Ethernet physical layer

Ethernet physical layer
A standard 8P8C (often called RJ45) connector used most commonly on cat5 cable, one of the types of cabling used in Ethernet networks
Standard IEEE 802.3 (2002 onwards)
Physical media Coaxial cable, twisted pair, optical fiber
Network topology Point-to-point, star, bus
Major variants 10BASE-T, 10BASE2, 10BASE5, 100BASE-TX, 100BASE-FX, 100BASE-T, 1000BASE-T, 1000BASE-SX
Maximum distance 100 metres (328 ft) over twisted pair, up to 100 km over optical fiber
Mode of operation Differential (Balanced)
Maximum bit rate 3 Mbit/s to 100 Gbit/s
Voltage levels ± 2.5V (over twisted pair)
Available signals Tx+, Tx−, Rx+, Rx−
Common connector types 8P8C, LC, SC, ST

The Ethernet physical layer is the physical layer component of the Ethernet family of computer network standards.

The Ethernet physical layer evolved over a considerable time span and encompasses quite a few physical media interfaces and several magnitudes of speed. The speed ranges from 1 Mbit/s to 100 Gbit/s, while the physical medium can range from bulky coaxial cable to twisted pair and optical fiber. In general, network protocol stack software will work similarly on all physical layers.

10 Gigabit Ethernet was already used in both enterprise and carrier networks by 2007, with 40 Gbit/s[1][2] and 100 Gigabit Ethernet[3] ratified.[4] Higher speeds are under development.[5] Robert Metcalfe, one of the co-inventors of Ethernet, in 2008 said he believed commercial applications using Terabit Ethernet may occur by 2015, though it might require new Ethernet standards.[6]

Many Ethernet adapters and switch ports support multiple speeds, using autonegotiation to set the speed and duplex for the best values supported by both connected devices. If auto-negotiation fails, a multiple-speed device will sense the speed used by its partner, but will assume half-duplex. A 10/100 Ethernet port supports 10BASE-T and 100BASE-TX. A 10/100/1000 Ethernet port supports 10BASE-T, 100BASE-TX, and 1000BASE-T.

Physical layers

Xerox experimental Ethernet

Name Description
Experimental Ethernet The original 2.94 Mbit/s Ethernet implementation had eight bit addresses and other differences in frame format. Manchester coded on 50 Ω coaxial cable.[7]

The following sections provide a brief summary of official Ethernet media types (section numbers from the IEEE 802.3-2008 standard are parenthesized). In addition to these official standards, many vendors have implemented proprietary media types for various reasonsoften to support longer distances over fiber optic cabling.

Early implementations

Name Standard (Clause) Description
10BASE5 802.3 (8) Original standard uses a single coaxial cable into which you literally tap a connection by drilling into the cable to connect to the core and screen. Largely obsolete, though due to its widespread deployment in the early 1980s, some systems may still be in use.[8] Was known also as Thick-Ethernet. 10 Mbit/s, Manchester coded signaling, copper RG-8X (expensive) coaxial cabling, bus topology with collision detection.
10BASE2 802.3 (10) 50 Ω coaxial cable connects machines together, each machine using a T-adaptor to connect to its NIC. Requires terminators at each end. For many years during the mid to late 1980 this was the dominant Ethernet standard. Also called Thin Ethernet, ThinNet or Cheapernet. 10 Mbit/s, Manchester coded signaling, RG-58 coaxial cabling, bus topology with collision detection.
10BROAD36 802.3 (11) An early standard supporting Ethernet over longer distances. It utilized broadband modulation techniques, similar to those employed in cable modem systems, and operated over coaxial cable. 10 Mbit/s, scrambled NRZ signaling modulated (PSK) over high frequency carrier, broad bandwidth coaxial cabling, bus topology with collision detection.
1BASE5 802.3 (12) Operated at 1 Mbit/s over twisted pair to an active hub. Although a commercial failure, 1BASE5 defined the architecture for all subsequent Ethernet evolution. Also called StarLAN. 1 Mbit/s, Manchester coded signaling, copper twisted pair cabling, star topology.
StarLAN 10 Proprietary 10 Mbit/s, Manchester coded signaling, copper twisted pair cabling, star topology - evolved into 10BASE-T
LattisNet UTP Proprietary 10 Mbit/s, Manchester coded signaling, copper twisted pair cabling, star topology - evolved into 10BASE-T
10BASE-T 802.3 (14) Runs over four wires (two twisted pairs) on a Category 3 or Category 5 cable. An active hub or switch sits in the middle and has a port for each node. This is also the configuration used for 100BASE-T and gigabit Ethernet. Manchester coded signaling, copper twisted pair cabling, star topology - direct evolution of 1BASE-5.
FOIRL 802.3 (9.9) Fiber-optic inter-repeater link; the original standard for Ethernet over fiber
10BASE‑F 802.3 (15) A generic term for the family of 10 Mbit/s Ethernet standards using fiber optic cable: 10BASE-FL, 10BASE-FB and 10BASE-FP. Of these only 10BASE-FL is in widespread use. 10 Mbit/s, Manchester coded signaling, fiber pair
10BASEFL 802.3 (15&18) An updated version of the FOIRL standard
10BASEFB 802.3 (15&17) Intended for backbones connecting a number of hubs or switches; it is now obsolete
10BASE‑FP 802.3 (15&16) A passive star network that required no repeater, it was never implemented

