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Ethernet over twisted pair

Ethernet over twisted pair technologies use twisted-pair cables for the physical layer of an Ethernet computer network. Other Ethernet cable standards employ coaxial cable or optical fiber. Early versions developed in the 1980s included StarLAN followed by 10BASE-T. By the 1990s, fast, inexpensive technologies began to emerge. Currently the most popular are 100BASE-TX (fast Ethernet; 100 Mbit/s) and 1000BASE-T (gigabit Ethernet; 1 Gbit/s). These standards all use 8P8C connectors. Meanwhile higher-speed implementations generally support lower-speed standards inclusively; thus it is possible to mix different generations of equipment. Inclusive capability is designated 10/100 or 10/100/1000- for connections that support such combinations. The cables usually have four pairs of wires (though 10BASE-T and 100BASE-TX only require two of the pairs). The three standards support both full-duplex and half-duplex communication. High-grade twisted pair cabling can transport up to 10 Gbit/s Ethernet (10GBASE-T).

Ethernet over twisted-pair cable

8P8C plug

 

History

The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) standards association ratified several versions of the technology. The first two early designs were StarLAN, standardized in 1986, at one megabit per second, and LattisNet, developed in January 1987, at 10 megabit per second. Both were developed before the 10BASE-T standard (published in 1990 as IEEE 802.3i), and both were not compatible with it.

Using twisted pair cabling, in a star topology, for Ethernet addressed several weaknesses of the previous standards:

  • Twisted pair cables could be used more generally and were already present in many office buildings, lowering overall cost.
  • The centralized star topology was a more common approach to cabling than the bus in earlier standards and easier to manage.
  • Using point-to-point links instead of a shared bus greatly simplified troubleshooting and was less prone to failure.
  • Exchanging cheap repeater hubs for more advanced switching hubs provided a viable upgrade path.
  • Mixing different speeds in a single network became possible with the arrival of Fast Ethernet.

 

Naming

The common names for the standards derive from aspects of the physical media. The leading number (10 in 10BASE-T) refers to the transmission speed in Mbit/s. BASE denotes that baseband transmission is used. The T designates twisted pair cable, where the pair of wires for each signal is twisted together to reduce radio frequency interference and crosstalk between pairs. Where there are several standards for the same transmission speed, they are distinguished by a letter or digit following the T, such as TX.

 

Cabling

 

8P8C modular plug pin positioning

TIA/EIA-568 T568A termination

Pin

Pair

Wire

Color

1

3

tip

white/green

2

3

ring

green

3

2

tip

white/orange

4

1

ring

blue

5

1

tip

white/blue

6

2

ring

orange

7

4

tip

white/brown

8

4

ring

brown

 

TIA/EIA-568 T568B termination

Pin

Pair

Wire

Color

1

2

tip

white/orange

2

2

ring

orange

3

3

tip

white/green

4

1

ring

blue

5

1

tip

white/blue

6

3

ring

green

7

4

tip

white/brown

8

4

ring

brown

Twisted-pair Ethernet standards are such that the majority of cables can be wired "straight-through" (pin 1 to pin 1, pin 2 to pin 2 and so on), but others may need to be wired in the "crossover" form (receive to transmit and transmit to receive).

10BASE-T and 100BASE-TX only require two pairs to operate, located on pins 1 plus 2 and pins 3 plus 6. Since 10BASE-T and 100BASE-TX need only two pairs and Category 5 cable has four pairs, it is possible, but not standards compliant, to run two network connections or use spare pairs for PoE (Power over Ethernet) (or a network connection and two phone lines) over a Category 5 cable by using the normally unused pairs (pins 4–5, 7–8) in 10- and 100-Mbit/s configurations. In practice, great care must be taken to separate these pairs as most 10/100-Mbit/s hubs, switches, and PCs electrically terminate the unused pins.[citation needed] Moreover, 1000BASE-T requires all four pairs to operate, pins 1 and 2, 3 and 6 — as well as 4 and 5, 7 and 8.

