Industrial Data Communications 4th Edition

Chapter 7 - Wide Area Networks: Packet Switching

Packet switching is the process of breaking up a digital information stream into packets. Each
packet will have its destination (and source) address included in it, perhaps with control and
data as well. Obviously, these items must be arranged in a specific format. CCITT (now ITUITS,
International Telecommunications Union-International Telecommunications Standards)
Recommendation X.25 concerns a packet-switching scheme to be used over the public
network. It has specific controls and is generated in a Packet Assembly/Disassembly Device
(PAD). X.25 uses a statistical multiplex technique that adds packet headers to the user's data.
The PAD breaks a message up into small packets, each addressed to the destination, and
inserts them into the transmission channel when it is available. Each step is connection oriented
in that a Logical Channel Number (LCN) (recyclable) is assigned when the packet is
transmitted from the originating station to the network cloud. See figure 7-6 for the X.25
packet switching layout. At the receive end of the cloud, the packets are then transmitted to
the receiver, with another LCN assigned to them.

Figure 7-6. X.25 Packet Switching Layout

The receive end then reassembles the message from the packets. Various data speeds can be
used; however, 56 Kbps is the highest, and others are a submultiple of 64 Kbps. Typically, only
virtual circuit service is used, and that is a connection-oriented service.

To review, in connection-oriented transmissions, a destination is set up, and the packets are
routed to that source in the same sequence in which they were generated, even if it means
the packets must be stored at one point while they wait for an available path. Connectionless
service allows the packets to be routed by the available path, and they may arrive at the destination
out of sequence. It is the responsibility of the receiving device to reassemble the
packets in the correct order. (This could be tough on real-time voice or television.)

X.25 uses an HDLC (point-to-point) frame in which a protocol data unit (PDU) is enclosed.
Packet switching is performed on the public switched network, although it could doubtless
be used on private networks. X.25 is supposedly available everywhere (in theory) as a data
network. And since these data packets can exist with a digital voice scheme, they become
the basis for an integrated network of voice and data. Though the public switched network
and packet switching itself are viable, proven technologies, they are not presently configured
to meet the needs of industrial data communications in that they are not inherently
deterministic. A small amount of time researching X.25 with an Internet search engine will
reveal many good texts relating to X.25 and packet switching in general, and the reader is
referred to them for further investigation
.

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