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Chapter 2 – Topics in Data Communications

Chapter 2 – Topics in Data Communications. Data Communications Concepts Introduction. Essential definitions for Data Communications Data, Signaling, & Transmission Systems Analog & Digital

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Chapter 2 – Topics in Data Communications

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  1. Chapter 2 – Topics in Data Communications

  2. Data Communications ConceptsIntroduction • Essential definitions for Data Communications • Data, Signaling, & Transmission Systems • Analog & Digital • Data are entities that convey meaning, while signaling is the transfer of encoded data thru a transmission system • Analog versus digital signaling • Digital signaling usually less expensive than analog but care must be taken to properly engineer system (e.g. - attenuation) • Combinations of analog & digital data and signals • Analog data -> Analog signals • Digital data -> Analog signals (Key equipment is a modem) • Analog data -> Digital signals (Key equipment is a codec) • Digital data -> Digital signals

  3. Data Communications ConceptsAnalog versus Digital Transmission Systems • Analog systems transmit analog signals without regard for the content of the signal • Amplifiers are used to boost the energy of the signal • Amplifiers also boost the strength of any noise on the line, introducing the possibility that the signal could be lost • Digital Transmission Systems are concerned with the content of the signal • Repeaters used to regenerate the signal, overcoming attenuation • Repeaters output a new copy cleansed of any noise, so noise is not cumulative (however, bit errors can still occur if the signal is not regenerated before it degrades too much)

  4. Data Encoding TechniquesIntroduction • Encoding is the process of mapping digital data into the appropriate signal elements for transmission • Encoding may be very complex or as simple as using binary signal elements (0s and 1s) • Encoding schemes are chosen to assist the receiver in its two key tasks: • Determining when the signal element begins and ends (so sampling is done at the proper time) • Determining the value of the signal element (Is it a one? A zero?) • Attenuation, data rate, & noise all play a role at receiver • With analog data the encoding scheme also plays a key role in system performance but the details are a little different

  5. Data Encoding TechniquesAnalog encoding of digital data • The basis for analog encoding is a base signal called the carrier signal • Digital data is encoded (and decoded at the other end) by a device called a modem • Three basic schemes for analog encoding of digital data: • Amplitude Shift-keying (ASK) • Frequency Shift-keying (FSK) • Phase Shift-keying (PSK) • These schemes can be combined for more sophisticated digital transmission systems that carry more data per signal element

  6. Data Encoding TechniquesAnalog encoding of digital data • Amplitude-shift Keying • Data represented by different amplitude levels of the carrier signal • Simplest scheme, but inefficient and prone to noise • Most valuable use is in optical systems • Frequency-shift Keying • Data represented by different frequency values near the carrier signal frequency • Less prone to errors but requires more complex circuitry • Phase-shift Keying • Data represented by different phase shifts to the carrier frequency • More efficient and noise resistant than ASK or FSK but requires more complex circuitry

  7. Data Encoding TechniquesDigital Encoding of Digital Data • The most common way to encode digital data is to use a binary signaling scheme consisting of two voltage levels • NRZ-L (Non-Return to Zero Level) • Each voltage level defines the value of the digital data • Used only in very short connections • NRZ-I (Non-Return to Zero Inverted) • A transition at the beginning of a signal unit denotes a binary one • This type of signaling is known as differential signaling; it is usually easier to detect a transition out of the background noise and the signals are polarity insensitive • Clocking and DC current are usually problems

  8. Data Encoding TechniquesDigital Encoding of Digital Data • Manchester Encoding • Example of a bi-phase coding; up to two signaling transitions per signal element (needs more bandwidth to transmit a given data rate) • The mid-signal transition provides clocking as well as the data value (a zero data element is a high-to-low transition and a one is a low-to-high transition) • Used in Ethernet LANs (IEEE 802.3) • Differential Manchester Encoding • Another bi-phase code • The mid-signal transition provides clocking; the transition at the beginning of the signal element represents data (a zero data element has no transition at the beginning of a bit time while a one does) • Used in Token Ring LANs (IEEE 802.5)