It is conventional to wire cables for 10- or 100-Mbit/s Ethernet to either the T568A or T568B standards. Since these standards differ only in that they swap the positions of the two pairs used for transmitting and receiving (TX/RX), a cable with T568A wiring at one end and T568B wiring at the other is referred to as a crossover cable. The terms used in the explanations of the 568 standards, tip and ring, refer to older communication technologies, and equate to the positive and negative parts of the connections.

A 10BASE-T or 100BASE-TX node such as a PC, with a connector called medium dependent interfaces (MDI), transmits on pin 1 and 2 and receives on pin 3 and 6 to a network device using a "straight-through" cable. In order for two network devices or two nodes to communicate with each other (such as a switch to another switch or computer to computer) a crossover cable is often required at speeds of 10 or 100 Mbit/s. If available, connections can be made with a straight-through cable by means of an MDI-X port, also known as an "internal crossover" or "embedded crossover" connection. Hub and switch ports with such internal crossovers are usually labelled as such, with "uplink" or "X". For example, 3Com usually labels their ports 1X, 2X, and so on. In some cases a button is provided to allow a port to act as either a normal or an uplink port.

Many modern Ethernet host adapters can automatically detect another computer connected with a straight-through cable and then automatically introduce the required crossover, if needed; if neither of the adapters has this capability, then a crossover cable is required. Most newer switches have automatic crossover ("auto MDI-X" or "auto-uplink") on all ports, eliminating the uplink port and the MDI/MDI-X switch, and allowing all connections to be made with straight-through cables. If both devices being connected support 1000BASE-T according to the standards, they will connect regardless of the cable being used or how it is wired.

A 10BASE-T transmitter sends two differential voltages, +2.5 V or −2.5 V.

100BASE-TX follows the same wiring patterns as 10BASE-T, but is more sensitive to wire quality and length, due to the higher bit rates.

A 100BASE-TX transmitter sends three differential voltages, +1 V, 0 V, or −1 V.

1000BASE-T uses all four pairs bi-directionally and the standard includes auto MDI-X; however, implementation is optional. With the way that 1000BASE-T implements signaling, how the cable is wired is immaterial in actual usage. The standard on copper twisted pair is IEEE 802.3ab for Cat 5e UTP, or 4D-PAM5; four dimensions using PAM (pulse amplitude modulation) with five voltages, −2 V, −1 V, 0 V, +1 V, and +2 V[7] While +2 V to −2 V voltage may appear at the pins of the line driver, the voltage on the cable is nominally +1 V, +0.5 V, 0 V, −0.5 V and −1 V.

100BASE-TX and 1000BASE-T were both designed to require a minimum of Category 5 cable and also specify a maximum cable length of 100 meters. Category 5 cable has since been deprecated and new installations use Category 5e.

Unlike earlier Ethernet standards using broadband and coaxial cable, such as 10BASE5 (thicknet) and 10BASE2 (thinnet), 10BASE-T does not specify the exact type of wiring to be used, but instead specifies certain characteristics that a cable must meet. This was done in anticipation of using 10BASE-T in existing twisted-pair wiring systems that may not conform to any specified wiring standard. Some of the specified characteristics are attenuation, characteristic impedance, timing jitter, propagation delay, and several types of noise. Cable testers are widely available to check these parameters to determine if a cable can be used with 10BASE-T. These characteristics are expected to be met by 100 meters of 24-gauge unshielded twisted-pair cable. However, with high quality cabling, cable runs of 150 meters or longer are often obtained and are considered viable by most technicians familiar with the 10BASE-T specification.[citation needed]

 

Autonegotiation and duplex mismatch

Main articles: Autonegotiation and Duplex mismatch

Many different modes of operations (10BASE-T half duplex, 10BASE-T full duplex, 100BASE-TX half duplex, ...) exist for Ethernet over twisted pair, and most network adapters are capable of different modes of operation. 1000BASE-T requires autonegotiation to be on in order to operate.

