* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download link-2-wb
		                    
		                    
								Survey							
                            
		                
		                
                            
                            
								Document related concepts							
                        
                        
                    
						
						
							Transcript						
					
					CS3502: Data and Computer Networks DATA LINK LAYER - 2 WB version data link layer : flow and error control  purpose : regulate the flow of data from sender S to receiver R, so that R is neither overwhelmed nor kept idle unnecessarily.  secondary purpose may also be used to avoid swamping the network or link with traffic.  technique : send control information between S and R, synchronizing on buffer space, transmission rates, etc.  protocols:  stop-and-wait, alternating bit  sliding window (go-back-N, selective repeat/reject) performance analysis of networks  attempts to determine the efficiency of a network; that is, for various traffic loads, how well the network uses its resources to meet the needs of the traffic  examples  stop and wait  alternating bit  more complex networks need the use of probability and queueing theory data link layer : stop-and -wait protocol send 1 frame, then stop, and wait for an acknowledgment before sending the next. X R data ack data data link layer : stop and wait  what happens if a message is lost?  to tolerate losses, must add timeouts (TO) and retransmissions  what happens if data is lost?  what happens if ack is lost?  what is the obvious solution?  alternating bit protocol:add a number to data frames, to uniquely identify; enable repeated messages to be safely discarded data link layer : stop and wait protocols  what is the efficiency of this S&W protocol? i.e., of the total time spent, how much is actually spent sending the data?  variables td, time spent transmitting the data tp, propagation delay tproc, processing time tack, time spent transmitting the ack. U, utilization or efficiency of the protocol performance of A-B protocol td tp tp  AB protocol U = td /( td + 2 tprop), error free case or U = (1-PE)td /( td + 2 tprop, )error case link utilization of AB protocol  suppose we use a satellite link, tprop = 250ms; data frame is 16K bits; transmission rate is 1 Mbps. What is U ? Assume negligible error rate. eart h  how might this be improved? sliding window protocols: no error  send a series of data frames, without waiting for acknowledgments 1 at a time  window W : the number of frames in transit between sender and receiver (max, current)  each frame numbered from 0, 1, 2, ..., w  receiver may ack 1 or more frames at a time X sends up to max window, then waits for acks; R uses acks to control and maximize utilization sliding window protocol : no error suppose w = 3: frame NOTE: By Convention ack# = sequence # of next d0 d1 d2 expected by receiver ack3 sliding window protocol  sequencing for w = 3:  d0, d1, d2  wait for ack3  d3, d0, d1  wait for ack2  etc.  exercise: show all sequences possible on timing diagram for w=3. (include 3 at a time, 2 at a time, 1 at a time) sliding window protocol : no error  what is the efficiency of the protocol? ie, what is the best utilization possible? (assume no errors in the channel)  sliding window: no channel errors U = W td /( td + 2 tprop ), if less than 1, U = 1, otherwise. Why sliding window protocol?  for large windows, what if a message is lost? what problem do you see with this?  suppose w = 63: what if d61 lost? d0 d1 d61 d62 T w ack61 d6 1 sliding window: variables, nacks  standard variables NS and NR : used to keep track of sequence numbers NS : send sequence number; seq. number of the next data frame to be sent . Increments modulo Wmax +1.  NR : receive sequence number; seq. number of the last (most recent) nack. frame received  both are local variables of the sender  current window in sender is found by subtracting the difference, NS _- NR , from maximum window size - Wcurrent = Wmax - [NS _- NR ] sliding window: variables, nacks  go-back-N nacks: if a frame lost, it and all subsequent frames retransmitted  nack: (1) acknowledges previous frames, and (2) rejects numbered frame and all subsequent frames. Sequence numbers convention same as acks# ie. Next frame expected.  when sender gets a nack, NS must be rolled back to the value of the nack, and  NR must be rolled forward to the nack  examples sliding window: variables, nacks  Initially, NS = NR = 0  NS incremented each time a frame sent  NR updated each time a nack frame received  example: suppose Wmax = 5; show values after each of following:  send d0, d1, d2  receive nack1  send d1, d2, d3, d4, d5  receive nack4  send d4, d5, d0  what is current window size? Calculated modulo Wmax +1 sliding window protocol  Go-back-n needlessly repeats frames  sliding window: selective repeat (also called selective reject)  only retransmit messages which were lost  window size at most half the range of sequence numbers (why?)  timing diagrams  disadvantage  more buffers, more complex algorithm, costs more  advantage  higher efficiency in noisy channels data link protocol performance  go-back-N, selective repeat : no channel errors U = W td /( td + 2 tprop ),if less than 1, U = 1, otherwise. performance of data link protocols  selective repeat: with errors U = 1 - P, for Wtd > td + 2 tprop = (1 - P) Wtd / td + 2 tprop , otherwise  go-back-N, with errors U = (1 - P)td/(td + 2tpP), W > 2tp/td + 1, = W(1 - P)td/ (2tp + td)(1 - P + WP), O.W.  see Stallings Appendix 6A HDLC: high level data link control  ISO standard for a data link protocol  other DL standards exist, but are very similar; e.g., PPP  HDLC combines various functions of the DL layer - flow control, error control, sequencing, framing, etc. - into a single protocol standard  HDLC standard is broad, covering several different cases  3 general classes:  station type  link configuration  mode of operation HDLC  station types  primary P  secondary S  combined C  types P and S are for multipoint network with polling  hub polling, etc. --> master/slave network  type  link C for point-to-point link configurations  balanced : 2 combined stations on 1 direct link  unbalanced : 1 P, n S’s directly connected (e.g., bus) HDLC  frame types and formats I-frame(information/data)  S-frame (supervisory) U-frame (data) 
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            