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ATM Yang Wang 103301 Professor: Anvari
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Definition 1: ATM is a high bandwidth, low-delay, connection-oriented, packet-like switching and multiplexing technique. 2: It is a very high speed transmission technology.
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Switching and Transmission Technologies 1: Switching Technology a: Circuit Switching b: Cell Relay c: Frame Relay d: Packet Switching 2: Transmission Technology: Synchronous Digital Hierarchy ( SDH ) and Synchronous Optical Networks ( SONET ) 3: ATM: the combination of cell relay and SDH
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The History of ATM 1: the ITU-T and 53 bytes 2: The perfect mathematical compromise between Europe and American 3: ATM ( Asynchronous Transfer Mode ) is the first world-wide standard to be embraced by the computer, communications and entertainment industries
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ATM and B-ISDN 1: Broadband Integrated services Digital Network ( B- ISDN) : the most intelligent of intelligent networks (INs). 2: ATM is the switching technique at the heart of B-ISDN and makes B-ISDN a reality. a): ATM can handle any kind of information i.e. Voice, video, image, text, and data in an integrated manner. b): ATM has high access speeds: 155Mbps,622Mbps and up to 2.4Gbps ( with the backbone carrier networks operating ). c): ATM provides a flexible use of the bandwidth.
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ATM Description(con) 1: Integrates Voice, Video, Television signals and Data. 2: Uses short fixed length packets called cells. 3: Best effort delivery system. 4: Bandwidth on demand. 5: Connection Oriented technology -- Every cell with the same source and destination travels over the same route. 6: Potential to remove performance bottlenecks in today’s LANs and WANs. 7: Combines local and wide-area networks and services into a seamless whole.
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ATM Description(2) 8: Billing possible on per-cell basis. 9: Scalable -- Works at different speeds and on different media. 10: Open-ended growth path -- Not locked to any physical media or speed.
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ATM Cell 1: The basic unit of information transfer in ATM communication. 2: The cell is comprised of 53 bytes. 3: Five of the bytes make up the header and the remainder form the user data field.
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ATM Cell Header(con) 1: The main function of the cell header is to carry the VPI and VCI information which allows the active network elements ( ATM multiplexors, switches, crossconnectors ) to switch the cells of active connections through the network. 2: The cell header comprises 40 bits, of which 24 bits ( in UNI header ) or 28 bits ( in NNI header ) are used for the virtual path and virtual channel identifiers. 3:The GFC ( Generic Flow Control ) field which is used to control the cell transmission has 4 bits at UNI.
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ATM Cell Header(2) 4: The PT ( payload type ) field which identifies the contents of the cell has 3 bits. 5: The CLP ( cell loss priority ) bit, when set to 1 means that the cell should be discarded prior to cells where the CLP is set at 0. 6: The HEC ( header error control ) field comprises 8 bits used for detection of errors in the cell header.
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ATM Benefits 1: One Network 2: Enables new applications 3: Compatibility 4: Incremental Migration 5: Simplified Network Management 6: Long Architectural Lifetime
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Disadvantage of ATM 1: Overhead of cell header(5 bytes per cell). 2:Complex mechanisms for achieving QoS - -Quality of Service. 3:Congestion may cause cell losses.
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The Future of ATM(con) 1: Traditional Local Area Networks ( LANs ) like Ethernet, Token Ring and Token Bus are limited in speed (10mbps) and will not satisfy the need of the future. 2: For multimedia applications, the bandwidth requirement is high and the information is a combination of Voice, Video and Data and it requires a transfer mode capable of transporting and switching these different types of information. 3: ATM will play an important role in the broadband communications network of the future
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The Future of ATM(2) 1): FDDI Ring 2): B-ISDN 3): Wireless ATM 4): High Speed Optical Networking(HSON) Using ATM
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