cabling rated to 100 MHz. Used in very high bit rate applications.
Corresponds to TIA/EIA Category 5 cabling.
- Class E
- ISO/IEC proposal for
twisted pair cabling rated to 250 MHz. Corresponds to the proposed TIA/EIA
Category 6 cabling standard.
- Class I Repeater
- A Class I Repeater
operates by translating the line signal on the incoming port to a digital
signal. This allows the translation between different types of Fast Ethernet
media systems such as 100Base-TX and 100Base-FX. A Class I repeater introduces
delays when performing this conversion such that only one repeater can be
put in a single Fast Ethernet LAN segment.
- Class II Repeater
- A Class II Repeater
immediately repeats the signal on the incoming port to all the ports on
the repeater. Very little delay is introduced by this quick movement of
the data across the repeater, thus two class II repeaters are allowed per
Fast Ethernet segment.
- Closet
- An enclosed space for
housing telecommunications and networking equipment, cable terminations,
and cross-connect cabling. It contains the horizontal cross connect where
the backbone cable cross-connects with the horizontal cable.
- Coax, Coaxial Cable
- A type of communication
transmission cable in which a solid center conductor is surrounded by an
insulating spacer which in turn is surrounded by a tubular outer conductor
(usually a braid, foil or both). The entire assembly is then covered with
an insulating and protective outer layer. Coaxial cables have a wide bandwidth
and can carry many data, voice and video conversations simultaneously. Coaxial
cables are know for low susceptibility to interference.
- Coaxial Cable Section
- A single length of
coaxial cable, terminated at each end with a male BNC connector. Cable sections
are joined to other cable sections via BNC plug/receptacle barrel or Type
T adapters.
- Coaxial Cable Segment
- A length of coaxial
cable made up from one or more coaxial cable sections and coaxial connectors,
and terminated at each end in its characteristic impedance.
- Code Rule Violation
(CRV)
- An analog waveform
that is not the result of the valid Manchester encoded output of a single
optical transmitter.
- Collision
- A condition that occurs
on a CSMA/CD (Ethernet) transmission medium when two or more stations transmit
signals concurrently.
- Collision Detect
- A method of detecting
two or more simultaneous transmissions on a common signal channel.
- Collision Domain
- A single CSMA/CD network.
If two or more Ethernet stations are within the same collision domain and
both transmit at the same time, a collision will occur. Ethernet stations
that are separated by a repeater are in the same collision domain. Ethernet
stations that are separated by a bridge are in different collision domains.
The concept of collision domain applies only to half duplex Ethernet. Collisions
do not occur in full duplex Ethernet configurations.
- Concentrator
- LAN equipment that
allows multiple network devices to be connected to the LAN cabling system
through a central point. Sometimes called a "hub".
- Conduit
- A rigid or flexible
metallic or nonmetallic raceway of circular cross section in which cables
are housed for protection and to prevent burning cable from spreading flames
or smoke in the event of a fire.
- Conductor
- A material that offers
low resistance to the flow of electrical current.
- Contention
- Interference between
colliding transmissions (see collisions). Normal part of Ethernet CSMA/CD
protocol.
- Continuity
- An uninterrupted pathway
for electrical signals.
- Core
- The central region
of an optical fiber through which light is transmitted.
- CRC
- see Cyclic Redundancy
Check
- Cross Connect
- A group of connection
points, often wall or rack mounted in a wiring closet, used to mechanically
terminate and interconnect twisted-pair building wiring.
- Cross Connection
- A connection scheme
between cabling runs, subsystems, and equipment using patch cords or jumpers
that attach to connecting hardware at each end.
- Crossover
- A conductor which connects
to a different pin number at each end.
- Crossover Cable
- A twisted pair patch
cable wired in such a way as to route the transmit signals from one piece
of equipment to the receive signals of another piece of equipment, and vice
versa.
- Crosstalk
- The coupling of unwanted
signals from one pair within a cable to another pair. Crosstalk can be measured
at the same (near) end or far end with respect to the signal source.
- CSMA/CD
- see Carrier Sense Multiple
Access with Collision Detect.
- Cyclic Redundancy Check
(CRC)
- An error checking technique
used to ensure the accuracy of transmitting digital code over a communications
channel. The transmitted messages are divided into predetermined lengths
which, used as dividends, are divided by a fixed divisor. The remainder
of the calculation is appended onto and sent with the message. At the receiving
end, the computer recalculates the remainder. If it does not match the transmitted
remainder, and error is detected.
D
- D Connector
- see Subminiature D
Connector
- Data Grade
- A term used for twisted-pair
cable used in networks to carry data signals. Data grade media has a higher
frequency rating than voice grade media used in telephone wiring.
- Data Link Layer
- Layer 2 of the OSI
reference model. This layer takes data from the network layer and passes
it on to the physical layer (layer 1). The data link layer is responsible
for transmission and reception of Ethernet frames, 48-bit addressing, etc.
It includes both the media access control (MAC) and logical link control
(LLC) layers.
- Data Terminal Equipment
(DTE)
- Any source or destination
of data connected to the local area network.
- dB
- Decibel. A unit for
measuring the relative strength of a signal. Usually expressed as the logarithmic
ratio of the strength of a transmitted signal to the strength of the original
signal. A decibel is one tenth of a "bel".
- DB-9
- Nine pin D connector.
- DB-15
- Fifteen pin D connector.
- DB-25
- Twenty-five pin D connector.
- Deference
- For CSMA/CD Ethernet,
the process by which a station delays its transmission when the channel
is busy to avoid contention with ongoing transmission.
- Destination MAC Address
- Address identifying
the station or stations on a LAN to which a frame is being sent.
