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Ethernet
Outline
Multiple Access and Ethernet Intro
Ethernet Framing
CSMA/CD protocol
Exponential backoff
CS 640 2
Shared Access Networks are Different
• Shared Access Networks assume multiple nodes on the
same physical link
– Bus, ring and wireless structures
– Transmission sent by one node is received by all others
– No intermediate switches
• Need methods for moderating access (MAC protocols)
– Fairness
– Performance
– How can this be done?
CS 640 3
Multiple Access Methods
• Fixed assignment
– Partition channel so each node gets a slice of the bandwidth
– Essentially circuit switching – thus inefficient
– Examples: TDMA, FDMA, CDMA (all used in wireless/cellular
environments)
• Contention-based
– Nodes contends equally for bandwidth and recover from collisions
– Examples: Aloha, Ethernet
• Token-based or reservation-based
– Take turns using the channel
– Examples: Token ring
CS 640 4
A Quick Word about Token Ring
• Developed by IBM in early 80’s as a new LAN
architecture
– Consists of nodes connected into a ring (typically via
concentrators)
– Special message called a token is passed around the ring
• When nodes gets the token it can transmit for a limited time
• Every node gets an equal opportunity to send
– IEEE 802.5 standard for Token Ring
• Designed for predictability, fairness and reliability
– Originally designed to run at either 4Mbps and 16Mbps
• Still used and sold but beaten out by Ethernet
CS 640 5
Our Focus is Ethernet
• History
– Developed by Bob Metcalfe and others at Xerox PARC in mid-1970s
– Roots in Aloha packet-radio network
– Standardized by Xerox, DEC, and Intel in 1978
– LAN standards define MAC and physical layer connectivity
• IEEE 802.3 (CSMA/CD - Ethernet) standard – originally 2Mbps
• IEEE 802.3u standard for 100Mbps Ethernet
• IEEE 802.3z standard for 1,000Mbps Ethernet
• CSMA/CD: Ethernet’s Media Access Control (MAC) policy
– CS = carrier sense
• Send only if medium is idle
– MA = multiple access
– CD = collision detection
• Stop sending immediately if collision is detected
CS 640 6
Ethernet Standard Defines Physical Layer
• 802.3 standard defines both MAC and physical layer
details
Metcalfe’s original
Ethernet Sketch
CS 640 7
Ethernet Technologies: 10Base2
• 10: 10Mbps; 2: under 185 (~200) meters cable length
• Thin coaxial cable in a bus topology
• Repeaters used to connect multiple segments
– Repeater repeats bits it hears on one interface to its other interfaces: physical layer device only!
CS 640 8
10BaseT and 100BaseT
• 10/100 Mbps rate
• T stands for Twisted Pair
• Hub(s) connected by twisted pair facilitate “star topology”
– Distance of any node to hub must be < 100M
CS 640 9
Physical Layer Configurations for 802.3
• Physical layer configurations are specified in three parts
• Data rate (10, 100, 1,000)
– 10, 100, 1,000Mbps
• Signaling method (base, broad)
– Baseband
• Digital signaling
– Broadband
• Analog signaling
• Cabling (2, 5, T, F, S, L)
– 5 - Thick coax (original Ethernet cabling)
– F – Optical fiber
– S – Short wave laser over multimode fiber
– L – Long wave laser over single mode fiber
CS 640 10
Ethernet Overview
• Most popular packet-switched LAN technology
• Bandwidths: 10Mbps, 100Mbps, 1Gbps
• Max bus length: 2500m
– 500m segments with 4 repeaters
• Bus and Star topologies are used to connect hosts
– Hosts attach to network via Ethernet transceiver or hub or switch
• Detects line state and sends/receives signals
– Hubs are used to facilitate shared connections
– All hosts on an Ethernet are competing for access to the medium
• Switches break this model
• Problem: Distributed algorithm that provides fair access
CS 640 11
Ethernet Overview (contd.)