Early Ethernet standards used Manchester coding so that the signal was self-clocking not adversely affected by high-pass filters.

Fast Ethernet

Main article: Fast Ethernet
Name Standard (Clause) Description
100BASE‑T802.3 (21)A term for any of the three standards for 100 Mbit/s Ethernet over twisted pair cable. Includes 100BASE-TX, 100BASE-T4 and 100BASE-T2. As of 2009, 100BASE-TX has totally dominated the market, and is often considered to be synonymous with 100BASE-T in informal usage. All of them use a star topology.
100BASE-TX802.3 (24&25)4B5B MLT-3 coded signaling, CAT5 copper cabling with two twisted pairs.
100BASE-T4802.3 (23)8B6T PAM-3 coded signaling, CAT3 copper cabling (as used for 10BASE-T installations) with four twisted pairs (uses all four pairs in the cable). Now obsolete, as CAT5 cabling is the norm. Limited to half-duplex.
100BASE-T2802.3 (32)No products exist. PAM-5 coded signaling, CAT3 copper cabling with two twisted pairs, star topology. Supports full-duplex. It is functionally equivalent to 100BASE-TX, but supports old telephone cable. However, special sophisticated digital signal processors are required to handle encoding schemes required, making this option fairly expensive at the time. It arrived well after 100BASE-TX was established in the market. The technology developed for 100BASE-T2 was the foundation for 1000BASE-T.
100BASE‑FX802.3 (24&26)4B5B NRZI coded signaling, two strands of multi-mode optical fiber. Maximum length is 400 meters for half-duplex connections (to ensure collisions are detected) or 2 kilometers for full-duplex.
100BASE‑SXTIA-785100 Mbit/s Ethernet over multi-mode fiber. Maximum length is 300 meters. 100BASE-SX used short wavelength (850 nm) optics that was sharable with 10BASE-FL, thus making it possible to have an auto-negotiation scheme and have 10/100 fiber adapters.
100BASE‑BX10802.3 (58)100 Mbit/s Ethernet bidirectionally over a single strand of single-mode optical fiber. A multiplexer is used to split transmit and receive signals into different wavelengths allowing them to share the same fiber. Supports up to 10 km.
100BASE-LX10802.3 (58)100 Mbit/s Ethernet up to 10 km over a pair of Single Mode Fibers.
100BaseVG802.12Standardized by a different IEEE 802 subgroup, 802.12, because it used a different, more centralized form of media access ("Demand Priority"). Championed by only HP, 100VG-AnyLAN (as was the marketing name) was the earliest in the market. It needed four pairs in a Cat-3 cable. Now obsolete (802.12 has been "inactive" since 1997) the standard has been withdrawn.

1 Gbit/s

Main article: Gigabit Ethernet

All gigabit Ethernet variants use a star topology.

