Computer/Embedded Technology


10 issues to consider before installing industrial Ethernet - Part III

17 July 2002 Computer/Embedded Technology

After having a look at speed and distance issues in Part II, we now turn our attention to a consideration between hubs vs switches.

Some hubs and converters are shown here
Some hubs and converters are shown here

Repeating hubs

Modern Ethernet networks must be wired in a star topology utilising either twisted-pair or fibre-optic cabling. Links, consisting of only two devices, are established between a single Ethernet device and a port on a hub. Hubs are multiport devices usually capable of having 4, 8 or 12 ports. Hubs can be cascaded with a hub-to-hub connection.

Repeating hubs must conform to the requirements for IEEE-802.3 repeater units. These requirements include preamble regeneration, symmetry and amplitude compensation. Repeaters must re-time signals so that jitter, introduced by transceivers and cabling, does not accumulate over multiple segments. These devices detect runt packets and react to collisions by generating a JAM signal. They automatically partition jabbering ports to maintain network operability.

A point to remember: there is a limit to the number of hubs that can be cascaded. Ethernet's contention-based station arbitration method requires that all stations note if a collision has occurred on the network. The limit of this detection is called the collision domain, and it restricts the network's overall size. Exceeding the collision domain by introducing too many repeating hubs creates an unstable network with lost messages and generally poor performance. However, on a properly designed network, repeating hubs are simple to understand and use, not to mention very effective.

Repeating hubs have been criticised because they do not improve the determinism of Ethernet. With contention-based networks, such as Ethernet, it is impossible to predict the amount of time it takes for a station-to-station message when collisions occur since the backoff time is variable. A potential solution to this problem is to avoid collisions altogether.

Industrial automation systems frequently utilise master/slave protocols where a response from a slave only occurs after a command is initiated by the master. This type of protocol tends to limit collisions and thereby improves determinism. Repeating hubs will function quite well in this situation.

Media converters

Another class of physical devices are the media converters. Sometimes called transceivers, these devices convert one type of media to another. The most important conversion is from twisted-pair cable to fibre optics. Since some hubs do not have any fibre-optic ports, media converters are required in order to support fibre-optic cable in a network. Media converters should appear to the network as transparent devices. They are two-port devices that do not store frames or detect collisions. They only convert the signals sent over one medium to compatible signals over another.

Switching hubs

It is possible to replace repeating hubs with switching hubs and achieve higher network performance. Unlike repeating hubs, which are physical layer devices, the switching hub is actually a bridge that connects two data links together. By doing so, collision domains terminate at each switch port. Therefore, adding a switch doubles the possible geographic limit of the network. Switches can be cascaded for an even larger network.

Switches are much more complex than repeating hubs. Each twisted-pair port automatically negotiates with its attached device the data rate for that port, be it 10 or 100 Mbps. The flow control mechanism is also negotiated. For full-duplex segments, the PAUSE scheme is used. For half-duplex segments, the backpressure approach is used. The switch learns the port locations of Ethernet devices by reading complete Ethernet frames and observing source addresses. The switch then creates and maintains a table of source addresses and corresponding port assignments. From that time on, traffic is restricted to only those ports involved in a transmission. This allows for improved throughput since simultaneous transmissions can be initiated on those ports without activity. Table values are aged to automatically accommodate changes to field wiring.

If a broadcast, multicast or unicast transmission to an unknown destination is received on a port, all other ports are flooded with the transmission.

In Figure 1 we have the same identical network as the preceding example except that all the repeating hubs have been replaced by switching hubs. The result is that instead of one overall collision domain we have several collision domains allowing us to have a much greater overall network diameter. Within each collision domain you must follow the same rules as stated earlier. You could add repeating hubs connected to switch ports. You could also make it easy on yourself by only specifying switching hubs and not repeating hubs. If you do that, the maximum twisted-pair segment length remains at 100 m; however, switches can be cascaded with little concern. If you want the same flexibility using fibre optics, we need to address the half-/full-duplex issue first.

Figure 1. Because switches break the network into multiple collision domains, the physical size of the network is virtually unlimited
Figure 1. Because switches break the network into multiple collision domains, the physical size of the network is virtually unlimited

Repeating hub vs switching hub debate

From the above discussion it would seem like switching hubs are an all-round best choice over repeating hubs. However, repeating hubs have their advantages. Repeating hubs are simple to understand and you can connect a network analyser to any transmission. A 'flood' port on the switch is required in order to observe all traffic on the network. Switching hubs are bridges that store and forward complete Ethernet frames, creating a degree of data latency. Cascading switches aggravate the problem. Therefore, you can see that repeating hubs, as well as switching hubs, have their place with industrial Ethernet.

Part IV will continue in a subsequent issue (10 September, 2002) and will look at half-duplex and full-duplex issues.



Credit(s)



Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page

Further reading:

Microsoft Windows IoT on ARM
Altron Arrow Computer/Embedded Technology
This expansion means that the Windows IoT ecosystem can now harness the power of ARM processors, known for their energy efficiency and versatility.

Read more...
Hardened-grade network switches
CST Electronics Computer/Embedded Technology
Lantronix’s hardened switches provide Layer 2 or Layer 3 networking, and are available as Power-over-Ethernet (PoE) or Power-over-Ethernet Plus (PoE+).

Read more...
Switched mezzanine card for enhanced Ethernet connectivity
Rugged Interconnect Technologies Computer/Embedded Technology
The TXMC897 sets a new standard in high-speed Ethernet communication, with advanced features and flexibility.

Read more...
Ryzen V3000 computer on module
Altron Arrow Computer/Embedded Technology
SolidRun has recently announced the launch of its new Ryzen V3000 CX7 Com module, configurable with the eight-core/16-thread Ryzen Embedded V3C48 processor.

Read more...
1.6T Ethernet IP solution to drive AI and hyperscale data centre chips
Computer/Embedded Technology
As artificial intelligence (AI) workloads continue to grow exponentially, and hyperscale data centres become the backbone of our digital infrastructure, the need for faster and more efficient communication technologies becomes imperative. 1.6T Ethernet will rapidly be replacing 400G and 800G Ethernet as the backbone of hyperscale data centres.

Read more...
Maximising edge computing
Computer/Embedded Technology
Senao Networks has announced its launch of its SX904 SmartNIC based on the Intel NetSec Accelerator Reference Design.

Read more...
Duxbury unveils next-gen solar-powered switches
Computer/Embedded Technology
These powerful solar-powered switches are ideal for any environment requiring reliable Power-over-Ethernet (PoE) capabilities.

Read more...
UFS Ver. 4.0 embedded Flash memory devices
EBV Electrolink Computer/Embedded Technology
KIOXIA Europe has announced sampling of the industry’s first Universal Flash Storage (UFS) version 4.0 embedded Flash memory devices designed for automotive applications.

Read more...
Powering factory automation into the future
Rugged Interconnect Technologies Computer/Embedded Technology
Powered by the newest 13th Gen Intel processors, ADLINK Technology’s COM-HPC-cRLS module is a future-proof edge AI solution.

Read more...
Linux OS with immutable file system
Computer/Embedded Technology
What really sets VanillaOS apart from others, however, is in security, where it takes a new approach to computing by using an immutable file system for improved security and stability.

Read more...