Friday, February 6, 2015

Chapter 3: Point-to-Point Connections Part 1

This chapter covers Terms technology, and protocols used in serial connections. (HDLC/PPP/Serial connections/Clock Skew/TDM/STSM/Demarcation Points/DCE/DTE/PAP/CHAP)

Serial Point-to-Point Overview

Point-to-Point connections are used to connect LANs to a service providers WAN in a serial connection, or leased line.

 

Serial VS Parallel connections

Serial connections compared to parallel connections.

 

Serial connections

  • Transmit bits sequentially over a single channel
  • Bidirectional
  • Also called bidirectional port or a communications port
  • Used for external communications and signal conversion
  • Less expensive than parallel ports, requiring fewer wires, cheaper cables, and use fewer pins.

©2014 Cisco Press, Connecting Networks Companion Guide

 

Parallel Connections

  • Allow bits to be simultaneously transmitted over multiple channels
  • Uni-directional (outbound from hard drive)
  • Theoretically eight times faster than Serial connections
  • Problems with crosstalk that worsens with the length increases
  • Used on PCs for communicating to printers, other peripheral devices,  and for internal connections.
  • Problem with Clock Skew
Clock Skew happens when data across the different wires do not arrive at the same time causing synchronization issues.

Parallel ports and RS-232 serial ports have been replaced by faster Universal Serial bus (USB) interfaces.

Serial Communications

Frames are encapsulated by the communications protocol then are sent and decapsulated by the same protocol on the receiving router.  There are three main serial connection standards of LAN to WAN connections, RS-232, V.35, High Speed Serial Interface (HSSI).

 

RS-232/RS-232s

  • RS-422/RS-423 are the newer standards
  • Used for peripheral devices but are mostly replaced by USB
  • RJ-45 connecters conform to the original RS-232 standard
  • Uses both 9 and 28 pin connectors


 

V.35

  • Used for modem-to-multiplexer connections
  • ITU standard for high-speed synchronous data exchange
  • Used in the US to connect routers and DSUs to T1 carriers
  • Connects DTEs and DCEs over digital lines


 

HSSI

  • Transmission rates up to 52Mbps
  • Connects routers to WANs over T3 lines
  • High-speed connectivity between LANs using Token Ring or Ethernet
  • DTE/DCE interface
  • Developed by Cisco Systems and T3 Plus Networking
  • Addressed need for high-speed communication over WAN lines

Point-to-Point communication links

Point-to-Point serial links provide a single, pre-established, WAN communications path that connects two distance locations through a service provider. Service provider dedicates specific resources for the leased line. The links are not limited to land and are more expensive than shared connections. The Dedicated capacity removes latency/jitter. The constant availability is useful for VoIP and Video over IP.

©2014 Cisco Press, Connecting Networks Companion Guide


Even tough resources are dedicated for a leased line, the links may be shared using multiplexing. There are two types used: Time-Division Multiplexing (TDM) and Statistical Time-Division Multiplexing (STDM).

 

TDM

Physical layer concept, invented by Bell Industries, to maximize traffic carried over a single link. Before TDM, phones required individual links.

 

How TDM Works

  • The Multiplexer (MUX) accepts multiple separate channel/links
  • Assigns each channel a time slot
  • Divides the signals into segments
  • Puts each segment on a single channel in its assigned time slot
  • The receiving MUX reassembles the stream into the separate streams based on the arrival time of each bit.
TDM uses bit overlapping to keep track of the number and sequence of the bits in each transmission so the streams can be properly reassembled. If data is only sent by one channel the time slots of the channels not sending are still sent but empty.

©2014 Cisco Press, Connecting Networks Companion Guide


 

STDM

Developed to use all time slots when fewer streams are active. Channels compete for free slots on a first-come first-serve basis. STDM temporarily stores data in buffer memory during high-traffic. Each transmission requires an identification number or channel identifier.

©2014 Cisco Press, Connecting Networks Companion Guide


TDM/STDM examples are SONET/SDM.

This chapter will be continued in Part 2.

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