Control de Flujo y Error
Control de Flujo y Error
Data Link
Control
and
Protocols
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Note:
Flow control refers to a set of
procedures used to restrict the amount
of data that the sender can send before
waiting for acknowledgment.
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Note:
Error control in the data link layer is
based on automatic repeat request,
which is the retransmission of data.
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Operation
Bidirectional Transmission
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11.1
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Normal operation
11.2
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11.3
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Note:
In Stop-and-Wait ARQ, numbering
frames prevents the retaining of
duplicate frames.
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11.4
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Note:
Numbered acknowledgments are
needed if an acknowledgment is
delayed and the next frame is lost.
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11.5
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Piggybacking
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11.7
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11.8
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Control variables
11.9
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11.10
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Note:
In Go-Back-N ARQ, the size of the
sender window must be less than 2m;
the size of the receiver window is
always 1.
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11.12
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11.13
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Note:
In Selective Repeat ARQ, the size of
the sender and receiver window must
be at most one-half of 2m.
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11.14
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Example 1
In a Stop-and-Wait ARQ system, the bandwidth of the line is 1 Mbps, and 1 bit
takes 20 ms to make a round trip. What is the bandwidth-delay product? If the
system data frames are 1000 bits in length, what is the utilization percentage of
the link?
Solution
The bandwidth-delay product is
1 106 20 10-3 = 20,000 bits
The system can send 20,000 bits during the time it takes for the data to go
from the sender to the receiver and then back again. However, the system
sends only 1000 bits. We can say that the link utilization is only
1000/20,000, or 5%. For this reason, for a link with high bandwidth or long
delay, use of Stop-and-Wait ARQ wastes the capacity of the link.
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Example 2
What is the utilization percentage of the link in Example 1 if the link uses GoBack-N ARQ with a 15-frame sequence?
Solution
The bandwidth-delay product is still 20,000. The system can send up to 15
frames or 15,000 bits during a round trip. This means the utilization is
15,000/20,000, or 75 percent. Of course, if there are damaged frames, the
utilization percentage is much less because frames have to be resent.
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11.5 HDLC
Configurations and Transfer Modes
Frames
Frame Format
Examples
Data Transparency
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11.15
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NRM
11.16
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ABM
11.17
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HDLC frame
11.18
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11.19
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I-frame
11.20
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11.21
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Meaning
SNRM
SNRME
SABM
SABME
UP
Unnumbered poll
UI
Unnumbered information
UA
Unnumbered acknowledgment
RD
Request disconnect
DISC
Disconnect
DM
Disconnect mode
RIM
SIM
RSET
Reset
XID
Exchange ID
FRMR
Frame reject
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Example 3
Figure 11.22 shows an exchange using piggybacking where is no
error. Station A begins the exchange of information with an I-frame
numbered 0 followed by another I-frame numbered 1. Station B
piggybacks its acknowledgment of both frames onto an I-frame of
its own. Station Bs first I-frame is also numbered 0 [N(S) field]
and contains a 2 in its N(R) field, acknowledging the receipt of As
frames 1 and 0 and indicating that it expects frame 2 to arrive next.
Station B transmits its second and third I-frames (numbered 1 and
2) before accepting further frames from station A. Its N(R)
information, therefore, has not changed: B frames 1 and 2 indicate
that station B is still expecting A frame 2 to arrive next.
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11.22
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Example 3
Example 4
InExample3,supposeframe1sentfromstationBto
stationAhasanerror.StationAinformsstationBto
resendframes1and2(thesystemisusingtheGoBack
Nmechanism).StationAsendsarejectsupervisoryframe
toannouncetheerrorinframe1.Figure11.23showsthe
exchange.
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11.23
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Example 4
Note:
Bit stuffing is the process of adding
one extra 0 whenever there are five
consecutive 1s in the data so that the
receiver does not mistake the
data for a flag.
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11.24
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11.25
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