beautypg.com

Duplex mode, Store and forward, Duplex mode store and forward – Allied Telesis AT 8000/8POE User Manual

Page 27

background image

AT-8000/8POE Layer 2 Fast Ethernet Switch Installation Guide

27

Duplex Mode

Duplex mode refers to how an end node receives and transmits data. If an
end node can receive or transmit data, but not both simultaneously, the
end node is operating in what is referred to as half-duplex mode. If an end
node can both receive and transmit data simultaneously, the end node is
said to be operating in full-duplex mode. Naturally, an end node capable of
operating in full-duplex can handle data much faster than an end node that
can only operate in half-duplex mode.

The twisted pair ports on the AT-8000/8POE Fast Ethernet Switch can
operate in either half-or full-duplex mode. They are IEEE 802.3u-compliant
and use Auto-Negotiation to set the duplex mode setting for you
automatically.

For Auto-Negotiation to operate properly on a switch, the end nodes
connected to the switch should also use Auto-Negotiation. If an end node
does not have this feature and has a fixed duplex mode of full-duplex, the
result will be a duplex mode mismatch between the end node and a switch
port. A port on the Gigabit Ethernet switch connected to an end node with
a fixed duplex mode of full-duplex will operate at only half-duplex. This
results in the end node using full-duplex and the switch port using half-
duplex. This can produce network performance problems. If you encounter
this situation, you must configure the port on the end node to use Auto-
Negotiation or, if it lacks that feature, to half-duplex.

Note

Because the ports on the AT-8000/8POE Fast Ethernet Switch
operate in Auto-Negotiate mode only, the end nodes connected to
the switch must also be configured to operate in the Auto-Negotiate
mode. If an end node is configured to a specific duplex setting in a
manual mode, it will not respond to the Auto-Negotiate protocol from
the AT-8000/8POE Fast Ethernet Switch. (The speed is determined
from the link pulses, however, so the speed is always detected
correctly.) As a result, the port setting on the switch will end up at
half-duplex. If the end node is manually configured to full-duplex,
there will be a duplex mismatch and data will be lost. If the end node
is manually configured to half-duplex, both ports will have the speed
and duplex match up correctly.

Store and

Forward

The AT-8000/8POE Fast Ethernet Switch uses store and forward as the
method for receiving and transmitting frames. When a Ethernet frame is
received on a switch port, the switch does not retransmit the frame out the
destination port until it has received the entire frame and stored the frame
in a port buffer. It then examines the frame to determine if it is a valid
frame. Invalid frames, such as fragments or runts, are discarded by the
switch. This insures that only valid frames are transmitted out the switch
ports and that damaged frames are not propagated on your network.