• Ethernet by definition is a broadcast protocol
– Any signal can be received by all hosts
– Switching enables individual hosts to communicate
• Network layer packets are transmitted over an
Ethernet by encapsulating
• Frame Format
Dest
addr
64 48 32
CRC
Preamble Src
addr
Type Body
16
48
CS 640 12
Switched Ethernet
• Switches forward and filter frames based on LAN addresses
– It’s not a bus or a router (although simple forwarding tables are maintained)
• Very scalable
– Options for many interfaces
– Full duplex operation (send/receive frames simultaneously)
• Connect two or more “segments” by copying data frames between them
– Switches only copy data when needed
• key difference from repeaters
• Higher link bandwidth
– Collisions are completely avoided
• Much greater aggregate bandwidth
– Separate segments can send at once
CS 640 13
Ethernet Frames
• Preamble is a sequence of 7 bytes, each set to “10101010”
– Used to synchronize receiver before actual data is sent
• Addresses
– unique, 48-bit unicast address assigned to each adapter
• example: 8:0:e4:b1:2
• Each manufacturer gets their own address range
– broadcast: all 1s
– multicast: first bit is 1
• Type field is a demultiplexing key used to determine which
higher level protocol the frame should be delivered to
• Body can contain up to 1500 bytes of data
CS 640 14
A Quick Word about Aloha Networks
• Developed in late 60’s by Norm Abramson at Univ. of Hawaii (!!)
for use with packet radio systems
– Any station can send data at any time
– Receiver sends an ACK for data
– Timeout for ACK signals that there was a collision
• What happens if timeout is poorly timed?
– If there is a collision, sender will resend data after a random backoff
• Utilization (fraction of transmitted frames avoiding collision for N
nodes) was pretty bad
– Max utilization = 18%
• Slotted Aloha (dividing transmit time into windows) helped
– Max utilization increased to 36%
CS 640 15
Ethernet’s MAC Algorithm
• In Aloha, decisions to transmit are made without paying attention
to what other nodes might be doing
• Ethernet uses CSMA/CD – listens to line before/during sending
• If line is idle (no carrier sensed)
– send packet immediately
– upper bound message size of 1500 bytes
– must wait 9.6us between back-to-back frames
• If line is busy (carrier sensed)
– wait until idle and transmit packet immediately
• called 1-persistent sending
• If collision detected
– Stop sending and jam signal
– Try again later
CS 640 16
State Diagram for CSMA/CD
Packet?
Sense
Carrier
Discard
Packet
Send Detect
Collision
Jam channel
b=CalcBackoff();
wait(b);
attempts++;
No
Yes
attempts < 16
attempts == 16
CS 640 17
Collisions
A B
A B
Collisions are caused when two adaptors transmit at the same
time (adaptors sense collision based on voltage differences)
• Both found line to be idle
• Both had been waiting to for a busy line to become idle
A starts at
time 0
Message almost
there at time T when
B starts – collision!
How can we be sure A knows about the collision?
CS 640 18
Collision Detection
• How can A know that a collision has taken place?
– There must be a mechanism to insure retransmission on collision
– A’s message reaches B at time T
– B’s message reaches A at time 2T
– So, A must still be transmitting at 2T
• IEEE 802.3 specifies max value of 2T to be 51.2us
– This relates to maximum distance of 2500m between hosts
– At 10Mbps it takes 0.1us to transmit one bit so 512 bits (64B) take 51.2us to send
– So, Ethernet frames must be at least 64B long
• 14B header, 46B data, 4B CRC
• Padding is used if data is less than 46B
• Send jamming signal after collision is detected to insure all hosts see collision
– 48 bit signal
CS 640 19
Collision Detection contd.