When two linked interfaces are set to different duplex modes, the effect of this duplex mismatch is a network that functions much more slowly than its nominal speed. Duplex mismatch may be inadvertently caused when an administrator configures an interface to a fixed mode (e.g. 100 Mbit/s full duplex) and fails to configure the remote interface, leaving it set to autonegotiate. Then, when the autonegotiation process fails, half duplex is assumed by the autonegotiating side of the link.

 

Variants

Speed [Mbit/s]

Distance [m]

Name

Standard
/ Year

Description

1

100
(nominally)

StarLAN

802.3e 1986

Runs over four wires (two twisted pairs) on telephone twisted pair or Category 3 cable. An active hub sits in the middle and has a port for each node. Manchester coded signaling.

10

100
(nominally)

LattisNet

(pre) 802.3i 1987

Runs over AT&T Premises Distribution System (PDS) wiring or four wires (two twisted pairs) on telephone twisted pair or Category 3 cable.

10

100
(nominally)

10BASE-T

802.3i 1990

Runs over four wires (two twisted pairs) on a Category 3 or Category 5 cable. Star topology with an active hub or switch sits in the middle and has a port for each node. This is also the configuration used for 100BASE-T and gigabit Ethernet. Manchester coded signaling.

100

100

100BASE-TX

802.3u 1995

4B5B MLT-3 coded signaling, Category 5 cable copper cabling with two twisted pairs.

1000

100

1000BASE‑T

802.3ab 1999

PAM-5 coded signaling. At least Category 5 cable with four twisted pairs copper cabling. Category 5 cable has since been deprecated and new installations use Category 5e. Each pair is used in both directions simultaneously.

10 000

100

10GBASE‑T

802.3an 2006

THP PAM-16 coding. Uses category 6a cable.

40 000

≥30

40GBASE-T

802.3bq

under development, uses encoding from 10GBASE-T on proposed Cat 8.1/8.2 cable

 

Source : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethernet_over_twisted_pair

Ethernet crossover cable

An Ethernet crossover cable is a type of Ethernet cable used to connect computing devices together directly. Normal straight through or patch cables were used to connect from a host network interface controller (a computer or similar device) to a network switch, hub or router. A cable with connections that "cross over" was used to connect two devices of the same type: two hosts or two switches to each other. Owing to the inclusion of Auto-MDIX capability, modern implementations of the Ethernet over twisted pair standards usually no longer require the use of crossover cables.

Gigabit T568B crossover cable ends

8P8C modular crossover adapter

 

Overview

 

The 10BASE-T and 100BASE-TX Ethernet standards use one wire pair for transmission in each direction. This requires that the transmit pair of each device be connected to the receive pair of the device on the other end. When a terminal device is connected to a switch or hub, this crossover is done internally in the switch or hub. A standard straight through cable is used for this purpose where each pin of the connector on one end is connected to the corresponding pin on the other connector.

One terminal may be connected directly to another without the use of a switch or hub, but in that case the crossover must be done in the cabling. Since 10BASE-T and 100BASE-TX use pairs 2 and 3, these two pairs must be swapped in the cable. This is a crossover cable. A crossover cable may also be used to connect two hubs or two switches on their upstream ports.

Because the only difference between the T568A and T568B pin/pair assignments are that pairs 2 and 3 are swapped, a crossover cable may be envisioned as a cable with one modular connector following T568A and the other T568B (see Jack crossover wiring). Such a cable will work for 10BASE-T or 100BASE-TX. Gigabit Ethernet (and an early Fast Ethernet variant, 100BASE-T4) use all four pairs and also requires the other two pairs (1 and 4) also to be swapped.

The polarity of each pair is not swapped, but the pairs crossed as a unit: the two wires within each pair are not crossed.

 

Crossover cable pinouts

Crossover cable connecting two MDI ports

In practice, it does not matter if non-crossover Ethernet cables are wired as T568A or T568B, just so long as both ends follow the same wiring format. Typical commercially available "pre-wired" cables can follow either format depending on the manufacturer. What this means is that one manufacturer's cables are wired one way and another's the other way, yet both are correct and will work. In either case, T568A or T568B, a normal (un-crossed) cable will have both ends wired according to the layout in the Connection 1 column.