Name Standard (Clause) Description
1000BASE‑T 802.3 (40) PAM-5 coded signaling, At least Category 5 cable, with Category 5e strongly recommended copper cabling with four twisted pairs. Each pair is used in both directions simultaneously.
1000BASE‑TX TIA-854 Only over Cat-6 copper cabling. Unimplemented.
1000BASE‑SX 802.3 (38) 8B10B NRZ coded signaling, short-range multi-mode fiber (up to 550 m).
1000BASE‑LX 802.3 (38) 8B10B NRZ coded signaling, multi-mode fiber (up to 550 m) or single-mode fiber (up to 2 km; can be optimized for longer distances, up to 10 km).
1000BASE‑LH multi-vendor over single-mode fiber (up to 100 km). A long-haul solution.
1000BASE‑CX 802.3 (39) 8B10B NRZ coded signaling, balanced shielded twisted pair (up to 25 m) over special copper cable. Predates 1000BASE-T and rarely used.
1000BASE‑BX10 802.3 (59) up to 10 km. Bidirectional over single strand of single-mode fibre.
1000BASE‑LX10 802.3 (59) Up to 10 km over a pair of single-mode fibres.
1000BASE‑PX10‑D 802.3 (60) downstream (from head-end to tail-ends) over single-mode fiber using point-to-multipoint topology (supports at least 10 km).
1000BASE‑PX10‑U 802.3 (60) upstream (from a tail-end to the head-end) over single-mode fiber using point-to-multipoint topology (supports at least 10 km).
1000BASE‑PX20‑D 802.3 (60) downstream (from head-end to tail-ends) over single-mode fiber using point-to-multipoint topology (supports at least 20 km).
1000BASE‑PX20‑U 802.3 (60) upstream (from a tail-end to the head-end) over single-mode fiber using point-to-multipoint topology (supports at least 20 km).
1000BASE‑ZX Unknown Up to 100 km over single-mode fibre.[9]
1000BASE‑KX 802.3 (70) 1 m over backplane

10 Gbit/s

Main article: 10 Gigabit Ethernet

10 Gigabit Ethernet defines a version of Ethernet with a nominal data rate of 10 Gbit/s, ten times as fast as Gigabit Ethernet. In 2002, the first 10 Gigabit Ethernet standard was published as IEEE Std 802.3ae-2002. Subsequent standards encompassed media types for single-mode fibre (long haul), multi-mode fibre (up to 300 m), copper backplane (up to 1 m) and copper twisted pair (up to 100 m). All 10-gigabit varieties were consolidated into IEEE Std 802.3-2008. As of 2009, 10 Gigabit Ethernet is predominantly deployed in carrier networks, where 10GBASE-LR and 10GBASE-ER enjoy significant market shares.

Name Standard (Clause) Description
10GBASESR 802.3 (52) designed to support short distances over deployed multi-mode fiber cabling, it has a range of between 26 m and 82 m depending on cable type. It also supports 300 m and 400 m operation over 2000 MHz·km and respectively 4700 MHz·km multi-mode fiber.
10GBASELX4 802.3 (53) uses wavelength division multiplexing to support ranges of between 240 m and 300 m over deployed multi-mode cabling. Also supports 10 km over single-mode fiber.
10GBASELR 802.3 (52) supports 10 km over single-mode fiber
10GBASEER 802.3 (52) supports 40 km over single-mode fiber
10GBASESW 802.3 (52) A variation of 10GBASE-SR using the WAN PHY, designed to interoperate with OC-192 / STM-64 SONET/SDH equipment
10GBASELW 802.3 (52) A variation of 10GBASE-LR using the WAN PHY, designed to interoperate with OC-192 / STM-64 SONET/SDH equipment
10GBASEEW 802.3 (52) A variation of 10GBASE-ER using the WAN PHY, designed to interoperate with OC-192 / STM-64 SONET/SDH equipment
10GBASECX4 802.3 (54) Designed to support short distances over copper cabling, it uses InfiniBand 4x connectors and CX4 cabling and allows a cable length of up to 15 m. Was specified by the IEEE Std 802.3an-2006 which has been incorporated into the IEEE Std 802.3-2008.
10GBASET 802.3 (55) Uses unshielded twisted-pair wiring.
10GBASELRM 802.3 (68) Extend to 220 m over deployed 500 MHz·km multimode fiber
10GBASEKX4 802.3 (71) 1 m over 4 lanes of backplane
10GBASEKR 802.3 (72) 1 m over a single lane of backplane