- DGM
- Data Grade Media (see
Data Grade)
- Dielectric
- An insulating (non-conducting)
material.
- Differential Manchester
Encoding
- see Manchester Encoding
- Dispersion
- The phenomenon in an
optical fiber whereby light photons arrive at a distant point in different
phase than they entered the fiber. Dispersion causes receive signal distortion
that ultimately limits the bandwidth and usable length of the fiber cable.
The two major types of dispersion are 1) mode (or modal) dispersion caused
by differential optical path lengths in a multimode fiber, and 2) material
dispersion caused by differing transmission times of different wavelengths
of light in the fiber optic material.
- Distortion
- Any undesired change
in a wave for or signal.
- DIX
- Acronym identifying
the three companies that released the original Ethernet specification in
1980: Digital, Intel, and Xerox.
- Drain Wire
- An uninsulated wire
in contact with a shield throughout its length. Used to terminate the shield.
- Drop Cable
- The cable which allows
connection and access to and from the trunk cables of a network such as
the cables that connect individual PCs to the bus on a bus LAN. In Ethernet,
synonymous with "AUI Cable".
- DTE
- see Data Terminal Equipment.
- Duplex
- 1. (data communications)
A circuit used to transmit signals simultaneously in both directions. 2.
(general) Two receptacles or jacks in a common housing which accepts two
plugs.
E
- Earth
- A term for zero reference
ground.
- EIA
- Electronic Industry
Association (formerly RMA or RETMA). An association of manufacturers and
users that establishes standards and publishes test methodologies.
- Eight-pin connector,
Eight-pin modular
- A twisted pair connector
that closely resembles the RJ-45 connector, but has better electrical characteristics
than typical telephone grade RJ-45 connectors.
- Electromagnetic Interference
- An interfering electromagnetic
signal. Network wiring and equipment may be susceptible to EMI as well as
emit EMI.
- ELFEXT
- Equal Level Far End
Crosstalk
- EMI
- see Electromagnetic
Interference.
- Ethernet
- A local area network
(LAN) protocol defined in the IEEE 802.3 standard in which computers access
the network through a Carrier Sense Multiple Access / Collision Detect (CSMA/CD)
protocol.
- Ethernet Cable
- Informal name for the
50-ohm, 10 mm coaxial cable specified in the Ethernet 10Base5 standard.
Often called "thick Ethernet" cable to distinguish it from the
5 mm coaxial cable specified by the 10Base2 standard.
- Ethernet Version 2
- The original Ethernet
specification produced by Digital, Intel, and Xerox (DIX) that served as
the basis for the IEEE 802.3 Ethernet standard.
- Excessive Collision
Error
- If a station receives
16 consecutive collisions when attempting to transmit a single frame, then
the frame is dropped due to an excessive collision error.
- Extended LAN
- A network that consists
of two or more separate LAN data links that are interconnected using bridges.
F
- f
- Frequency
- Far End Cross Talk
(FEXT)
- Crosstalk that is measured
on the quiet line at the opposite end as the source of energy on the active
line. FEXT is not typically measured in cabling, with Near End Cross Talk
(NEXT) being the preferred crosstalk measurement.
- Fast Ethernet
- Ethernet standard supporting
100 Mb/s operation.
- Fast Link Pulse (FLP)
- A link pulse which
encodes information used in the Auto-Negotiation protocol. Fast link pulses
consist of bursts of the normal link pulses originally used in 10Base-T.
- FCC
- Federal Communications
Commission.
- FCS
- see Frame Check Sequence
- FEXT
- see Far End Cross Talk
- Fiber Optics, Fiber
Optic Cable
- The technology in which
communication signals in the form of modulated light beams are transmitted
over a glass or plastic fiber transmission medium. Fiber optic cables offers
high bandwidth, small space needs and protection from electromagnetic interference,
eavesdropping and radioactivity.
- Fiber Optic Medium
Attachment Unit (FOMAU)
- A MAU for fiber applications.
- Fifty-pin Connector
- Commonly referred to
as a Telco, CHAMP, or blue ribbon connector, this connector is used on Ethernet
10Base-T hubs as an alternate twisted-pair segment connection method. The
50-pin connector connects to 25-pair cables, which are frequently used in
telephone wiring systems and which typically meet Category 3 specifications.
- Filtering
- Bridges and switches
can reduce the level of congestion on a LAN through the process of filtering.
A filtering bridge or switch forwards a packet from one LAN segment to another
only as required. Packets that are not forwarded by a bridge or switch are
said to be "filtered".
- Filtering Rate
- The maximum number
of frames per second that a bridge or switch can continuously receive, parse,
and make a forwarding decision on.
- Flow Control
- The process of controlling
data transmission at the sender to avoid overfilling buffers and loss of
data at the receiver.
- FOIRL
- Fiber Optic Inter-Repeater
Link. An early Ethernet fiber optic connection method intended for connection
of repeaters. Defined in the IEEE 802.3c standard.
- FOMAU
- see Fiber Optic Medium
Attachment Unit.
- Forwarding
- The process of moving
frames from one port to another in a bridge or switch.
- Forwarding Rate
- The maximum number
of frames per second that can be forwarded by a bridge or switch, assuming
no congestion on the output port.
- Frame
- The sequence of bits
that form the unit of data transmission at the LAN data link layer or medium
access control layer. In Ethernet, a frame consists of the sequence of bits
transmitted by a station from the "preamble" through the "frame
check sequence". Also called "packet".
- Frame Bursting
- A technique permitted
only in half-duplex Gigabit Ethernet networks that optionally allows a station
to transmit a series of frames without relinquishing control of the transmission
medium. It improves the performance of Gigabit Ethernet when transmitting
short frames.