A B
A B
A B
time = 0
time = T
time = 2T
CS 640 20
Exponential Backoff
• If a collision is detected, delay and try again
• Delay time is selected using binary exponential backoff
– 1st time: choose K from {0,1} then delay = K * 51.2us
– 2nd time: choose K from {0,1,2,3} then delay = K * 51.2us
– nth time: delay = K x 51.2us, for K=0..2n
– 1
• Note max value for k = 1023
– give up after several tries (usually 16)
• Report transmit error to host
• If delay were not random, then there is a chance that sources
would retransmit in lock step
• Why not just choose from small set for K
– This works fine for a small number of hosts
– Large number of nodes would result in more collisions
CS 640 21
MAC Algorithm from the Receiver Side
• Senders handle all access control
• Receivers simply read frames with acceptable
address
– Address to host
– Address to broadcast
– Address to multicast to which host belongs
– All frames if host is in promiscuous mode
CS 640 22
Fast and Gigabit Ethernet
• Fast Ethernet (100Mbps) has technology very similar to
10Mbps Ethernet
– Uses different physical layer encoding (4B5B)
– Many NIC’s are 10/100 capable
• Can be used at either speed
• Gigabit Ethernet (1,000Mbps)
– Compatible with lower speeds
– Uses standard framing and CSMA/CD algorithm
– Distances are severely limited
– Typically used for backbones and inter-router connectivity
– Becoming cost competitive
– How much of this bandwidth is realizable?
CS 640 23
Experiences with Ethernet
• Ethernets work best under light loads
– Utilization over 30% is considered heavy
• Network capacity is wasted by collisions
• Most networks are limited to about 200 hosts
– Specification allows for up to 1024
• Most networks are much shorter
– 5 to 10 microsecond RTT
• Transport level flow control helps reduce load (number of
back to back packets)
• Ethernet is inexpensive, fast and easy to administer!
CS 640 24
Ethernet Problems
• Ethernet’s peak utilization is pretty low (like Aloha)
• Peak throughput worst with
– More hosts
• More collisions needed to identify single sender
– Smaller packet sizes
• More frequent arbitration
– Longer links
• Collisions take longer to observe, more wasted bandwidth
– Efficiency is improved by avoiding these conditions
CS 640 25
Why did Ethernet Win?
• There are LOTS of LAN protocols
• Price
• Performance
• Availability
• Ease of use
• Scalability
• Tomorrow we will talk about physical layer
stuff…

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Ethernet Basic Introduction for Begginer

  • 1. Ethernet Outline Multiple Access and Ethernet Intro Ethernet Framing CSMA/CD protocol Exponential backoff
  • 2. CS 640 2 Shared Access Networks are Different • Shared Access Networks assume multiple nodes on the same physical link – Bus, ring and wireless structures – Transmission sent by one node is received by all others – No intermediate switches • Need methods for moderating access (MAC protocols) – Fairness – Performance – How can this be done?
  • 3. CS 640 3 Multiple Access Methods • Fixed assignment – Partition channel so each node gets a slice of the bandwidth – Essentially circuit switching – thus inefficient – Examples: TDMA, FDMA, CDMA (all used in wireless/cellular environments) • Contention-based – Nodes contends equally for bandwidth and recover from collisions – Examples: Aloha, Ethernet • Token-based or reservation-based – Take turns using the channel – Examples: Token ring
  • 4. CS 640 4 A Quick Word about Token Ring • Developed by IBM in early 80’s as a new LAN architecture – Consists of nodes connected into a ring (typically via concentrators) – Special message called a token is passed around the ring • When nodes gets the token it can transmit for a limited time • Every node gets an equal opportunity to send – IEEE 802.5 standard for Token Ring • Designed for predictability, fairness and reliability – Originally designed to run at either 4Mbps and 16Mbps • Still used and sold but beaten out by Ethernet
  • 5. CS 640 5 Our Focus is Ethernet • History – Developed by Bob Metcalfe and others at Xerox PARC in mid-1970s – Roots in Aloha packet-radio network – Standardized by Xerox, DEC, and Intel in 1978 – LAN standards define MAC and physical layer connectivity • IEEE 802.3 (CSMA/CD - Ethernet) standard – originally 2Mbps • IEEE 802.3u standard for 100Mbps Ethernet • IEEE 802.3z standard for 1,000Mbps Ethernet • CSMA/CD: Ethernet’s Media Access Control (MAC) policy – CS = carrier sense • Send only if medium is idle – MA = multiple access – CD = collision detection • Stop sending immediately if collision is detected
  • 6. CS 640 6 Ethernet Standard Defines Physical Layer • 802.3 standard defines both MAC and physical layer details Metcalfe’s original Ethernet Sketch
  • 7. CS 640 7 Ethernet Technologies: 10Base2 • 10: 10Mbps; 2: under 185 (~200) meters cable length • Thin coaxial cable in a bus topology • Repeaters used to connect multiple segments – Repeater repeats bits it hears on one interface to its other interfaces: physical layer device only!