25 and 50 Gbit/s

Main article: 25 Gigabit Ethernet

An IEEE 802.3 workgroup has been formed to develop a 25-gigabit Ethernet standard based on one lane of the 4 by 25-Gbit/s 100 Gigabit Ethernet standard and is expected to progress quickly.[10] A 50-Gbit/s option is also being discussed.[11]

40 and 100 Gbit/s

Main article: 100 Gigabit Ethernet

This version of Ethernet specified two speeds and was standardized in June 2010 as IEEE 802.3ba, with one addition in March 2011 as IEEE 802.3bg.[12][13] The nomenclature is as follows:[14]

40 gigabits/second 100 gigabits/second Standard (Clause) Description
40GBASE-KR4 802.3 (84) at least 1 m over a backplane
40GBASE-CR4 100GBASE-CR10 802.3 (85) approximately 7 m over copper cable assembly
40GBASE-SR4 100GBASE-SR10 802.3 (86) at least 100 m over 2000 MHz·km multi-mode fiber
at least 150 m over new 4700 MHz·km multi-mode fiber
40GBASE-LR4 802.3 (87) at least 10 km over single-mode fiber
100GBASE-LR4 802.3 (88)
100GBASE-ER4 802.3 (88) at least 40 km over single-mode fiber
40GBASE-FR 802.3 (89) Single-mode fiber over 2 km

Terabit and beyond

Main article: Terabit Ethernet

The standards body the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) wants to define a new Ethernet standard capable of 400 Gbit/s and possibly 1 Tbit/s.[15][16][17]

They believed that Terabit Ethernet may make a debut as early as 2015, and would be followed rapidly by a scaling to 100 Terabit, possibly as early as 2020. It is worth noting that these were theoretical predictions of technological ability, rather than estimates of when such speeds would actually become available at a practical price point.[18]

"First mile"

For providing Internet access service directly from providers to homes and small businesses:

Name Standard (Clause) Description
10BaseS Proprietary[19] Ethernet over VDSL, used in Long Reach Ethernet products[20]
2BASE-TL 802.3 (63) Over telephone wires
10PASS-TS 802.3 (62)
100BASE-LX10 802.3 (58) Single-mode fiber-optics
100BASE-BX10
1000BASE-LX10 802.3 (59)
1000BASE-BX10
1000BASE-PX10 802.3 (60) Passive optical network
1000BASE-PX20

Twisted-pair cable

Several varieties of Ethernet were specifically designed to run over 4-pair copper structured cabling already installed in many locations. ANSI recommends using Category 6 cable for new installations.

RJ-45 Wiring (TIA/EIA-568-B T568A)
Pin Pair Color telephone 10BASE-T 100BASE-TX 1000BASE-T PoE mode A PoE mode B
1 3 white/green TX+ z bidi 48 V out
2 3 green TX− z bidi 48 V out
3 2 white/orange RX+ z bidi 48 V return
4 1 blue ring bidi 48 V out
5 1 white/blue tip bidi 48 V out
6 2 orange RX− z bidi 48 V return
7 4 white/brown bidi 48 V return
8 4 brown bidi 48 V return

Combining 10Base-T (or 100BASE-TX) with "IEEE 802.3af mode A" allows a hub to transmit both power and data over only two pairs. This was designed to leave the other two pairs free for analog telephone signals.[21] The pins used in "IEEE 802.3af Mode B" supply power over the "spare" pairs not used by 10BASE-T and 100BASE-TX.

In a departure from both 10BASE-T and 100BASE-TX, 1000BASE-T uses all four cable pairs for simultaneous transmission in both directions through the use of echo cancellation.

Minimum cable lengths

Fiber connections have minimum cable lengths due to level requirements on received signals.[22] Fiber ports designed for long-haul wavelengths require a signal attenuator if used within a building.

10BASE2 installations, running on RG-58 coaxial cable, require a minimum of 0.5 m between stations tapped into the network cable, this is to minimize reflections.[23]

10BASE-T, 100BASE-T, and 1000BASE-T installations running on twisted pair cable use a star topology. No minimum cable length is required for these networks.[24] [25]

Related standards

Some networking standards are not part of the IEEE 802.3 Ethernet standard, but support the Ethernet frame format, and are capable of interoperating with it.