- Frame Check Sequence
(FCS)
- An encoded value appended
to each frame by a transmitting station to allow transmission errors to
be detected by the receiving station. Implemented as a 32-bit cyclic redundancy
check (CRC) code.
- Frequency
- The number of times
a periodic action occurs in a unit of time. Expressed in hertz (abbreviated
Hz). One hertz equals one cycle per second.
- FTP
- see Screened Twisted
Pair (ScTP) cable
- Full Duplex
- Data transmission over
a circuit capable of transmitting in both directions simultaneously. For
Ethernet, full duplex operation was defined in the IEEE 802.3x standard.
G
- Gb/s
- Gigabits per second.
One Gb/s equal one billion bits per second.
- Giants
- Giants are frames which
are longer than the maximum Ethernet size (1518 or 1522 bytes). Giant packets
usually occur when you have a jabbering node on your network; one that is
continuously transmitting, or transmitting improperly for short bursts-probably
due to a bad transmitter on the NIC. Giants can also be caused by packets
being corrupted as they are transmitted, either by the addition of garbage
signals, or by the corruption of the bits that indicate frame size.
- Giga
- A prefix meaning one
billion
- Gigabit Ethernet
- A version of Ethernet
that operates at 1 Gb/s (1000 Mb/s).
- Gigahertz (GHz)
- One billion hertz.
- GIPOF
- Graded Index Plastic
Optical Fiber
- Globally Administered
MAC Address
- A form of LAN station
addressing in which MAC addresses are 48-bits in length and whose values
are globally unique. Address values are set by the organization that manufactures
the Network Interface Card (NIC) or other LAN station. A manufacturer applies
to the IEEE for a unique block of addresses and assigns to each device it
manufactures a unique MAC address from its assigned block. The address is
permanently "burned" into the device through a PROM or other form
of non-volatile storage. Sometimes called "universal addressing".
- GMII
- Gigabit Media Independent
Interface
- Graded Index Fiber
- A multimode fiber optic
cable design in which the index of refraction of the core is lower toward
the outside of the core and progressively increases toward the center of
the core, thereby reducing modal dispersion of the signal.
- Group Address
- An address specifying
a group of logically related stations on a network. Also called a "multicast"
address.
- Ground
- A common point of zero
potential such as a metal chassis or ground rod.
H
- Half Duplex
- Data transmission over
a circuit capable of transmitting in either direction, but not simultaneously.
For Ethernet, the CSMA/CD method is a half duplex protocol.
- Headend
- The equipment in a
cable system which receives the various program source signals, processes
them, and retransmits them to subscribers. In the 10Broad36 Ethernet media
system, the location that serves as the root for the branching tree of the
physical medium; the point to which all inbound signals converge and the
point from which all outbound signals emanate.
- Hertz
- The unit of frequency,
one cycle per second (abbreviated Hz).
- Hub
- A device at the center
of a star topology network. Hubs can be active (where they repeat signals
set to them) or passive (where they do not repeat but merely split signals
sent through them). Hub may refer to a repeater, bridge, switch, router,
or any combination of these.
I
- IEEE
- Institute of Electrical
and Electronics Engineers. A professional organization and standards body.
The IEEE Project 802 is the group within IEEE responsible for LAN technology
standards.
- IEEE 802.1
- The IEEE standards
committee defining High Level Interfaces, Network Management, Internetworking,
and other issues common across LAN technologies.
- IEEE 802.2
- The IEEE standards
committee defining Logical Link Control (LLC).
- IEEE 802.3
- The IEEE standards
committee defining Ethernet networks.
- Impedance
- A unit of measure,
expressed in Ohms, of the total opposition (resistance, capacitance and
inductance) offered to the flow of an alternating current.
- Impedance Match
- A condition where the
impedance of a particular circuit cable or component is the same as the
impedance of the circuit, cable, or device to which it is connected.
- Impedance Matching
Transformer
- A transformer designed
to match the impedance of one circuit to another.
- Individual Address
- A MAC address that
identifies a single station. The low order bit of the first byte (first
bit transmitted) of an individual address is always "0".
- Insertion Loss
- A measure of the attenuation
of a device by determining the output of a system before and after the device
is inserted into the system. For example, a connector causes insertion loss
across the interconnection (in comparison to a continuous cable with no
interconnection).
- Intelligent Hubs
- Wiring concentrators
that can be monitored and managed by network operators.
- Inter-Frame Gap (IFG)
- The delay or time gap
between frames. Also called Inter-Packet Gap.
- Inter-Packet Gap (IPG)
- The delay or time gap
between packets. Also called Inter-Frame Gap.
- Isochronous
- Signals which are dependent
on some uniform timing or carry their own timing information imbedded as
part of the signal. Voice and video signals are isochronous signals, but
data transfer is generally not.
- Isochronous Ethernet,
Isoethernet
- A LAN technology developed
by National Semiconductor that adds 6 Mb/s of isochronous services to a
cable that also carries normal 10 Mb/s Ethernet traffic. Allows voice and/or
video to be carried on the same cable as data traffic.
J
- Jabber
- Term used with Ethernet
to describe the act of continuously sending data. A jabbering station is
one whose circuitry or logic has failed, and which has locked up a network
channel with its incessant transmission.
- Jack
- A female connector.
- Jacket
- The outer protective
covering of a cable.
- Jam, Jamming Sequence
- In CSMA/CD Ethernet,
the signal that a station transmits when it detects a collision condition
on the transmission medium. The jamming sequence is sent to ensure that
all stations know the collision has occurred.
- Jitter
- The slight movement
of a transmission signal in time or phase that can introduce errors and
loss of synchronization. More jitter will be encountered with longer cables,
cables with higher attenuation, and signals at higher data rates. Also,
called phase jitter, timing distortion, or intersymbol interference.
