Brochure/Catalogue
CSMA/CD
An access procedure where several network stations have 
access to the transmission medium. In the CSMA-system the 
transmitting station listens to the channel (carrier sensing) 
before it transmits. A station can then only transmit if the 
transmission medium has not yet been occupied by another 
station. If the transmission medium is occupied, the station 
waits till it is free and can transmit. Because of the signalling 
times it is still possible for two devices to transmit at the 
same time. To avoid data loss in this type of collision, both 
transmitters have to detect the collision (collision detect) and 
after a randomly-selected waiting time send each of their 
data packets again. CSMA/CD is a widespread standard 
process in 10-MBit-networks with hubs. 
In Industrial Ethernet networks the CSMA/CD system is only 
used rarely nowadays, because of high demands on network 
performance.
DCE
(Data Communication Equipment) 
Any facility that can relay data between data terminal 
equipment. DCEs are part of the infrastructure and not 
terminal equipment. 
DHCP 
DHCP (Dynamic Host Conguration Protocol) enables a 
specially congured server to allocate dynamic IP addresses 
and other network parameters to the computers in a 
network.
DNS-Server
On the Internet, computers are addressed using their 
numeric IP address (e.g., 211.163.5.38). The DNS server 
maintains the structure of the domain name system (DNS). 
It administers and updates the logical names which are 
associated with the IP addresses. The name server converts 
less-accessible dotted-decimal-notation numbers into 
domain addresses. It then makes this information available 
to DNS clients on request. A network may include an 
unlimited number of name servers. Since DNS servers must 
have built-in redundancy, a server implementation consists 
of two servers: the primary (PNS) and secondary (SNS) name 
server. If the primary name server is down, the secondary 
name server, running in parallel, takes over.
DTE
(Data Terminal Equipment) data terminal unit: Every device 
in the network where a communications route starts or 
nishes. A station (computer or host) in the network that 
can transmit or receive data.
DynDNS
DynDNS stands for dynamic domain name system. DNS 
is responsible for resolving host names to IP addresses. 
Services such as DynDNS were developed for users using 
a DSL connection with dynamic IP addresses. DynDNS 
enables the registration of a dynamic (changeable) IP 
address to a host name. For this to work, a DSL router must 
support it or a DynDNS client must be installed on a PC.
Error Detection
The error detection code is a detection code (CRC or 
checksum) used where errors are identied but not 
corrected as in ECC.
Ethernet
Ethernet is computer networking technology for local 
networks (LANs). It refers to cable types and signalling for 
the bit transfer layer (physical layer), packet formats and 
protocols for checking media access (media access control, 
MAC) / link layer of the OSI model. Ethernet is standardised 
to a large extent in the IEEE norm 802.3.
Fast-Ethernet
Nowadays a very widespread version of Ethernet with 
100Mbps over a twisted pair cable according to category 5 
or higher. The maximum range is 100 m.
Fibre-optic cables
A type of cable with bre-optics or plastic core that transmits 
digital signals in the form of light pulses. (Wave lengths 
850 nm in 10BaseFL and 100BaseSX or 1300 nm in 
100BaseFX).
Flow Control
This is a function to modify transmission to the capacity of 
the receiver. Flow control regulates transmission between 
the transmitter and receiver by causing the transmitter 
only to send as much data as the receiver can deal with. 
The different types of Ethernet have different ow control 
systems. In credit systems (FO cable) the receiver relays 
to the transmitter the number of data packets that can be 
transmitted without conrmation. Duplex connections use 
the PAUSE signal for ow control and back pressure is used 
in semi-duplex systems to control the data rate.
Glossary
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Technical appendix
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