Other networking standards do not use the Ethernet frame format but can still be connected to Ethernet using MAC-based bridging.

Other special-purpose physical layers include Avionics Full-Duplex Switched Ethernet and TTEthernet — Time-Triggered Ethernet for embedded systems.

References

  1. "Consideration for 40 Gigabit Ethernet" (PDF). IEEE HSSG. May 2007.
  2. "40 gigabit Ethernet answers" (PDF). IEEE HSSG. May 2007.
  3. "HECTO: High-Speed Electro-Optical Components for Integrated Transmitter and Receiver in Optical Communication". Hecto.eu. Retrieved December 17, 2011.
  4. "IEEE P802.3ba 40Gb/s and 100Gb/s Ethernet Task Force". IEEE. 2010-06-19.
  5. Yiran Ma, Qi Yang, Yan Tang, Simin Chen, and William Shieh, 1-Tb/s single-channel coherent optical OFDM transmission over 600-km SSMF fiber with subwavelength bandwidth access, retrieved 2010-07-30
  6. "Bob Metcalfe on the Terabit Ethernet". Light Reading. February 15, 2008. Retrieved August 27, 2013.
  7. John F. Shoch; Yogen K. Dalal; David D. Redell; Ronald C. Crane (August 1982). "Evolution of the Ethernet Local Computer Network". IEEE Computer 15 (8): 14–26. doi:10.1109/MC.1982.1654107.
  8. "L-com Introduces Commercial-Grade Thinnet (10Base-2) and Thicknet (10Base-5) Converters for Legacy Installs". Virtual-Strategy Magazine. 2012-06-11. Retrieved 2012-07-01.
  9. Cisco Gigabit Ethernet Solutions for Cisco 7x00 Series Routers, undated, URL retrieved on 17 February 2008
  10. Jim Duffy (9/3/2014). "25G Ethernet moving fast". Network World. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  11. Rick Merritt (9/3/2014). "50G Ethernet Debate Brewing". EE Times. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  12. Reimer, Jeremy (July 25, 2007). "New Ethernet standard: not 40Gbps, not 100, but both". Ars Technica. Retrieved December 17, 2011.
  13. "IEEE P802.3bg 40Gb/s Ethernet: Single-mode Fibre PMD Task Force". official task force web site. IEEE 802. April 12, 2011. Retrieved June 17, 2011.
  14. Ilango Ganga (May 13, 2009). "Chief Editor's Report". IEEE P802.3ba 40Gb/s and 100Gb/s Ethernet Task Force public record. p. 8. Retrieved June 7, 2011.
  15. http://www.ieee802.org/3/bs/index.html
  16. http://www.proavbiz-europe.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=6151:ieee-begins-work-on-new-ethernet-standard&catid=15&Itemid=401979
  17. http://www.ieee802.org/3/ad_hoc/bwa/BWA_Report.pdf
  18. http://www.electronista.com/articles/12/08/20/aging.standard.is.still.ahead.of.most.core.networking/
  19. "Infineon Strengthens Leadership in MDU/MTU Market with Ethernet over VDSL Technology Patent Award". News release (Infineon Technologies AG). January 8, 2001. Archived from the original on April 13, 2001. Retrieved August 27, 2011.
  20. "Infineon Announces Second Quarter Results". News release (Infineon Technologies). April 24, 2001. Retrieved August 28, 2011. ...strategic design-win with Cisco for new long range Ethernet products incorporating Infineon’'s 10BaseS™ technology
  21. "Tech Info - LAN and Telephones". Zytrax.com. Retrieved December 17, 2011.
  22. "Cisco 100BASE-FX SFP Fast Ethernet Interface Converter on Gigabit SFP Ports". Cisco Systems. Archived from the original on 2007-10-13.
  23. "IEEE Standard for Ethernet 802.3-2008 Clauses 10.7.2.1-2".
  24. http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/docs/interfaces-modules/port-adapters/12768-eth-collisions.html
  25. http://web.cs.dal.ca/~yongzhen/course/6704/report.pdf

External links