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Quick Reference Guide to the Ethernet System
1.5 Operation of Ethernet
Each Ethernet-equipped computer, also known as a station,
operates independently of all other stations on the network: there is no
central controller. All stations attached to an Ethernet are connected
to a shared signaling system, also called the medium. Ethernet signals
are transmitted serially, one bit at a time, over the shared signal channel
to every attached station. To send data a station first listens to the
channel, and when the channel is idle the station transmits its data in
the form of an Ethernet frame, or packet.*1
After each frame transmission, all stations on the network must
contend equally for the next frame transmission opportunity. This ensures
that access to the network channel is fair, and that no single station
can lock out the other stations. Access to the shared channel is determined
by the medium access control (MAC) mechanism embedded in the Ethernet interface
located in each station. The medium access control mechanism is based on
a system called Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Collision Detection
(CSMA/CD).
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- The CSMA/CD Protocol
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- Collisions
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- Best Effort Data Delivery
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Quick Reference Guide to the Ethernet System - 04 SEP 95
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