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Rane NM 84 User Manual

Page 16

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Manual-16

Conductor – The CobraNet device on the network which

supplies the master clock. A conductor arbitration proce-

dure insures that at any time there is one, and only one,

conductor per network. The conductor transmits beat

packets at a regular interval. The time interval between beat

packet transmission is the mechanism of clock delivery.

The conductor is also responsible for generating transmis-

sion permissions based on forward reservations received in

reservation packets. The transmission permissions are

published in the beat packet.

Crossover cable – A special network cable that allows two

network devices to connect directly together without the

need for a hub. The receive and transmit pairs must be

swapped within the cable.

One End

Cable

the Other End

TR+ pin 1

———

pin 3 RCV+

TR- pin 2

———

pin 6 RCV-

RCV+ pin 3

———

pin 1 TR+

RCV- pin 6

———

pin 2 TR-

Since a normal (non-crossover) network cable physically

looks like a crossover cable, one of three practices are

suggested: clearly label all crossover cables so they are not

confused with normal “standard” ethernet cables. Wire two

female wall plate jacks back to back with the proper

swapping and use this adapter as a 2 port hub. Another

useful adapter uses a standard RJ-45 at one end and a

female wall jack at the other cross-wired. Making these two

adapters short helps avoid confusing standard network

cables from crossover cables. http://www.peakaudio.com/

cobranet/network_cabling.htm.

Fully Switched Network – A network built entirely from

Switching Hubs. With the elimination of Repeater Hubs,

the collision condition is removed from a fully switched

network.

Hub – Hub is not a technically concise term. The term can be

used to refer to either a Repeater Hub or a Switching Hub.

Isochronous – Uniform in time; of equal time; performed in

equal times; recurring at regular intervals. An isochronous

data stream is characterized by the fact that data delivered

late is unusable. Live audio and video are examples of

isochronous data streams.

Media Converter – A two port Repeater Hub with different

media types on each port. Media converters can convert

between CAT5 Cable and Fiber.

Multicast – See Multicast addressing.

Multicast addressing – Data which is Multicast is addressed

to a group of, or all devices on a network. All devices

receive multicast addressed data and decide individually

whether the data is relevant to them. A Switched Hub is

typically not able to determine appropriate destination port

or ports for multicast data and thus must send the data out

all ports simultaneously just as a Repeater Hub does.

Multicast addressing is to be avoided whenever possible

since it uses bandwidth network wide and since all devices

are burdened with having to decide whether multicast data

is relevant to them.

Network Channel – Old term now called Bundle. (Hey,

Bundle is a Peak Audio term, so call them.)

Packet – A series of bits containing data and control informa-

tion, source and destination addresses and formatted for

transmission from one node to another.

Performer – All units except the conductor operate as a

performer. A performer must re-synthesize a sample clock

based on arrival times of received beat packets. A per-

former may transmit isochronous data packets only if given

transmission permission to do so by the conductor.

Repeater Hub – An Ethernet multi-port repeater. A data

signal arriving in any port is electrically regenerated and

reproduced out all other ports on the hub. A repeater hub

does not buffer or interpret the data passing through it. If

data signals arrive simultaneously from multiple ports, a

collision condition is recognized by the hub and a special

jam signal is transmitted out all ports.

Repeater Network – A network built with one or more

Repeater Hubs. Repeater networks share the same band-

width among all connected DTEs.

Sub-channel – Old term now called Audio Channel.

Switched Network – A network built with one or more

Switching Hubs. It is possible, even common to build a

network from a combination of interconnected Repeater

Hubs and Switched Hubs.

Switching Hub - A Switching Hub, or simply "Switch",

examines addressing fields on data arriving at each port and

attempts to direct the data out the port or ports to which the

data is addressed. Data may be buffered within the Switch-

ing Hub to avoid the collision condition experienced within

a Repeater Hub. A network utilizing Switching Hubs

realizes higher overall bandwidth capacity since data may

be received through multiple ports simultaneously without

conflict.

Unicast – See Unicast addressing.

Unicast addressing – Data which is unicast is addressed to a

specific network device. A switching hub examines the

unicast address field of the data and determines on which

port the addressed device resides and directs the data out

only that port. Delivery of an email message is an example

of unicast data addressing.