Industrial Data Communications 4th Edition

Chapter 7 - Wide Area Networks: Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM)

Asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) is also known as cell relay. It is primarily a fiberoptic
transmission system and is highly suitable for that medium as the very small transmission
packet called a “cell” requires it to use hardware routing, switching, and error detection.
Data is transmitted in fifty-three octet packets (cells), with data taking up forty-eight octets
while the remaining five octets are used for header information. ATM was originally scheduled
to have a 155 Mbps data rate, although there are now different rates to suit differing
applications, from 25 Mbps (ATM25) through the 600 Mbps that is envisioned running over
the Metropolitan Area Network (IEEE 802.6). ATM is presently the technology of choice for
carriers and handles voice, video, and data over WANs or LANs with a specified quality of
service (QOS). However, high costs and slowness in developing standards have impeded the
wide adoption of ATMs by anyone but wide area carriers.

Technically, for LAN users ATM LAN emulation allows the ATM connection to appear to be a
token ring or Ethernet connection. The Ethernet (or token ring) packet is then encapsulated
into the cell structure of ATM. When it appears at the other end of the connection it is
appropriately reassembled into an Ethernet (or token ring) packet. ATM is probably more of
a technique for carriers than a LAN methodology, particularly now that 1,000 Mbps
Ethernet is in the process of being standardized. It was widely speculated that ATM would
be the network of the future (particularly where deterministic services are required), yet this
was when 10 Mbps Ethernet was standard. 100 Mbps Ethernet was two to four times as
fast as Desktop ATM and was only a fraction of the cost. Even 1 Gbps Switched Ethernet is
deterministic and has a cost structure lower than ATM. And while many network topologies
and technologies were crowned successors to TCP/IP over Ethernet, 10 Gbps Ethernet is
here. Moreover, 40 Gbps is on the horizon and, along with IPV6, eliminates complaints
about QOS. Although ATM is the primary technology used in B-ISDN, SMDS, and the
Metropolitan Area Network (MAN) and offered by other carriers providing WAN services, 10
Gbps Ethernet over fiberoptic lines though, is becoming a serious, viable contender in the
long-haul business.

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