- Jumper Cable Assembly
- An electrical or optical
assembly consisting of a pair of transmission lines terminated at their
ends with a plug connectors.
K
L
- LAN
- see Local Area Network.
- LAN Adapter
- see Network Interface
Card
- Laser
- Light Amplification
by Stimulated Emission of Radiation. A device which produces light with
a narrow spectral width. Used in fiber optic communication systems, usually
single mode, where high capacity and low attenuation are required.
- Late Collision
- A late collision is
an Ethernet CSMA/CD collision that takes place after 64-bytes of a frame
has been transmitted on the network by an originating station. It is considered
a failure in the network because the collision arrives too late in the frame
transmission to be automatically dealt with by the Ethernet medium access
control function. The frame being transmitted will be dropped, requiring
that application software detect its loss and initiate a retransmission.
Late collisions may be caused by overly long cable lengths that result in
excessive delay in propagating collisions through the network. In a normal
Ethernet network, collisions should propagate throughout the network before
the first 64-bytes of a frame are transmitted.
- LED
- see Light Emitting
Diode.
- Light Emitting Diode
- A semiconductor diode
which emits incoherent light when a current is passed through it. Used as
a light source in fiber optic transmission.
- Link
- A transmission path
between two points not including terminal equipment, work area cables, or
equipment cables.
- Link Aggregation Link
Aggregation provides for increased link availability and bandwidth between
two Ethernet stations by allowing multiple "physical" links to
be combined to operate as a single "logical" link. Defined by
the 802.3ad Working Group. Also called "Trunking".
- Link Light
- An optional status
LED on an Ethernet transceiver that indicates the status of the link integrity
test. If this light is lit on the transceivers at both ends of the link,
it indicates that the link has passed the integrity test.
- Link Pulse
- A communication mechanism
used in Ethernet link segments to indicate link status and, in auto-negotiation
equipped devices, to communicate information about abilities and negotiate
communication methods. The original 10Base-T used Normal Link Pulses (NLP)
which indicate link status only. Ethernet nodes equipped with auto-negotiation
exchange information using a Fast Link Pulse (FLP) mechanism which is compatible
with NLP.
- Link Segment
- In Ethernet, a point
to point segment that connects two and only two transceivers at its endpoints.
- LLC
- see Logical Link Control
- Local Area Network
(LAN)
- A term used to refer
to a form of networking technology that implements a high-speed, relatively
short distance form of computer communications. Ethernet is one type of
LAN.
- Locally Administered
Address
- With locally administered
addressing, the organization installing the network is responsible for assigning
a unique MAC address to each network station. This could be done using DIP
switches on the NIC or using a software function. A locally administered
address overrides any globally administered address assigned during manufacture
of the NIC.
- Logical Link Control
(LLC)
- A protocol defined
in the IEEE 802.2 standard for data-link-level transmission control. It
is the upper sublayer of the IEEE Layer 2 (OSI) protocol that complements
the MAC protocol. LLC is independent of any specific LAN technology.
M
- MAC
- see Medium Access Control
- MAC Address
- The 48-bit address
used in Ethernet to identify a station. Generally a unique number that is
programmed into a device at time of manufacture.
- MAC Frame
- Name for the data unit
exchanged between peer Medium Access Control sublayer entities. Also called
simply a "frame".
- Manageable Hubs
- Another definition
for intelligent hubs. Each of the ports on the managed hub can be configured,
monitored, and enabled or disabled by a network operator from a hub management
console.
- Management Information
Base (MIB)
- A list of manageable
objects (counters, etc.) for a given device. Used by network management
applications.
- Manchester Encoding
- A method of LAN signal
encoding in which each bit time that represents a data bit has a transition
in the middle of the bit time. Used with 10 Mb/s Ethernet (10Base2, 10Base5,
10Base-F, & 10Base-T), and Token-Ring LANs.
- MAU
- see Medium Attachment
Unit
- Mega
- A prefix meaning one
million
- Mbaud
- Megabaud. One million
baud.
- Mb/s
- Megabits per second.
One Mb/s equals one million bits per second.
- MDI
- see Medium Dependent
Interface
- Media
- Wire, cable, or conductors
used for transmission of signals.
- Medium Access Control
(MAC)
- A mechanism operating
at the data link layer of local area networks which manages access to the
communications channel (medium). It forms the lower layer of the IEEE data
link layer (OSI layer 2) which complements the Logical Link Control (LLC).
MAC is a media-specific protocol within the IEEE 802 specifications.
- Medium Attachment Unit
(MAU)
- The transceiver in
Ethernet networks. Also a common name for the MSAU (Multi-station Access
Unit) in Token-Ring networks.
- Medium Dependent Interface
(MDI)
- The connector used
to make the mechanical and electrical interface between a transceiver and
a media segment. An 8-pin RJ-45 connector is the MDI for the 10Base-T, 100Base-TX,
100Base-T2, 100Base-T4, and 1000Base-T media systems.
- Media Independent Interface
(MII)
- Used with 100 Mb/s
Ethernet systems to attach MAC level hardware to a variety of physical media
systems. Similar to the AUI interface used with 10 Mb/s Ethernet systems.
An MII provides a 40-pin connection to outboard transceivers (also called
PHY devices).
- Mega
- Prefix meaning one
million.
- Megahertz (MHz)
- One million hertz.
- MIB
- see Management Information
Base
- Midsplit Broadband
- A broadcast network
configuration in which a broadband cable is divided into two channels, each
using a different range of frequencies. One channel is used to transmit
signals and the other is used to receive. For Ethernet, midsplit broadband
is a configuration that can be used only with the 10Broad36 media system.
