Title: Ethernet 802'3 Physical Layer
1Ethernet 802.3 Physical Layer
- Topology Order in which stations receive bits
- Ethernet hubs use a bus topology
- Signal is broadcast
- All stations receive almost simultaneously
2Ethernet 802.3 Physical Layer
- Topology Order in which stations receive bits
- Early Ethernet standards arranged stations in a
daisy chain - Stations broadcast on the chain in both
directions - All stations receive almost simultaneously
- Original idea of bus
3Ethernet 802.3 Physical Layer
- Topology Order in which stations receive bits
- Ethernet switches use a switched topology
- Signal only goes to one station
4Ethernet 802.3 Physical Layer
- Ethernet began as a bus network
- Some question whether Ethernet switching is
really Ethernet - However, hubs will be disappearing in the next
few years, and almost all Ethernet will be
switched
5Ethernet 802.3 Physical Layer
- Recent Ethernet 802.3 Standards use Unshielded
Twisted Pair (UTP) Wiring or Optical Fiber - For Small LANs with a Single Hub or Switch, use
UTP Exclusively
6Physical Layer 802.3 UTP Standards
- Ethernet 802.3 10Base-T
- Physical layer standard
- Created by the 802.3 Working Group
- 10 Mbps
- Baseband transmission
- Insert signal directly into wire
- No channels
- T means uses UTP twisted-pair wire
802.3
10 Mbps
7Physical Layer 802.3 UTP Standards
- Ethernet 802.3 100Base-TX
- 100 Mbps
- 100Base-TX Not just 100Base-T because other
100Mbps UTP standards were created but were not
used significantly - Ethernet 802.3 1000Base-T
- Gigabit Ethernet
- Overkill for small LANs
8Physical Layer 802.3 UTP Standards
- Wiring
- Unshielded Twisted Pair
- Bundle of 4 pairs (only uses 2 pairs)
- One pair to send
- One pair to receive
- Terminates in RJ-45 connector
- Slightly larger than RJ-11 home phone connector
9Physical Layer 802.3 UTP Standards
- Categories of UTP Wiring
- Wiring Quality, Category 3 being lowest
- For 10Base-T
- Categories 3, 4, or 5 are OK
- However, most installed wiring is Cat 5
- For 100Base-TX, Cat 5 is required
- For Gigabit Ethernet, Enhanced Category 5 is
recommended, although Cat 5 should work if
perfectly installed
10Physical Layer 802.3 UTP Standards
- Wiring
- 100 meters maximum UTP distance hub-to-station or
hub-switch - 200 meters maximum distance between stations
200 m
100 m
100 m
11Physical Layer 802.3 Standards
- NIC-Hub Communication
- NIC transmits on one pair (Pins 12)
- Hub or switch transmits on another pair (Pins 3
6) - Other 4 wires are not used
To Hub or Switch (Pins 12)
From Hub or Switch (Pins 36)
12Physical Layer 802.3 Standards
- Upgrading from 10Base-T to 100Base-TX
- Need new hub or switch
- May have autosensing 10/100 ports that handle
either 10 Mbps or 100 Mbps NICs - Need new NICs
- Only for stations that need more speed
- No need to rewire
- This would be expensive