JOURNAL ARTICLE

<title>Experimental high-speed network</title>

Kevin M. McNeillWilliam P. KleinRichard VercilloYasser H. AlsafadiMiguel V. ParraWilliam J. Dallas

Year: 1993 Journal:   Proceedings of SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering/Proceedings of SPIE Vol: 1899 Pages: 271-275   Publisher: SPIE

Abstract

Many existing local area networking protocols currently applied in medical imaging were originally designed for relatively low-speed, low-volume networking. These protocols utilize small packet sizes appropriate for text based communication. Local area networks of this type typically provide raw bandwidth under 125 MHz. These older network technologies are not optimized for the low delay, high data traffic environment of a totally digital radiology department. Some current implementations use point-to-point links when greater bandwidth is required. However, the use of point-to-point communications for a total digital radiology department network presents many disadvantages. This paper describes work on an experimental multi-access local area network called XFT. The work includes the protocol specification, and the design and implementation of network interface hardware and software. The protocol specifies the Physical and Data Link layers (OSI layers 1 & 2) for a fiber-optic based token ring providing a raw bandwidth of 500 MHz. The protocol design and implementation of the XFT interface hardware includes many features to optimize image transfer and provide flexibility for additional future enhancements which include: a modular hardware design supporting easy portability to a variety of host system buses, a versatile message buffer design providing 16 MB of memory, and the capability to extend the raw bandwidth of the network to 3.0 GHz.

Keywords:
Computer science

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Citation History

Topics

Electric Power Systems and Control
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Advanced Scientific Research Methods
Life Sciences →  Agricultural and Biological Sciences →  Food Science
Advanced Research in Systems and Signal Processing
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Control and Systems Engineering

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