Brochure/Catalogue
FO (Fibre-optic cables)
Fibre-optic cables provide an alternative transmission 
medium to copper. A distinction is made between pure 
glass bres (GOF: multimode/singlemode), combined bres 
(PCF/HCS) and plastic bres (POF). They are primarily used 
because of their insensitivity to electromagnetic interference, 
but also, in the case GOF, on account of the signicantly 
longer cable lengths compared to copper. 
The bres are usually dened according to the core/
sheathing diameter in microns (µm):
GOF/MM: 50/125 or 62.5/125
GOF/SM: 9/125
PCF: 200/230
POF: 980/1000
Conventional bre-optic connector standards include SC 
Duplex, SC-RJ, LC Duplex and ST (also BFOC).
Forwarding
The process whereby frames are relayed from one port to 
another in the switch.
Frame
A frame is a data transmission frame on the link layer 
(layer 2 in the OSI model), which includes the header and 
trailer information that the bits transmission layer requires 
for transmission. All frame formats together form the start 
delimiter of a frame, the destination and source address 
(destination and source address), the data itself and an 
errorchecking device (a frame check sequence). A maximum 
of 1500 bytes, with VPN-information of 1524 bytes of 
payload data per packet are possible in the Ethernet.
Full Duplex Operation
In full duplex operation or duplex operation both 
communications partners can communicate bi-directionally 
at the same time.
Gigabit Ethernet
A version of Ethernet operating at a data transmission rate of 
1000 Mbps.
Hub
A hub is a data communications facility (DCE) that makes it 
possible to connect three or more devices in a star topology. 
Modern Ethernet installations hardly use hubs any more 
but use switches for this purpose because of the higher 
network output that occurs as a result and the predictable 
transmission times.
IEEE
Association of American Engineers dealing with norm 
issues.
IGMP snooping
A switch equipped with IGMP (Internet Group Multicast 
Protocol) snooping can check whether join requests for a 
multicast group occur behind the ports. If this is the case, 
the port concerned is accepted in the forward table for this 
group. This reduces the load on the network because the 
switch does not ood all ports with multicast trafc.
Jabber
The jabber messaging protocol is a method in Ethernet 
networks that prevents a station from occupying the 
transmission medium for longer than permitted. The 
jabber function is an element of the IEEE 802.3 standard 
and provides an interrupt mechanism with which a MAU 
(Medium Attachment Unit) is interrupted during the 
transmission process when this transmits data on the cable 
for longer than 30 ms, or the standard dened packet length 
of 1518 bytes is exceeded. SQE (Signal Quality Error) signals 
are sent to the terminal equipment at the same time as 
the interruption and these cause the terminal equipment 
to terminate the data transfer. An error function in which 
a network component continuously sends meaningless 
signals to the network is also known as a jabber.
LAN
(Local Area Network) local network e.g. within a building.
Link Integrity Test
This test ensures that the Ethernet link is connected 
properly and that the signals are transmitted correctly. This 
can be helpful but does not guarantee that the link is fully 
functional.
Link Layer
The link layer in the OSI reference model.
Link Pulse
The NLP pulse is a recognition pulse that is transmitted 
from 10Base-T-stations to 100Base-T stations for auto-
negotiation. The NLP is a periodic pulse with an interval of 
16 +/– 8ms.
LLDP – Link Layer Discovery Protocol
LLDP is a layer-2 protocol in compliance with the 
IEEE-802.1AB standard. It denes the possibilities for 
exchanging information with neighbouring devices. 
Information is periodically sent from supported devices 
to all devices on the network. Neighbouring devices 
which support LLDP are then able to receive this data 
independently.
Glossary
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Technical appendix
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