  9. Data Encoding TechniquesDigital Encoding of Analog Data • Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) is an example – used in the phone system to transmit analog data across digital networks • Sampling rate based on the Nyquist theorem • Digitized into 8 bit samples based on a nonlinear scale that provides good reproduction of the human voice • Other digital-to-analog encoding schemes: • Adaptive Differential Pulse Code Modulation (ADPCM) - used with voice transmission • Delta Modulation - used rarely but also for voice transmission systems • Code Excited Linear Prediction (CELP) - used in very low-bandwidth voice and multimedia communication systems

  10. MultiplexingIntroduction • Allows a transmission system to carry multiple independent signals simultaneously for higher efficiency • Two general schemes are in use: FDM and TDM • Frequency Division Multiplexing (FDM) • Takes advantage of the fact that the useful bandwith of the transmission system exceeds the required bandwidth of a given signal • Allows frequency spectrum to be divided & allocated to different signal sources • Most commonly used with analog signaling and transmission • Time Division Multiplexing (TDM)

  11. MultiplexingTechniques • Allows a transmission system to carry multiple independent signals simultaneously for higher efficiency • Two general schemes are in use: FDM and TDM • Time Division Multiplexing (TDM) • Takes advantage of the fact that the maximum bit rate of the system exceeds the required bit rate of the digital signal • Each source is allocated a ‘time slot’ in the multiplexer • Analog signals can be time division multiplexed, but it is very uncommon • Two varieties of TDM: statistical and fixed time-slot • Both FDM and TDM can be used in a synchronous or asynchronous manner

  12. Transmission MediaIntroduction • The transmission media is the physical signal path between the transmitter and the receiver • Can be guided (cables, waveguides, etc.) or unguided (open air) • Our key concerns for transmission systems are data rate and distance • Influencing factors: • Bandwidth of the media • Transmission impairments • Interference • Number of Receivers

  13. Transmission Media (2)Twisted Pair Cable • Consists of a minimum of two copper wires twisted together and enclosed within a protective sheath • Advantages: inexpensive, easy to work with, may already be installed where needed • Disadvantages: limited in distance, data rate, and bandwidth; susceptible to interference • Comes in two general varieties: shielded twisted pair (STP) and unshielded twisted pair (UTP) • Shielding provides more noise immunity, especially at lower data rates • STP costs more and is more difficult to work with

  14. Transmission Media (3)Twisted Pair Cable • Category 3 and Category 5 UTP • Rating standards devised by the Electronic Industries Association (EIA) • The higher the category the better the cable; Cat 3 designed to support 10Mbps Ethernet while Cat 5 will support 100Mbps Ethernet • The key difference between the two categories is the number of twists per unit length of cable • Near-end Crosstalk (NEXT) is a key transmission impairment to minimize in any twisted pair cabling system • While these are regarded as the most commonly found UTP installations, there are higher performance UTP choices

  15. Transmission MediaTwisted Pair Cable • High-performance Twisted Pair • Category 5e (or enhanced Category 5): supports 125-MHz bandwidth on all four pairs, allowing Gigabit Ethernet to run over UTP up to 100 meters • Attenuation (db/100m)=12.3 for 100 MHz, 12.3=-10Log(Vin/Vout) gives Log(Vin/Vout)=-1.23 or Vin/Vout is about 1/10 (tenth of signal magnitude exits from the UTP. • Crosstalk=32db=-10Log(Vneighbor/Vsignal), about 1/1000 crosstalk. • Cat 5 UTP provides 100 Mbps over 100m. • Category 6: supports over 200-MHz bandwidth on all four pairs; could potentially run high data rate ATM connections • Category 7: will require special shielding and will likely support up to 700-MHz bandwidth on each pair

  16. Transmission MediaCoaxial Cable • Provides a two conductor transmission system where one conductor is situated inside the outer hollow conductor with an insulating dielectric in between • Because of its structural characteristics coaxial cable is more resistant to noise than twisted pair • Harder to work with and more expensive than twisted pair • Coax systems can be grouped in three categories based on the type of signaling used: • Baseband: digital signaling occupies the entire spectrum of the cable • Broadband: carrier-band analog signaling is used, allowing multiple channels on the cable • Carrierband: carrier-band analog signaling with low-end components; signal occupies entire spectrum of cable • Coaxial cable provides 100 Mbps over 1Km.