  • 8. CS 640 8 10BaseT and 100BaseT • 10/100 Mbps rate • T stands for Twisted Pair • Hub(s) connected by twisted pair facilitate “star topology” – Distance of any node to hub must be < 100M
  • 9. CS 640 9 Physical Layer Configurations for 802.3 • Physical layer configurations are specified in three parts • Data rate (10, 100, 1,000) – 10, 100, 1,000Mbps • Signaling method (base, broad) – Baseband • Digital signaling – Broadband • Analog signaling • Cabling (2, 5, T, F, S, L) – 5 - Thick coax (original Ethernet cabling) – F – Optical fiber – S – Short wave laser over multimode fiber – L – Long wave laser over single mode fiber
  • 10. CS 640 10 Ethernet Overview • Most popular packet-switched LAN technology • Bandwidths: 10Mbps, 100Mbps, 1Gbps • Max bus length: 2500m – 500m segments with 4 repeaters • Bus and Star topologies are used to connect hosts – Hosts attach to network via Ethernet transceiver or hub or switch • Detects line state and sends/receives signals – Hubs are used to facilitate shared connections – All hosts on an Ethernet are competing for access to the medium • Switches break this model • Problem: Distributed algorithm that provides fair access
  • 11. CS 640 11 Ethernet Overview (contd.) • Ethernet by definition is a broadcast protocol – Any signal can be received by all hosts – Switching enables individual hosts to communicate • Network layer packets are transmitted over an Ethernet by encapsulating • Frame Format Dest addr 64 48 32 CRC Preamble Src addr Type Body 16 48
  • 12. CS 640 12 Switched Ethernet • Switches forward and filter frames based on LAN addresses – It’s not a bus or a router (although simple forwarding tables are maintained) • Very scalable – Options for many interfaces – Full duplex operation (send/receive frames simultaneously) • Connect two or more “segments” by copying data frames between them – Switches only copy data when needed • key difference from repeaters • Higher link bandwidth – Collisions are completely avoided • Much greater aggregate bandwidth – Separate segments can send at once
  • 13. CS 640 13 Ethernet Frames • Preamble is a sequence of 7 bytes, each set to “10101010” – Used to synchronize receiver before actual data is sent • Addresses – unique, 48-bit unicast address assigned to each adapter • example: 8:0:e4:b1:2 • Each manufacturer gets their own address range – broadcast: all 1s – multicast: first bit is 1 • Type field is a demultiplexing key used to determine which higher level protocol the frame should be delivered to • Body can contain up to 1500 bytes of data
  • 14. CS 640 14 A Quick Word about Aloha Networks • Developed in late 60’s by Norm Abramson at Univ. of Hawaii (!!) for use with packet radio systems – Any station can send data at any time – Receiver sends an ACK for data – Timeout for ACK signals that there was a collision • What happens if timeout is poorly timed? – If there is a collision, sender will resend data after a random backoff • Utilization (fraction of transmitted frames avoiding collision for N nodes) was pretty bad – Max utilization = 18% • Slotted Aloha (dividing transmit time into windows) helped – Max utilization increased to 36%
  • 15. CS 640 15 Ethernet’s MAC Algorithm • In Aloha, decisions to transmit are made without paying attention to what other nodes might be doing • Ethernet uses CSMA/CD – listens to line before/during sending • If line is idle (no carrier sensed) – send packet immediately – upper bound message size of 1500 bytes – must wait 9.6us between back-to-back frames • If line is busy (carrier sensed) – wait until idle and transmit packet immediately • called 1-persistent sending • If collision detected – Stop sending and jam signal – Try again later
  • 16. CS 640 16 State Diagram for CSMA/CD Packet? Sense Carrier Discard Packet Send Detect Collision Jam channel b=CalcBackoff(); wait(b); attempts++; No Yes attempts < 16 attempts == 16
  • 17. CS 640 17 Collisions A B A B Collisions are caused when two adaptors transmit at the same time (adaptors sense collision based on voltage differences) • Both found line to be idle • Both had been waiting to for a busy line to become idle A starts at time 0 Message almost there at time T when B starts – collision! How can we be sure A knows about the collision?
