IEEE
Ethernet standards
Ethernet is defined in a number of IEEE (Institute of Electrical
and Electronics Engineers) 802.3 standards. These standards define the physical
and data-link layer specifications for Ethernet. The most important 802.3
standards are:
·
10Base-T (IEEE 802.3) – 10 Mbps with category 3
unshielded twisted pair (UTP) wiring, up to 100 meters long.
·
100Base-TX (IEEE 802.3u) – known as Fast Ethernet,
uses category 5, 5E, or 6 UTP wiring, up to 100 meters long.
·
100Base-FX (IEEE 802.3u) – a version of Fast
Ethernet that uses multi-mode optical fiber. Up to 412 meters long.
·
1000Base-CX (IEEE 802.3z) – uses copper
twisted-pair cabling. Up to 25 meters long.
·
1000Base-T (IEEE 802.3ab) – Gigabit Ethernet that
uses Category 5 UTP wiring. Up to 100 meters long.
·
1000Base-SX (IEEE 802.3z) – 1 Gigabit Ethernet
running over multimode fiber-optic cable.
·
1000Base-LX (IEEE 802.3z) – 1 Gigabit Ethernet
running over single-mode fiber.
·
10GBase-T (802.3.an) – 10 Gbps connections over
category 5e, 6, and 7 UTP cables.
Notice how the first number in the name of the standard represents
the speed of the network in megabits per second. The word base refers to
baseband, meaning that the signals are transmitted without modulation. The last
part of the standard name refers to the cabling used to carry signals. For
example, 1000Base-T means that the speed of the network is up to 1000 Mbps,
baseband signaling is used, and the twisted-pair cabling will be used (T stands
for twisted-pair).
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