The document discusses several IEEE 802 networking standards including 802.1 to 802.16. It focuses on the 802.15 standard for wireless personal area networks and provides details on Bluetooth and Zigbee which are both covered under the 802.15.1 and 802.15.4 standards respectively. It also provides an overview of the 802.16 standard for broadband wireless access, also known as WiMAX.
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IEEE 802 Standards
The document discusses several IEEE 802 networking standards including 802.1 to 802.16. It focuses on the 802.15 standard for wireless personal area networks and provides details on Bluetooth and Zigbee which are both covered under the 802.15.1 and 802.15.4 standards respectively. It also provides an overview of the 802.16 standard for broadband wireless access, also known as WiMAX.
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802.
1 Architecture, Management and Internetworking
802.2 Logical Link Control (LLC) 802.3 Carrier Sense Multiple Access/Collision Detect (CSMA/CD) 802.4 Token Bus 802.5 Token Ring 802.6 Metropolitan Area Networks (MANs) 802.7 Bandpass Technical Advisory Group 802.8 Fibre optic Technical Advisory Group 802.9 Integrated Data and Voice Network 802.10 Security Working Group 802.11 Wireless LAN Working Group 802.12 Demand Priority Working Group 802.13 Not Used 802.14 Cable Modem Working Group 802.15 Wireless Personal Area Networking Group 802.16 Broadband Wireless Access Study Group LLC sub-layer performs the following functions: I. Error Control II. Flow Control III. Sequencing and user addressing function
It provides services to the network layer and receives service from the MAC sub-layer to perform the functions mentioned above.
LLC Service:
The LLC sublayer provides the following three types of services to network layer entity: Type I: Unacknowledged connectionless mode service Type II: Connection mode service Type III: Acknowledged connection mode service
LLC Protocol:
DSAP SSAP Control Information Network Bridging describes the action taken by network equipment to allow two or more communication networks to create an aggregate network.
Bridging is different from routing which allows the networks to communicate independently as separate networks.
A network bridge is a network device that connects multiple network segments. In the OSI model, bridging acts in the first two layers below the network layer.
There are four types of bridging technologies: I. Simple bridging II. Multiport bridging III. Transparent bridging IV. Source Route bridging IEEE 802.15 specifies Wireless Personal Area Network Standards. It includes Seven Task Groups:
Task Group 1: WPAN/Bluetooth Task Group 2: Coexistence Task Group 3: High Rate WPAN Task Group 4: Low Rate WPAN Task Group 5: Mesh Networking Task Group 6: Body Area Networks Task Group 7: Visible Light Communication Task group I is based on bluetooth technology. It defines physical layer (PHY) and Media Access Control (MAC) specification for wireless connectivity with fixed, portable and moving devices within or entering personal operating space. The standards were issued in 2002 and 2005
It is a wireless technology standard for exchanging data over short distances using short wavelength radio transmissions in the ISM band from 2400- 2480 MHz from fixed and mobile devices, thus creating Personal Area Network (PAN) with high level of security. It was initially conceived as an alternative to RS-232 cables and can connect to several devices and overcomes problem of synchronization. It is managed by Bluetooth Special Interest Group. It was standardized as IEEE 802.15.1 but it is no longer maintained Bluetooth is a packet-based protocol with a Master- Slave structure. One master may communicate with upto 7 slaves in a piconet. All devices share the Masters clock. Package exchange is based on the basic clock defined by the master which ticks at 312.5 sec intervals. Two clock ticks make up a slot of 625 sec. Two slots make up a slot pair of 1250 sec. In simple case of single slot packets, the master transmits in every even slot and receives in odd slot. Packets maybe 1,3,5 slots long but master transmit always begins in even slot
IEEE 802.16 is a series of Wireless Broadband Standards written by IEEE. The IEEE Standards Board established a working group in 1999 to develop standards for broadband for Wireless MANs. Although 802.16 is called Wireless MAN in IEEE, it jas been commercialized under the name WiMAX (Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access) by WiMAX Forum Industry Alliance.