Retro networking / WAN communities
Grant Taylor
cctalk at gtaylor.tnetconsulting.net
Tue Apr 12 14:11:38 CDT 2022
On 4/12/22 11:41 AM, Paul Koning via cctalk wrote:
> I don't know anything about the 3 Mb/s prototype other than that
> it existed. When I speak of Ethernet and its "day 1" I mean 10 Mb/s
> Ethernet as defined by the DEC/Intel/Xerox spec.
Okay. Fair enough.
I surmise that we're talking about Ethernet II a.k.a. the Digital /
Intel / Xerox that was commercialized.
> Repeaters are a core part of that spec, and they were among the first
> wave of products delivered by DEC.
I can see how the need for repeaters was learned during Ethernet
research at Xerox PARC and incorporated into Ethernet II / DIX from the
start.
> I no longer remember. That's possible, or perhaps they were a number
> of small segments each with a handful of stations on them.
That would make /some/ sense. E.g. have a 10Base2 segment for a set of
cubicles and then link the multiple segments together with a multi-port
bridge.
> That's true but only part of the story. For one thing, as I said,
> both mechanisms were part of bridges from the start (at least from
> the start of DEC's bridges, which may not be quite the very earliest
> ever but certainly are the earliest significant ones).
Fair enough.
> The learning part of bridging is actually the hard part. ...
I feel like the conceptual algorithm / logic is simple. I concede that
implementing it within timing requirements could be non-trivial ~>
difficult.
> Spanning tree is indeed another algorithm / protocol, but it's a
> control plane algorithm with relatively easy time constraints, so
> it's just SMOP.
I guess I always assumed that spanning tree came along /after/ and / or
/independently/ of bridging / switching.
After all, the BPDU in spanning tree is "Bridge ..." so that name tends
to imply to me that it came about /after/ bridges were a thing on at
least some level.
> That rings a bell. Someone reminded me of 100Base-T4.
T4 rings a bell for me. -- It reminds me of some references to T2 and
T8. It seems as if there was great conflation between the number being
reference to wires; 4 vs 8, and pairs; 2 vs 4, respectively.
> In any case, there were two proposed, one that made it. The other
> might have gone as far as one or two shipping products, but no further
> than that.
Yep.
--
Grant. . . .
unix || die
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