submitted by:guided by: arun kumar guptamr. vipin kaushik m.tech (opto-electronics)- ii sem dept. of...

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Submitted by: Guided by: Arun Kumar Gupta Mr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED – DATA INTERFACE FDDI

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Page 1: Submitted by:Guided by: Arun Kumar GuptaMr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED –

Submitted by: Guided by:Arun Kumar Gupta Mr. Vipin Kaushik

M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem

Dept. of Applied Physics

SGSITS, Indore

FIBER DISTRIBUTED – DATA INTERFACE

FDDI

Page 2: Submitted by:Guided by: Arun Kumar GuptaMr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED –

Plan of talkHistory & Development Introduction FDDI Features

Working of FDDIFDDI TypesFrame FormatApplications of FDDIAdvantagesFuture of FDDIConclusion 2

Page 3: Submitted by:Guided by: Arun Kumar GuptaMr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED –

History & Development

FDDI was considered an attractive campus backbone technology in the early to mid 1990s since existing Ethernet networks only offered 10 Mbit/s transfer speeds and Token Ring networks only offered 4 Mbit/s or 16 Mbit/s speeds.

Thus it was the preferred choice of that era for a high-speed backbone, but FDDI has since been effectively obsoleted by fast Ethernet which offered the same 100 Mbit/s speeds, but at a much lower cost and, since 1998, by Gigabit Ethernet due to its speed, and even lower cost, and ubiquity.

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Page 4: Submitted by:Guided by: Arun Kumar GuptaMr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED –

Introduction FDDI LAN standards were developed by subcommittee

X3T9.5 of ANSI (American National Standard Institute) A networking technology that uses a dual ring

topology often with dual networking equipment (concentrators, etc.)

FDDI facilitates redundancy and protection of the network.

If a device fails, the primary and secondary rings enter a "wrap" state to form a logical connection and thus maintain the logical ring in the event of a link failure.

FDDI is capable of data rates of 100 Mbps over fiber optic cable (SMF and MMF).

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Page 5: Submitted by:Guided by: Arun Kumar GuptaMr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED –

FDDI FeaturesCan be implemented over copper (CDDI)The fiber optic cables have clear advantages over the

copper cables. There is more security, and the fiber optic cables are more reliable than any other wire available.

The data transfer in the fiber optic cable takes place without any electrical signals being transmitted.

The data flow is undeterred and constant through a fiber optic cable.

Long distances can be covered for data flow using the fiber optic cable using a single node.

Maximum of 500 stationsMedia access - Token passingSpeed - 100MbpsFrame Size is large as compared to Ethernet i.e. 4500

bytes5

Page 6: Submitted by:Guided by: Arun Kumar GuptaMr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED –

Working of FDDIThe inside architecture of the FDDI is based on

the dual rings where the data is flowing in the opposite directions.

There are two levels of rings the primary and the secondary.

Most of the data transmission takes place using the primary ring and the secondary is idle.

However in case the primary does not work the secondary takes over the primary’s functionalities

It also use optical bypass switch for avoiding the wrap

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Page 7: Submitted by:Guided by: Arun Kumar GuptaMr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED –

Wrap condition

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Page 8: Submitted by:Guided by: Arun Kumar GuptaMr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED –

Cont…

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Page 9: Submitted by:Guided by: Arun Kumar GuptaMr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED –

Optical Bypass Switch

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Page 10: Submitted by:Guided by: Arun Kumar GuptaMr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED –

FDDI DAS Ports Attach to the Primary and Secondary Rings

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Page 11: Submitted by:Guided by: Arun Kumar GuptaMr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED –

Function of Concentrator

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Page 12: Submitted by:Guided by: Arun Kumar GuptaMr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED –

FDDI TYPES There are two types of fiber distributed data interface

mainly.

The Single Mode Interface The single mode uses the laser technology to

generate the light rays.

The Multi Mode Interface. The Multimode fiber uses the LED display to generate

the light rays.