- MII
- see Media Independent
Interface.
- Mixing Segment
- Ethernet term used
in IEEE 802.3 standards to describe a segment that may have more than two
transceivers.
- MMF
- set Multimode Fiber
- Mode
- A single electromagnetic
wave traveling in an optical fiber.
- Modular Hubs
- A hub that starts with
a chassis, or card cage, with multiple card slots, each of which can accept
a communications card, or module. Each module acts like a standalone hub;
when the communications modules are placed in the card slots in the chassis,
they connect to a high-speed communications backplane that links them together
so that a station connected to a port on one module can easily communicate
with a station on another module.
- Modular Jack
- The equipment mounted
half of a modular interconnection. Typically a female connector. A modular
jack may be keyed or unkeyed and may have six or eight contact positions,
but not all the positions need to be equipped with jack contacts.
- Modular Plug
- The cable mounted half
of a modular interconnection. Typically a male connector. A modular plug
may be keyed or unkeyed and may have six or eight contact positions, but
not all the positions need to be equipped with contacts.
- MT-RJ
- Proposal for a new
duplex fiber optic connector standard from AMP/Siecor.
- Multicast
- An addressing mode
in which a given frame is targeted to a group of logically related stations.
- Multicast Address
- An address specifying
a group of logically related stations on a network. Also called a "group"
address.
- Multimode Fiber
- A fiber optic cable
which supports the propagation of multiple modes. Multimode fiber may have
a typical core diameter of 50 to 100 µm with a refractive index that is
graded or stepped. It allows the use of inexpensive LED light sources and
connector alignment and coupling is less critical than single mode fiber.
Distances of transmission and transmission bandwidth are less than with
single mode fiber due to dispersion.
N
- N connector
- A coaxial connector
used for Ethernet 10Base5 thick coax segments.
- Near-End Crosstalk
- Crosstalk between two
twisted pairs measured at the same end of the cable as the disturbing signal
source. NEXT is the measurement of interest for crosstalk specifications.
- Network
- An interconnection
of computer systems, terminals or data communications facilities.
- Network Interface Card
(NIC)
- A circuit board installed
in a computing device used to attach the device to a network. A NIC performs
the hardware functions that are required to provide a computing device with
physical communications capabilities. Also Network Interface Unit (NIU).
- NEXT
- see Near-End Crosstalk.
- Next Page Function
- Additional feature
of auto-negotiation. Next pages are a means by which devices can transmit
additional information beyond their link code.
- NIC
- see Network Interface
Card.
- NIR
- Near-end Crosstalk-to-Insertion
Loss Ratio
- Node
- End point of a network
connection. Nodes include any device connected to a network such as file
servers, printers, or workstations.
- N-Way
- Name originally used
for the Ethernet "auto-negotiation" algorithm.
O
- Octet
- Eight bits (also called
"byte")
- Ohm
- The electrical unit
of resistance. The value of resistance through which a potential of one
volt will maintain a current of one ampere.
- Open
- A break in the continuity
of a circuit.
- Optical Fiber
- A thin glass or plastic
filament used for the transmission of information via light signals. The
signal carrying part of a fiber optic cable.
- Optical Fiber Cable
- An assembly consisting
of one or more optical fibers.
- Optical Fiber Duplex
Adapter
- A mechanical media
termination device designed to align and join two duplex connectors.
- Optical Fiber Duplex
Connection
- A mated assembly of
two duplex connectors and a duplex adapter.
- Optical Fiber Duplex
Connector
- A mechanical media
termination device designed to transfer optical power between two pairs
of optical fibers.
- Optical Time Domain
Reflectometry.
- A method for evaluating
optical fiber based on detecting and measuring backscattered (reflected)
light. Used to measure fiber length and attenuation, evaluate splice and
connector joints, locate faults, and certify cabling systems.
- Open Systems Interconnect
reference model (OSI)
- A communications model
developed by the International Standards Organization (ISO) to define all
of the services a LAN should provide. This model defines seven layers, each
of which provides a subset of all of the LAN services. This layered approach
allows small groups of related services to be implemented in a modular fashion
that makes designing network software much more flexible.
- OTDR
- Optical Time Domain
Reflectometry.
- Out of Window Collision,
OOW Collision
- Same as "late
collision".
- Outlet
- A connecting device
in the work area on which a horizontal cable terminates.
- Outlet Box
- A metallic or non-metallic
box mounted within a wall, floor, or ceiling used to hold outlet, connector,
or transition devices.
- Output
- The useful signal or
power delivered by a circuit or device.
P
- Packet
- Bits grouped serially
in a defined format, containing a command or data message sent over a network.
Same as a "frame".
- PAM5x5
- Signal encoding scheme
used in the Ethernet 100Base-T2 and 1000Base-T media systems.
- Parallel Detection
- An auto-negotiation
device's means to establish links with non-negotiation, fixed speed devices.
- Patch Cable, Patch
Cord
- A flexible piece of
cable terminated at both ends with connectors. Used for interconnecting
circuits on a patch panel or cross connect.
- Patch Panel
- A passive device, typically
flat plate holding feed through connectors, to allow circuit arrangements
and rearrangements by simply plugging and unplugging patch cables.
- Pause Frames
- A optional flow control
technique for full-duplex Ethernet networks. One end station may temporarily
stop all traffic from the other end station by sending a pause frame.
- PC
- Personal Computer
- Photodetector
- Used on the receiving
end of a fiber optic cable to convert light energy into electrical energy.
- PHY
- Physical Layer device.
- Physical Address
- The unique address
value associated with a given station on the network. An Ethernet physical
address is defined to be distinct from all other physical addresses on the
network.
