4 The Medium Access Control Sublayer
4 The Medium Access Control Sublayer
4 The Medium Access Control Sublayer
Ethernet
• Classic Ethernet involved one shared coax cable
• CSMA/CD with binary exponential backoff
• Contention interval set by max. cable length
• Good efficiency achievable for large packets
• Switched Ethernet is used today; no collisions,
but buffering of packets required at each port
• Evolution from 10Mbps to 100M, 1G, and 10G
• Success is due to simplicity and flexibility,
and also good interworking with TCP/IP 5
Wireless LANs
• 802.11 MAC sublayer has evolved with changes
in the physical layer (freq. hop, OFDM, MIMO)
• Logical link control (LLC) sublayer just above
MAC sublayer hides those differences to make
everything appear the same to network layer
• MAC sublayer uses sensing & collision avoidance
because coll. detection not feasible for wireless
• Wait with random backoff before transmission,
pausing the countdown if other users transmit
• Receiver acknowledges if no error/collision 6
Broadband Wireless
• 802.16 (WiMAX) introduced then enhanced
as alternative to cable & DSL for Internet access
• Challenge from 3G led to introduction of mobility
• Combined the good elements of 802.11 and 3G
• MAC sublayer supported different traffic types
• Adjusted for distances with modulation changes
• Introduction of 4G presented further challenges
and ultimately reduced importance of WiMAX
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Bluetooth
• Short-range communication in small piconets
through pairing protocol and specialized profiles
• Need for adaptive frequency hopping emerged
when Bluetooth signals interfered with 802.11
• Link manager protocol sets up logical channels
between pair devices; secured with PIN usage
• Links can be synchronous or asynchronous
• More emphasis on low power in Bluetooth 4.0
Summary
• Dynamic allocation of shared medium: efficiency
• ALOHA, carrier sensing, handling of collisions
• Ethernet, its evolution from cabling to switches
• Wireless challenges, 802.11 and its evolution
• Broadband wireless, WiMAX and 3G/4G
• Other wireless networks such as Bluetooth, RFID
• Switches as bridges with backward learning
and distributed spanning-tree algorithm
• Virtual LAN management enabled by switches
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