1996
DOI: 10.1016/0923-4748(96)00003-3
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ATM networks and their applications at the NASA Lewis Research Center A case study

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The transmission delay is controlled by the ring's TTRT, which guarantees each station to have a chance to transmit its synchronous packets at least once every 2*TTRT (in the worst case). It is also ensure the average time between two consecutive token's visit to a station not to exceed the TTRT [6,[58][59][60]. The bandwidth of synchronous traffic for station i to transmit is guaranteed by assigning the station i a portion of the ring's TTRT, called Synchronous Allocation (SAi).…”
Section: Scope Of the Problemmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The transmission delay is controlled by the ring's TTRT, which guarantees each station to have a chance to transmit its synchronous packets at least once every 2*TTRT (in the worst case). It is also ensure the average time between two consecutive token's visit to a station not to exceed the TTRT [6,[58][59][60]. The bandwidth of synchronous traffic for station i to transmit is guaranteed by assigning the station i a portion of the ring's TTRT, called Synchronous Allocation (SAi).…”
Section: Scope Of the Problemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It allows to build high speed networks that span up to 100 Km. The MAC of the FDDI is operated according to the so-called Timed Token Rotation (TTR) protocol [5,6]. During ring initialization process, a protocol parameter called Target Token Rotation Time (TTRT) is determined, which indicates the expected target token rotation time.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%