- Physical Layer
- Layer one of the seven
layer ISO Reference Model for Open Systems Interconnection. The physical
layer is responsible for the transmission of signals, such as electrical
signals, optical signals, or radio signals, between computing machines.
- Pin-diode
- A photodetector used
to convert optical signals to electrical signals in a receiver.
- Plastic Fiber
- An optical fiber made
of plastic rather than glass.
- Plenum
- The air handling space
between the walls, under structural floors, and above drop ceilings used
to circulate and otherwise handle air in a building. Such spaces are considered
plenums only if they are used for air handling. Work spaces are generally
not considered plenums.
- Plenum Cable
- A cable that is rated
as having adequate fire resistance and low smoke producing characteristics
for use in air handling spaces (plenum).
- Plug
- A male connector.
- PMD
- Physical Media Dependent
- POF
- Plastic Optical Fiber.
- POTS
- Plain Old Telephone
System
- Preamble
- A sequence of 64 encoded
bits which a station transmits before each frame to allow synchronization
of clocks and other physical layer circuitry at other stations on the channel.
- Promiscuous Mode
- A mode of operation
where a device receives every frame on the LAN, regardless of destination
address.
- Propagation Delay
- The signal transit
time through a cable, network segment, or device.
- Protocol
- A set of agree-upon
rules and message formats for exchanging information among devices on a
network.
- PSELFEXT
- Power Sum Equal Level
Far End Crosstalk
- PSNEXT
- Power Sum Near End
Crosstalk
- Pulse
- A current or voltage
which changes abruptly from one value to another and back to the original
value in a finite length of time.
Q
R
- Receiver
- A device whose purpose
is to capture transmitted signal energy and convert that energy for useful
functions. In fiber optic systems, an electronic component that converts
light energy to electrical energy.
- Reflection
- A return of electromagnetic
energy that occurs at an impedance mismatch in a transmission line, such
as a LAN cable.
- Refractive Index.
- The ratio of the speed
of light in a vacuum to its velocity in a transmitting medium, such as an
optical fiber core.
- Repeater
- A device that receives,
amplifies (and sometimes reshapes), and retransmits a signal. It is used
to boost signal levels and extend the distance a signal can be transmitted.
It can connect two or more LAN segments and physically extend the distance
of a LAN. It immediately copies all bits arriving on each segment to all
other segments, whether or not they are part of a valid frame.
- Reversed Pair
- A wiring error in twisted
pair cabling where the conductors of a pair are reversed between connector
pins at each end of a cable.
- RFI
- Radio Frequency Interference.
Electromagnetic interference at radio frequencies.
- RG/U
- Radio Grade/Universal.
RG is the common military designation for coaxial cable.
- Ring
- 1. A polarity designation
of one wire of a pair indicating that the wire is that of the secondary
color of a 5-pair group (e.g. the blue white wire of the blue pair). 2.
A wiring contact to which the ring wire is attached. 3. The negative wiring
polarity (see Tip).
- Ripcord
- A cord placed directly
under the jacket of a cable in order to facilitate stripping (removal) of
the jacket.
- RJ
- A term from the telephone
industry, used for jacks (connectors) that were registered for use with
particular types of telephone services. RJ stands for "registered jack".
- RJ-45
- A USOC code identifying
an 8-pin modular plug or jack used with unshielded twisted pair cable. Officially,
an RJ-45 connector is a telephone connector designed for voice grade circuits
only. RJ-45 type connectors with better signal handling characteristics
are called 8-pin connectors in most standards documents, though most people
continue to use the RJ-45 name for all 8-pin connectors.
- Round-Trip Propagation
Time
- In bit times, the time
required in the worst case for a transmitting station's collision detect
signal to be asserted due to normal contention on the channel. This delay
is a primary component of the slot time.
- Routers
- These are more complex
internetworking devices that are also typically more expensive than bridges.
They use Network Layer Protocol Information within each packet to route
it from one LAN to another.
- Running Disparity
- A binary parameter
having a value of "+" or "-", representing the imbalance
between the number of ones and zeros in a sequence of 8B/10B code groups.
- Runt Frame
- An Ethernet frame that
is less than the minimum length of 64-bytes. In a half-duplex Ethernet environment,
runt frames are almost always caused by collisions. If runt frames occur
when collisions are not high or in a full-duplex Ethernet environment, then
they are probably the result of underruns or bad software on a network interface
card.
- Rx
- Receive
S
- SC Connector
- A fiber optic connector
having a 2.5mm ferrule, push-pull latching mechanism, and the ability to
be snapped together to form duplex and multifiber connectors. SC connectors
are the preferred fiber optic cable for premises cabling, and are recommended
by the TIA/EIA-568-A Standard for structured cabling. Used with Ethernet
100Base-FX and 1000Base-LX/SX fiber optic media systems.
- Screen
- see Shield
- Screened Twisted Pair
(ScTP) cable
- Four pair UTP, with
a single foil or braided screen surrounding all four pairs in order to minimize
EMI radiation or susceptibility. Screened twisted pair is sometimes called
Foil Twisted Pair (FTP). ScTP can be thought of as a shielded version of
the Category 3, 4, & 5 UTP cables.
- Screened/Shielded Twisted
Pair (SSTP)
- Four pair cabling,
with each pair having its own individual Shield, in addition to an overall
shield surrounding all four pairs. SSTP offers similar performance to Type
1 STP except with 4 pairs (rather than 2) and in a 100 ohm impedance (rather
than 150).
- ScTP
- see Screened Twisted
Pair cable
- Segment
- On Ethernet, a media
segment may be made up of one or more cable sections joined together to
produce a continuous cable for carrying Ethernet signals.
- Shared Ethernet
- Same as "half-duplex"
(CSMA/CD) Ethernet.