  17. Transmission MediaFiber Optic Cabling • A transmission system composed of a guided medium that allows the propagation of optical rays • A range of fiber optic cabling exists for various needs, from ultra-pure fused silica (expensive but high data rate) to plastic (cheap with lower data rate for short runs) • Advantages • Huge bandwidth capacity • Smaller size and lightweight • Lower attenuation • Electromagnetic isolation (high security & minimal interference) • 100 Gbps over 10 Km (multimode fiber) • Common transmitters used are LEDs for (low-cost & low-speed systems) or Injection Laser Diodes (long-haul high-speed systems)

  18. Transmission MediaFiber Optic Cabling • Basic fiber types • Step-index multimode: cheapest to manufacture but allows light to travel different paths down the fiber, causing signal distortion & lowering the maximum data rate. • Graded-index multimode: Higher grade of fiber with a varying refractive index that limits distortion of the signal. • Singlemode: contains a core with a diameter close to the wavelength to be transmitted; allows only a single transmission path down the fiber which practically eliminates distortion • Three wavelength ‘windows’ provide the best light propagation: 850, 1300, & 1550 nm • Most multimode systems use the 850 nm window • Long-haul transmission systems use the 1550 nm window because loss is lower at higher wavelengths

  19. Transmission MediaUnguided Media • Microwave • Occupies the frequency spectrum from 1GHz to 30GHz; can provide either a highly directional or omni-directional system • There are 3 main challenges to using microwave for data transmission: • Frequency Allocation and licensing • Interference • Security • Infrared • Uses light in the infrared spectrum for data transmission • Must be used line-of-sight or in an environment that allows infrared waves to be reflected • Less issues associated with microwave but only for specialized uses

  20. Data Communication NetworksIntroduction • For most WAN and MANs, transmission of data usually involves a number of intermediate switching nodes that move the data between source and destination • The complete set of end nodes, data links, & intermediate switches is known as a communications network • There is a spectrum of communication switching techniques; the two main variations are circuit and packet switching

  21. Data Communication NetworksCircuit Switching • Communication between end nodes is via a dedicated communications channel • Communications via circuit switching involves three phases: • Circuit establishment: the path is established before any data is transferred. The path is digital or analog and may include internal links operated using TDM or FDM. • Data transfer • Circuit disconnect: release of resource dedicated to the connection • The fixed capacity of the channel is allocated for the duration of the connection; can be very inefficient with bursty traffic (repeatedly ON during T and OFF later) • Circuit switching is best suited for synchronous data such as voice or real-time video

  22. Data Communication NetworksPacket Switching • Packet switching breaks data up into a series of packets, each appended with enough control information to ensure the packet transits the network successfully from source to destination • Developed to address problems certain data sources have with circuit switching: • Bursty data transmission • Source and destination must operate at the same data rate • Inefficient resource allocation • Connection setup can be too slow for certain applications (set up Virtual Circuit along logical connection path links, send packets without routing decision over VC) • In addition to addressing the above problems, packet switching also has other benefits for data transmission: • Under heavy load the network will accept packets but delay increases • Priorities for transmission of the packets can be set • Data rate conversion along links with short store and forward

  23. Data Communication NetworksPacket Switching • Two main varieties: datagrams or virtual circuits • Datagram Approach: Each packet is routed independently of all others, leading to the following consequences: • Packets don’t take the same routes, may arrive out of sequence • Routing based on neighboring info on traffic and failure • Possible packet discard (overflow in queues) and no control-flow • No circuit setup time, so data flow begins without delay • Data can easily flow around problems in the network • Virtual Circuit Approach: a preplanned route through the network is established before any data is sent • Requires logical circuit setup and teardown but routes along the connection are shared (identical) with other packets • A routing decision does not have to be made for every packet • May provide enhanced services such as error & flow control, and packet sequencing not available in a datagram environment

  24. Problem: M bit to be transmitted using UDP and Virtual Circuit (VC). t(UDP) and t(VC) is routing overhead for UDP and VC for each link. There are K links on the path. The largest packet has only N bits and data rate is R. Under what condition UDP and VC have the same transmission time. Using UDP: T(UDP)= kM/N(1/R+t(UDP)) Using VC: T(UDP)= k(t(VC) + M/NR) The same transmission time when kMt(UDP)/N =kt(VC). However, UDP produces shorter time when M/N is small.

