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Re: [802.3_10SPE] Objectives - things we seem to have consensus on



Just sharing an observation. 

 

IF Geoff’s request is honored, THEN you MAY have to  split fast start-up requirements for each P2P and P2MP.  Right?

 

Yong.

 

From: Geoff Thompson [mailto:thompson@xxxxxxxx]
Sent: Friday, October 28, 2016 1:00 PM
To: STDS-802-3-10SPE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [802.3_10SPE] Objectives - things we seem to have consensus on

 

George-

 

My thought was based on the belief that multi-hop and/or P2MP are a very different beast 

from P2P

and thus should have distinctly different objectives.

 

Geoff

 

On Oct 28, 2016, at 12:54 PMPDT, George Zimmerman <george@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

 

There are two reasons, because there are two wording differences:

-          “at least one phy” (15m) vs. “a phy”(1 km):  I don’t want to preclude the 1km phy from working on the 15m link segment, and want to make it clear we could end up with 2 phys that work on the 15m segment, but only one for the 1km link segment.

-          Omitting “point-to-point” on the 15m – While I believe we have consensus that the 1km link is not multi-drop, at this point we have had much discussion and reason to believe that a multi-drop 15m phy would be useful as well as meet the BMP and Economic feasibility CSDs.  Our CSDs and PAR as written do not preclude this.  We need work to specify the multi-drop scenario, and, I believe that requires technical decisions that are beyond the scope of what a study group should be doing (e.g., choosing media access approach).

I could live with the addition of “point-to-point” on the 15m link, but wanted to start general – let’s see what the consensus in the study group is.   

 

My personal belief is that at this point in the objective we can be general, and make room for an additional objective for multi-drop (not multi-hop, which would involve phy termination) links should it be proven out with technical decisions, perhaps refining the wording of this objective at that time.

 

Perhaps you could explain why it would be an error to leave the objective general? (or is it not an error, but a malformed piece of beef? (a ‘misteak’)

 

(FYI, I’m going to be offline now for a while…  don’t read anything into my silence)

 

Thanks for jumping in, Jeff.

-george

 

From: Geoff Thompson [mailto:thompson@xxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Friday, October 28, 2016 12:44 PM
To: George Zimmerman <george@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Geoff Thompson <thompson@xxxxxxxx>; STDS-802-3-10SPE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [802.3_10SPE] Objectives - things we seem to have consensus on

 

George-

 

Why is your wording on your draft 9 and 10 different?

If is because you want to leave things open for multi-hop

I believe that would be a misteak.

Point-to-point links should have separate statements from multi-hop links.

 

Regards,

 

            Geoff

 

 

On Oct 28, 2016, at 11:43 AMPDT, George Zimmerman <george@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

 

I’ve been preparing a presentation to close our objectives, and from the ad hoc discussion, we seem to have consensus on the following objectives. (another few email threads will discuss the ones we need to work).

Please reply whether you have issues with consensus on these, and with some explanation of the concern, or proposed alternative wording.  Please reference the number of the objective in your comment.  These are NOT intended to be all the objectives, just the ones that I have heard general consensus on in the ad hoc.  This way we can have a more efficient meeting in San Antonio.

(the adopted objectives are #1 through 8)

 

  1. Define the performance characteristics of a link segment and at least one PHY to support operation over this link segment with single twisted pair supporting up to four inline connectors using balanced cabling for at least 15 m reach.
  2. Define the performance characteristics of a link segment and a PHY to support point-to-point operation over this link segment with single twisted pair supporting up to 10 inline connectors using balanced cabling for at least 1 km reach
  3. Do not preclude working within an Intrinsically Safe device and system as defined in IEC 60079
  4. Do not preclude the ability to survive automotive and industrial fault conditions (e.g. shorts, over voltage, EMC, ISO16750).
  5. Support fast-startup operation using predetermined configurations which enables the time from power_on**=FALSE to a state capable of transmitting and receiving valid data to be less than 100ms.
  6. Support voltage and current levels for the automotive and industrial environments.

 

 

 

George Zimmerman, Ph.D.

10 Mb/s Single Twisted Pair Ethernet Study Group

President & Principal

CME Consulting, Inc.

Experts in Advanced PHYsical Communications

310-920-3860