User Manual
Frame Reception
In essence, the frame reception is the same in both operations of half duplex and full duplex, except that
For a received frame, the MAC will check:
1.If it is less than one slotTime in length, i.e. short packet, and if yes, it will be discarded by MAC because, by definition, the valid frame must be longer than the slotTime. If the length of the frame is less than one slotTime, it means there may be a collision happened somewhere or an interface malfunctioned in the LAN. When detecting the case, the MAC drops the packet and goes back to the ready state.
2.If the DA of the received frame exactly matches the physical address that the receiving MAC owns or the multicast address designated to recognize. If not, discards it and the MAC passes the frame to its client and goes back to the ready state.
3.If the frame is too long. If yes, throws it away and reports frame Too Long.
4.If the FCS of the received frame is valid. If not, for 10M and 100M Ethernet, discards the frame. For Gigabit Ethernet or higher speed Ethernet, MAC has to check one more field, i.e. extra bit field, if FCS is invalid. If there is any extra bits existed, which must meet the specification of IEEE802.3. When both FCS and extra bits are valid, the received frame will be accepted, otherwise discards the received frame and reports frameCheckError if no extra bits appended or alignmentError if extra bits appended.
5.If the length/type is valid. If not, discards the packet and reports lengthError.
6.If all five procedures above are ok, then the MAC treats the frame as good and
Publication date: March, 2007
Revision A1
33