Although the Gigabit crossover is defined in the Gigabit Ethernet standard, in practice all Gigabit PHYs feature an auto-MDIX capability and are designed for compatibility with the existing 100BASE-TX crossovers. The IEEE-specified Gigabit crossover is generally seen as unnecessary.

Certain equipment or installations, including those in which phone and/or power are mixed with data in the same cable, may require that the "non-data" pairs 1 and 4 (pins 4, 5, 7 and 8) remain un-crossed.

Two pairs crossed, two pairs uncrossed

10BASE-T or 100BASE-TX crossover

Pin

Connection 1: T568A

Connection 2: T568B

Pins on plug face

signal

pair

color

signal

pair

color

1

BI_DA+

3

white/green stripe

BI_DB+

2

white/orange stripe

2

BI_DA-

3

green solid

BI_DB-

2

orange solid

3

BI_DB+

2

white/orange stripe

BI_DA+

3

white/green stripe

4

1

blue solid

1

blue solid

5

1

white/blue stripe

1

white/blue stripe

6

BI_DB-

2

orange solid

BI_DA-

3

green solid

7

4

white/brown stripe

4

white/brown stripe

8

4

brown solid

4

brown solid

 

 

 

Gigabit T568A crossover

All four pairs crossed

10BASE-T, 100BASE-TX, 100BASE-T4 or 1000BASE-T crossover (shown as T568A)

Pin

Connection 1: T568A

Connection 2: T568A Crossed

Pins on plug face

signal

pair

color

signal

pair

color

1

BI_DA+

3

white/green stripe

BI_DB+

2

white/orange stripe

2

BI_DA-

3

green solid

BI_DB-

2

orange solid

3

BI_DB+

2

white/orange stripe

BI_DA+

3

white/green stripe

4

BI_DC+

1

blue solid

BI_DD+

4

white/brown stripe

5

BI_DC-

1

white/blue stripe

BI_DD-

4

brown solid

6

BI_DB-

2

orange solid

BI_DA-

3

green solid

7

BI_DD+

4

white/brown stripe

BI_DC+

1

blue solid

8

BI_DD-

4

brown solid

BI_DC-

1

white/blue stripe

 

Gigabit T568B crossover

All four pairs crossed

10BASE-T, 100BASE-TX, 100BASE-T4 or 1000BASE-T crossover (shown as T568B)

Pin

Connection 1: T568B

Connection 2: T568B Crossed

Pins on plug face

signal

pair

color

signal

pair

color

1

BI_DA+

2

white/orange stripe

BI_DB+

3

white/green stripe

2

BI_DA-

2

orange solid

BI_DB-

3

green solid

3

BI_DB+

3

white/green stripe

BI_DA+

2

white/orange stripe

4

BI_DC+

1

blue solid

BI_DD+

4

white/brown stripe

5

BI_DC-

1

white/blue stripe

BI_DD-

4

brown solid

6

BI_DB-

3

green solid

BI_DA-

2

orange solid

7

BI_DD+

4

white/brown stripe

BI_DC+

1

blue solid

8

BI_DD-

4

brown solid

BI_DC-

1

white/blue stripe

 

 

Automatic crossover

Introduced in 1998, this made the distinction between uplink and normal ports and manual selector switches on older hubs and switches obsolete. If one or both of two connected devices has the automatic MDI/MDI-X configuration feature, there is no need for crossover cables.

Although Auto-MDIX was specified as an optional feature in the 1000BASE-T standard, in practice it is implemented widely on most interfaces.

Besides the eventually agreed upon Automatic MDI/MDI-X, this feature may also be referred to by various vendor-specific terms including: Auto uplink and trade, Universal Cable Recognition and Auto Sensing.

 

Source : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethernet_crossover_cable