Справочник Пользователя для Siemens 2000592-001

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Definitions, 
Continued
 
 
A Late Collision is one that occurs after the first 64 bytes in a frame or 
packet. Since the smallest Ethernet frame (packet) is 64 bytes in length, 
late collisions will not be detected on small packets. Ethernet controllers 
do not retransmit packets with late collisions resulting in lost packets. 
Late Collisions usually appear as a bad FCS frame. The only time a late 
collision can be detected on a 10BaseT network is when the detecting 
device is transmitting at the same time. 
Late Collision 
The CRC (Cycle Redundancy Check) remainder transmitted at the end 
of a frame. A FCS error is a legal sized Ethernet frame with a bad frame 
check sequence. 
FCS - Frame Check 
Sequence Error 
Ghosts are energy on the cable that appears to be a frame, but does not 
have a valid beginning of frame pattern (start delimiter 10101011). 
Ground loops and other wiring problems cause some repeaters to 
believe that a frame is being received. Since the repeater is only reacting 
to an AC voltage riding on the cable, there is not a valid frame to pass 
along. The repeater, however, transmits this energy along the network. 
This may be a jam pattern or a very long preamble. Ghosts events 
consume bandwidth and can slow down a network. Ghosts are the result 
of network elements reacting to noise. The effect of noise on network 
wiring is indeterminate. Some network devices will react while others will 
not. Ghosts cause random events and can be hard to correct. 
Ghosts 
The term Jabber refers to an Ethernet frame that is greater than the 
maximum legal size (Greater than 1518 bytes). Many 10BaseT HUBS 
will partition a port that is jabbering. 
Jabber 
 
58  
  Glossary 
2000592-001