- Sheath
- see Jacket
- Shield
- A metallic foil or
multiwire screen mesh that is used to prevent electromagnetic fields from
penetrating or exiting a transmission cable. Also referred to as a "screen".
- Shield Coverage
- The physical area of
a cable that is actually covered by shielding material, often expressed
as a percentage.
- Shield Effectiveness
- The relative ability
of a shield to screen out undesirable interference. Frequently confused
with the term shield coverage.
- Shielded Twisted Pair
(STP)
- A type of twisted pair
cable in which the pairs are enclosed in an outer braided shield, although
individual pairs may also be shielded. STP most often refers to the 150
ohm IBM Type 1, 2, 6, 8, & 9 cables used with Token Ring networks.
- Signal
- The information conveyed
through a communication system.
- Signal to noise ratio
- The ratio of received
signal level to received noise level, expressed in dB. Abbreviated S/N.
A higher S/N ratio indicates better channel performance.
- Signal Quality Error
(SQE)
- Also called "heartbeat",
SQE is a signal sent by transceivers over an AUI cable to an Ethernet NIC.
It is sent after a frame is transmitted in order to verify the connection,
and is also used by the transceiver to notify a station that a collision
was detected. The SQE signal is used primarily in 10Base5 environments as
a test signal to reassure the station that the transceiver is still operating
correctly. The SQE test should be disabled when a transceiver is connected
to a repeater.
- Silver Satin
- The name for the silver-gray
voice-grade patch cable used to connect a telephone to a wall jacket. Typical
silver satin patch cables do not have twisted pair wires, which makes them
unsuitable for use in LAN applications. The lack of twisted pairs will result
in high levels of crosstalk.
- Simplex Transmission
- Data transmission over
a circuit capable of transmitting in one preassigned direction only.
- Single Mode Fiber
- An optical fiber that
will allow only one mode to propagate. The fiber has a very small core diameter
of approximately 8 µm. It permits signal transmission at extremely high
bandwidth and allows very long transmission distances.
- Slot Time
- A key parameter for
half-duplex Ethernet network operation. Defined as 512 bit times for Ethernet
networks operating below 1 Gb/s, and 4096 bit times for Gigabit Ethernet.
In order for each transmitter to reliably detect collisions, the minimum
transmission time for a complete frame must be at least one slot time, whereas
the round-trip propagation delay (including both logic delays in all electronic
components and the propagation delay in all segments) must be less than
a slot time.
- SMA Connector
- A threaded type fiber
optic connector. The 905 version is a straight ferrule design, whereas the
906 is a stepped ferrule design.
- SMF
- see Single Mode Fiber
- S/N
- see Signal to noise
ratio
- SNR
- see Signal to noise
ratio
- Source
- In fiber optics, the
device which converts the electrical information carrying signal to an optical
signal for transmission over an optical fiber. A fiber-optic source may
be a light emitting diode or laser diode.
- Spanning Tree
- A structure that includes
all the bridges and stations on an extended LAN in which there is never
more than one active path connecting any two stations.
- Splice
- A joining of conductors
generally from separate sheaths.
- Splice Closure
- A device used to protect
a cable or wire splice.
- Split Pair
- A wiring error in twisted
pair cabling where one of a pair's wires is interchanged with one of another
pair's wires. Split pair conditions may be determined with a transmission
test. Simple DC continuity testing will not reveal the error, because the
correct pin-to-pin continuity exists between ends. However, the error may
result in impedance mismatch, excessive crosstalk, susceptibility to interference,
and signal radiation.
- SQE
- see Signal Quality
Error
- SSTP, S/STP
- see Screened/Shielded
Twisted Pair
- ST Connector
- Designation for the
"straight tip" connector developed by AT&T. This fiber optic
connector features a physically contacting non-rotating 2.5mm ferrule design
and bayonet connector-to-adapter mating. Used with Ethernet 10Base-FL and
FIORL links.
- Stackable Hubs
- Hubs that look and
act like standalone hubs except that several of them can be "stacked"
or connected together, usually by short lengths of cable. When they are
linked together they can be managed as a single unit. Also allows users
to be added without adding repeater hops, i.e. the entire stack counts as
a single logical repeater.
- StarLAN
- Term used by AT&T
for their implementation of the 1Base5 standard.
- Star Network
- A network in which
all stations are connected through a single point.
- Star Topology
- A network configuration
in which there is a central point to which a group of systems are directly
connected. All transmissions from one system to another pass through this
central point. Ethernet 10Base-T is one example of a media system that uses
a star topology. All stations are connected through a central device called
a "hub".
- Station
- A unique, addressable
device on a network. A station is identified by a destination address (DA).
- Station Address
- see MAC Address
- Step Index Fiber
- An optical fiber in
which the core is of uniform refractive index with a sharp decrease in the
index of refraction at the core-cladding interface. Step index multimode
fibers generally have lower bandwidths than graded index multimode fibers.
- STP
- see Shielded Twisted
Pair
- STP-A
- Refers to the enhanced
IBM Cabling System specifications with the Type "A" suffix. The
original IBM Type 1, 2, 6, & 9 specifications were designed to support
operation of 4 and 16 Mb/s Token-Ring. The enhanced Type 1A, 2A, 6A, &
9A cable specifications were designed to support operation of 100 Mb/s FDDI
signals over copper.
- Structured Wiring
- Telecommunications
cabling that is organized into a hierarchy of wiring termination and interconnection
structures. The concept of structured wiring is used in the common standards
from the TIA and EIA.
- Subminiature D Connector
- A family of multipin
data connectors available in 9, 15, 25 and 37 pin configurations. Sometimes
referred to as DB9, DB15, DB25 and DB37 connectors respectively. An Ethernet
AUI connector is a 15-pin subminiature D connector.