  25. Data Communication NetworksHybrids • Multi-rate Circuit Switching (to improve circuit switching) • Extends circuit switching to allow one or more fundamental channels to be bundled together to provide a range of data connection rates • Examples of multi-rate switching are ISDN (2x64 Kbps and 1x16Kbps channels) and inverse multiplexing • Frame Relay (FR) • Packet switching was operating under high error rate and overhead added to enhance redundancy and reduce errors which produced the FR scheme (from 64 Kbps to 2 Mbps by removing overhead). • WAN service based on a connection-oriented packet data protocol • Frame Relay evolved from X.25; the new protocol was streamlined by eliminating features necessary on earlier, less reliable X.25 data communications networks • Cell Relay (ATM) • A further evolution of connection-oriented packet data services • Unlike frame relay fixed length data units (cells) are used which allow high-speed hardware based switching • Connection oriented, fixed cell size, fast switching devices.

  26. Comparison Packet Switching vs. Circuit Switching Is packet switching a “clear winner?” • Great for bursty data • Resource sharing • No call setup • Excessive congestion: packet delay and loss • Protocols needed for reliable data transfer, congestion control • Q: How to provide circuit-like behavior? • Bandwidth guarantees needed for audio/video apps • Still an unsolved problem

  27. Routing Routing in Packet-Switched Networks • Goal: move packets among routers from source to destination • We’ll study several path selection algorithms (chapter 5) • Datagram network: • Destination address determines next hop • Routes may change during session • Analogy: postal service • Virtual circuit network: • Each packet carries tag (virtual circuit ID), tag determines next hop • Fixed path determined at call setup time, remains fixed through call • Routers maintain per-call state

  28. Telecommunication networks Circuit-switched networks Packet-switched networks FDM TDM VC Based networks Datagram networks Taxonomy

  29. Network Access • End hosts are connected to edge routers through access networks • Types of access networks: • Residential access • Company access • Mobile access • Types of physical media technologies for access networks: • Fiber • Coaxial cable • Twisted-pair telephone wire • Radio spectrum

  30. Access Network Access Network: Residential Access • Connects home end systems to the network edge • Typically, through an ISP • End hosts are PCs • AKA last mile • Means of residential access: dialup, DSL, Cable, etc. • Dial-up modem • Uses POTS line  twisted pair copper wire • Calls ISP’s number • Max. data rate: 56 Kbps • Phone line is tied up when connected to ISP • Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) • Does not tie up the phone line • Uses existing twisted-pair line • Asymmetric upstream and downstream data rates • Downstream: 384 Kb/s—1.5 Mb/s • Upstream: 128—256 Kb/s • Hybrid Fiber Coaxial (HFC) Cable • Utilizes distribution network of video broadcast cable • Cable modem uses two channels for data transmission • Shared among subscribers • 10 Base-T Ethernet port

  31. LAN access LAN access • Company/university local area network (LAN) connects end system to edge router • Ethernet: • Shared or dedicated cable connects end system and router • 10 Mbs, 100Mbps, Gigabit Ethernet • Deployment: institutions, home LANs soon • LANs: Link layer (chapter 5) Wireless Access Networks • Shared wireless access network connects mobile end system to router at a base station • Laptops, PDAs, etc. • Wireless LANs: • Radio spectrum replaces wire • Wireless LANs are based on IEEE 802.11 b standard (11 Mbps) • Wider-area wireless access • CDPD (Cellular Digital Packet Data): wireless access to ISP router via cellular network • Third Generation (3G) wireless: packet-switched wide-area Internet access at 384 Kbps

  32. Example 1 • How long will it take to send a file of 640,000 bits from host A to host B over a circuit-switched network. • Suppose all links in the network are TDM with: • 24 slots and • have a bit rate of 1.536Mbps • It takes 500 msec to establish an end-to-end circuit before host A begins transmitting to B • How long will it take to send file?