  • 18. CS 640 18 Collision Detection • How can A know that a collision has taken place? – There must be a mechanism to insure retransmission on collision – A’s message reaches B at time T – B’s message reaches A at time 2T – So, A must still be transmitting at 2T • IEEE 802.3 specifies max value of 2T to be 51.2us – This relates to maximum distance of 2500m between hosts – At 10Mbps it takes 0.1us to transmit one bit so 512 bits (64B) take 51.2us to send – So, Ethernet frames must be at least 64B long • 14B header, 46B data, 4B CRC • Padding is used if data is less than 46B • Send jamming signal after collision is detected to insure all hosts see collision – 48 bit signal
  • 19. CS 640 19 Collision Detection contd. A B A B A B time = 0 time = T time = 2T
  • 20. CS 640 20 Exponential Backoff • If a collision is detected, delay and try again • Delay time is selected using binary exponential backoff – 1st time: choose K from {0,1} then delay = K * 51.2us – 2nd time: choose K from {0,1,2,3} then delay = K * 51.2us – nth time: delay = K x 51.2us, for K=0..2n – 1 • Note max value for k = 1023 – give up after several tries (usually 16) • Report transmit error to host • If delay were not random, then there is a chance that sources would retransmit in lock step • Why not just choose from small set for K – This works fine for a small number of hosts – Large number of nodes would result in more collisions
  • 21. CS 640 21 MAC Algorithm from the Receiver Side • Senders handle all access control • Receivers simply read frames with acceptable address – Address to host – Address to broadcast – Address to multicast to which host belongs – All frames if host is in promiscuous mode
  • 22. CS 640 22 Fast and Gigabit Ethernet • Fast Ethernet (100Mbps) has technology very similar to 10Mbps Ethernet – Uses different physical layer encoding (4B5B) – Many NIC’s are 10/100 capable • Can be used at either speed • Gigabit Ethernet (1,000Mbps) – Compatible with lower speeds – Uses standard framing and CSMA/CD algorithm – Distances are severely limited – Typically used for backbones and inter-router connectivity – Becoming cost competitive – How much of this bandwidth is realizable?
  • 23. CS 640 23 Experiences with Ethernet • Ethernets work best under light loads – Utilization over 30% is considered heavy • Network capacity is wasted by collisions • Most networks are limited to about 200 hosts – Specification allows for up to 1024 • Most networks are much shorter – 5 to 10 microsecond RTT • Transport level flow control helps reduce load (number of back to back packets) • Ethernet is inexpensive, fast and easy to administer!
  • 24. CS 640 24 Ethernet Problems • Ethernet’s peak utilization is pretty low (like Aloha) • Peak throughput worst with – More hosts • More collisions needed to identify single sender – Smaller packet sizes • More frequent arbitration – Longer links • Collisions take longer to observe, more wasted bandwidth – Efficiency is improved by avoiding these conditions
  • 25. CS 640 25 Why did Ethernet Win? • There are LOTS of LAN protocols • Price • Performance • Availability • Ease of use • Scalability • Tomorrow we will talk about physical layer stuff…