- Surge
- A temporary and relatively
large increase in the voltage or current in an electric circuit or cable.
Also called transient.
- Surge Suppression
- The process by which
transient voltage surges are prevented from reaching sensitive electronic
equipment.
- Switch
- A switch is a multi-port
bridge. Each port on the switch is in its own collision domain.
- Synchronous
- Transmission in which
the data character and bits are transmitted at a fixed rate with the transmitter
and receiver being synchronized.
T
- Tap
- On Ethernet 10Base5
thick coaxial cable, a tap is a method of connecting a transceiver to the
cable by drilling a hole in the cable, inserting a contact to the center
conductor, and clamping the transceiver onto the cable at the tap.
- TDR
- See Time Domain Reflectometry
- Terminator
- A device that provides
electrical resistance at the end of a transmission line. Its function is
to absorb signals on the line, thereby keeping them from bouncing back and
being received again by the network.
- Thicknet, Thick Ethernet
- Ethernet 10Base5 coaxial
cable.
- Thinnet, Thin Ethernet
- Ethernet 10Base2 coaxial
cable. Also called "cheapernet".
- TIA
- Telecommunications
Industry Association. Body which authored the TIA/EIA 568-A "Commercial
Building Telecommunications Wiring Standard" in conjunction with EIA.
- Time Domain Reflectometry
- A technique for measuring
cable lengths by timing the period between a test pulse and the reflection
of the pulse from an impedance discontinuity on the cable. The returned
waveform reveals many undesired cable conditions, including shorts, opens,
and transmission anomalies due to excessive bends or crushing. The length
to any anomaly, including the unterminated cable end, may be computed from
the relative time of the wave return and nominal velocity of propagation
of the pulse through the cable. See also Optical Time Domain Reflectometry.
- Tip
- 1. A polarity designation
of one wire of a pair indicating that the wire is that of the primary (common)
color of a 5-pair group (e.g. the white-blue wire of the blue pair). 2.
A wiring contact to which the tip wire is connected. 3. The positive wiring
polarity (also see "ring").
- Topology
- The physical or logical
interconnection pattern of a network. See "bus topology" and "star
topology".
- Transceiver
- A combination of the
words TRANSmitter and reCEIVER. A transceiver is the set of electronics
that send and receive signals on the Ethernet media system. Transceivers
may be small outboard devices, or may be built into an Ethernet port. Also
called Media Attachment Unit, or MAU.
- Transceiver Cable
- Same as AUI cable.
- Transmission Medium
- The cable or other
physical circuit that is used to interconnect systems in a network.
- Transmitter
- A device that converts
electrical signals for transmission to a distant point. In fiber optic systems,
the electronic component that converts electrical energy to light energy.
- Transparent Bridge
- A bridge that is used
to form an extended LAN consisting of a tree structure in which only one
active path connects any two stations in the extended LAN. Stations on the
interconnected LANs are not aware of the presence of transparent bridges.
Transparent bridges learn appropriate routes for messages by observing transmissions
that take place on the LANs to which they are connected and forwarding messages
that they receive to the opposite network when required.
- Truncated Binary Exponential
Backoff
- See "Binary Exponential
Backoff".
- Trunking
- See "LInk Aggregation".
- Twinaxial Cable, Twinax
- A type of communication
transmission cable consisting of two center conductors surrounded by an
insulating spacer which in turn is surrounded by a tubular outer conductor
(usually a braid, foil or both). The entire assembly is then covered with
an insulating and protective outer layer. It is similar to coaxial cable
except that there are two conductors at the center.
- Twisted Pair
- A multiple conductor
cable whose component wires are paired together, twisted, and enclosed in
a single jacket. Each pair consists of two insulated copper wires twisted
together. When driven as a balanced line, the twisting reduces the susceptibility
to external interference and the radiation of signal energy. Most twisted-pair
cabling contains either 2, 4, or 25 pairs of wires.
- Tx
- Transmit
- Type N Connector
- A threaded barrel constant
impedance coaxial connector for large diameter cable such as Ethernet 10Base5
thicknet cable.
U
- Unbalanced Line
- A transmission line
in which voltages on the two conductors are unequal with respect to ground.
Generally one of the conductors is connected to a ground point. An example
of an unbalanced line is a coaxial cable.
- Unicast Address
- An address that is
assigned to uniquely identify a single station on a network.
- Unshielded Twisted
Pair (UTP)
- Twisted pair cabling
that includes no shielding. UTP most often refers to the 100 ohm Category
3, 4, & 5 cables specified in the TIA/EIA 568-A standard.
- UTP
- see Unshielded Twisted
Pair.
V
- Vampire Tap
- see Tap
- Velocity of Propagation
- The transmission speed
of electrical energy in a length of cable compared to speed in free space.
Usually expressed as a percentage. Test devices use velocity of propagation
to measure a signal's transit time and thereby calculate the cable's length.
- VGM
- Voice Grade Media (see
Voice Grade)
- Virtual LAN
- A method in which a
port or set of ports in a bridge or switch are grouped together and function
as a single "virtual" LAN.
- VLAN
- see Virtual LAN
- Voice Grade
- A term used for twisted-pair
cable used in telephone systems to carry voice signals.
W
- Wavelength
- The distance between
successive peaks or nodes of a wave.
- wire fault
- An error condition
caused by a break in the wires or a short between the wires (or shield)
in a segment of cable.
- Wiring Closet
- see Closet
- Workgroup
- A collection of workstations
and servers on a LAN that are designated to communicate and exchange data
with one another.
- Workstation
- A computer connected
to a network at which users interact with software stored on the network.
X
- X