  33. Example 1 • How long will it take to send a file of 640,000 bits from host A to host B over a circuit-switched network. • Suppose all links in the network are TDM with: • 24 slots and • have a bit rate of 1.536Mbps • It takes 500 msec to establish an end-to-end circuit before host A begins transmitting to B • How long will it take to send file? • Transmission rate for each circuit = 1.536 Mbps / 24 = 64 Kbps • Time to send 640 Kbits file = (640000 bits)/(64 Kbits/sec) = 10 seconds • Including circuit setup overhead, time to send file is 10.5 seconds • This calculation is independent of the # of end-to-end links and does not include propagation delays

  34. Example 2 Packet Switching: • Two forwarding mechanisms: • No segmentation  message switching • With segmentationpipelining • Example: 7.5 million bits message sent over 3 links, each of 1.5 Mbps • Time required without segmentation = (7.5/1.5)x3=15 sec • Now segment packet into 5000 chunks each of 1500 bits • Time for whole packet = 5.002 sec • Pipelining results in reduction of delays as all links are being utilized simultaneously

  35. Delay in Packet-Switched networks Transmission delay: • R=link bandwidth (bps) • L=packet length (bits) • Time to send bits into link = L/R Propagation delay: • d = length of physical link • s = propagation speed in medium (~2x108 m/sec) • Propagation delay = d/s

  36. Example 3 Packet Switching Calculation of delay: • A packet of L bits • Q links between source and destination hosts • Each link has a data rate of R bits/sec • Assume: • No queuing delays • No end-to-end propagation delays • No connection establishment is required • How long it takes to send this L bit packet from source to destination? • Time to traverse the first link from source host: L/R seconds • Q-1 more such links are traversed before reaching destination • Thus, total delay: QL/R seconds  more delay for larger packets

  37. Example: LAN Hierarchy • N stations to be arranged in a LAN hierarchy • Each ST transfers on the average M bits per second, of which qM are to STs that are local to its segment and (1-q)M to STs in other segments • How to arrange the LAN Hierarchy so that traffic in one LAN segment does not exceed the segment capacity B, where B is 0.8xData.Rate of a LAN segment, i.e. a reference to a congestion point.

  38. Solution • Suppose there are K segments each consists of N/K stations, where k rages from 1 (1 seg) to N (N segs). • In a segment, the locally destined traffic by is qMN/K • In a segment, the exported traffic by is (1-q)MN/K • In a segment, the imported traffic by is (1-q)MN/K, because: • there are (K-1) segments each generates (1-q)MN/K external traffic, • Total external traffic for K-1 segments is (K-1)(1-q)MN/K destined to (k-1) segments. • Thus, a segment imports (1-q)MN/K data. • Total traffic for a segment is Q= qMN/K (local) + (1-q)MN/K (exported) + (1-q)MN/K (imported)=MN/K + (1-q)MN/K= MN(2-q)/K • Let’s derivate Q w.r.t. K to find its minimum value: dQ/dK=-MN(2-q)/K^2 which is minimum for K maximum or K=N. • We may incease the number of STs in a segment until Q(K)=0.8xData.Rate or MN(2-q)/K <= 0.8xData.Rate or • MN(2-q)/(0.8xData.Rate) <= K.

  39. wireless transmission • • Wireless local area networks (e.g IEEE 802.11) • – 2.4 GHz (microwave band) 1-2 Mbps, 150 m • – Infrared (IR) link 1-10 Mbps, 10 m • • Earth based cellular data • – Basic individual connection, 13 Kbps, 3 km • – Higher rate PCS (e.g. EDGE), 384 Kbps, 3 km • • Satellite links (GHz frequencies) • – geosynchronous, 600-1000 Mbps, continent • – Low earth orbit (LEO) 13 kbps - 400 Mbps, 800 km • (e.g., Motorola Iridium, 66 satellite constellation) services available from carriers • Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN) 144 Kbps • Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Lines 1.5-8 Mbps/16-640 Kbps • Cable modems 0.5-2 Mbps • T1 (old electronic telephony standard) 1.544 Mbps • T2 6.312 Mbps • T3 44.736 Mbps • Synchronous Transport Signal-1 (STS-1) 51.840 Mbps • STS-3 (a common ATM rate) 155.250 Mbps • STS-12 (another common ATM rate) 622.080 Mbps • STS-24 1.244160 Gbps • etc.

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