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  2. Frame (networking) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frame_(networking)

    Frames are the result of the final layer of encapsulation before the data is transmitted over the physical layer. [1] A frame is "the unit of transmission in a link layer protocol, and consists of a link layer header followed by a packet." [2] Each frame is separated from the next by an interframe gap. A frame is a series of bits generally ...

  3. Network packet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_packet

    A data unit at layer 2, the data link layer, is a frame. In layer 4, the transport layer , the data units are segments and datagrams . Thus, in the example of TCP/IP communication over Ethernet , a TCP segment is carried in one or more IP packets , which are each carried in one or more Ethernet frames .

  4. Ethernet frame - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethernet_frame

    Ethernet packet. The SFD (start frame delimiter) marks the end of the packet preamble. It is immediately followed by the Ethernet frame, which starts with the destination MAC address. [1] In computer networking, an Ethernet frame is a data link layer protocol data unit and uses the underlying Ethernet physical layer transport

  5. Protocol data unit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protocol_data_unit

    Protocol data units of the OSI model are: [1] The Layer 4: transport layer PDU is the segment or the datagram. The Layer 3: network layer PDU is the packet. The Layer 2: data link layer PDU is the frame. The Layer 1: physical layer PDU is the bit or, more generally, symbol.

  6. 802.11 frame types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/802.11_Frame_Types

    It is set to 1 in a non-QoS data frame transmitted by a non-QoS WLAN station to indicate the frame being transmitted is using Strictly-Ordered service class (this use is obsolete and will be removed from the future 802.11 Standard).

  7. Data link layer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_link_layer

    The data link layer is concerned with local delivery of frames between nodes on the same level of the network. Data-link frames, as these protocol data units are called, do not cross the boundaries of a local area network. Inter-network routing and global addressing are higher-layer functions, allowing data-link protocols to focus on local ...

  8. Broadcast, unknown-unicast and multicast traffic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broadcast,_unknown-unicast...

    In this case the switch marks the frame for flooding and sends it to all forwarding ports within the respective VLAN. Forwarding this type of traffic can create unnecessary traffic that leads to poor network performance or even a complete loss of network service. [6] This flooding of packets is known as a unicast flooding. [7] [5]

  9. Frame synchronization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frame_synchronization

    Individual frames are then "minor frames" within that superframe. Each frame contains a subframe ID (often a simple counter) which identifies its position within the superframe. A second frame synchronizer establishes superframe synchronization. This allows subcommutation, where some data is sent less frequently than every frame.