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Page 13: Submitted by:Guided by: Arun Kumar GuptaMr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED –

Cont…The difference in both these methods is that multi

mode as the name suggests allows many rays at one single point of time to pass and the single mode laser allows one ray at one time to pass through.

The angles at which the light reflects on the cable are all different so by the time they reach the nodes the time at which they arrive is different. In a single mode there is no such confusion so the data arrives at the node in a streamlined fashion.

The methodology which the multi mode uses is called modal dispersion and it is used in an environment which has limited boundaries.

In comparison with the multi node the single node will be able to carry more data and deliver at a higher speed along with covering larger distances.

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Page 14: Submitted by:Guided by: Arun Kumar GuptaMr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED –

Maximum Distance 1300nm LED on Multimode fiber50/125 500 Mhz per Km 1.9 miles62.5/125 500 Mhz per Km 2.9 miles85/125 300 Mhz per Km 1.5 miles100/140 200 Mhz per Km 1 mile

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Page 15: Submitted by:Guided by: Arun Kumar GuptaMr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED –

Cont….

1300nm Laser on Multimode fiber50/125 1,400 Mhz per Km 16.3 miles62.5/125 1,400 Mhz per Km 16.3 miles85/125 400 Mhz per Km 1.8 miles100/140 600 Mhz per Km 2.7 miles1300nm Laser on Single Mode fiber8/125 100,000 Hhz per Km 29.8 miles

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Page 16: Submitted by:Guided by: Arun Kumar GuptaMr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED –

FDDI frame format

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Page 17: Submitted by:Guided by: Arun Kumar GuptaMr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED –

Applications of FDDIFDDI is used mainly in mission critical and

high traffic networks where large amounts of data flow need to flow quickly and efficiently

FDDI is used  anywhere that utilizes a large network in need of high bandwidth.  Businesses, the Government, hospitals and other medical fields, stock exchanges and money markets etc.

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Page 18: Submitted by:Guided by: Arun Kumar GuptaMr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED –

Advantages

Higher Capacity and Performance than older LANs

More Simultaneous TransactionsHigher Availability (dual ring topology)Predetermined Performance (adding users

have minimal impact on throughput)Longer Distance Loops (2 kilometers to 100

kilometer)

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Page 19: Submitted by:Guided by: Arun Kumar GuptaMr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED –

Future of FDDIA newer version of FDDI, called FDDI-2,

supports the transmission of audio and visual information as well as data.

Another version, FDDI-Full Duplex Technology or FFDT, uses the same network setup as FDDI but can support twice the data rate, or 200 Mbps. 

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Page 20: Submitted by:Guided by: Arun Kumar GuptaMr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED –

ConclusionAfter the advent of FDDI internet has advanced to a

great extent even with common day to day users. The internet service providers are able to provide better services to the people and are able to facilitate internet in a better fashion.

Since internet has advanced and the number of users has increased, more and more businesses have started e-commerce applications on the internet.

Because the fiber distributed data interface is a safe and secure medium when it comes to cables the ecommerce transactions have found a reliable media.

FDDI through single node transfers are widely adapted by MNC’s for communication between different branches.

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Page 21: Submitted by:Guided by: Arun Kumar GuptaMr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED –

Referenceshttp://www.etutes.com/lesson4/

networking_fundamentals_lesson4_7.htmhttp://wiki.cisco.com/wiki/

Fiber_Distributed_Data_Interface#Figure:_The_FDDI_Frame_Is_Similar_to_That_of_a_Token_Ring_Frame

http://www.laynetworks.com/FDDI.htmhttp://www.arcelect.com/fddi.htmhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/

Fiber_Distributed_Data_InterfaceForging FDDI - Selected Areas in

Communications, IEEE Journal by FE Ross - 2002John M.Senior,second edition,page no.88521

Page 22: Submitted by:Guided by: Arun Kumar GuptaMr. Vipin Kaushik M.Tech (Opto-Electronics)- II Sem Dept. of Applied Physics SGSITS, Indore FIBER DISTRIBUTED –

Thank You!

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