In computer networking, the interpacket gap ( IPG), also known as interframe spacing, or interframe gap ( IFG), is a pause which may be required between or . Depending on the physical layer protocol or line code used, the pause may be necessary to allow for receiver clock recovery, permitting the receiver to prepare for another packet (e.g. powering up from a low-power state) or another purpose. It may be considered as a specific case of a guard interval.
During data reception, some interpacket gaps may be smaller due to variable network delays, clock tolerances (all speeds), and the presence of repeaters (10 Mbit/s only).
+Ethernet IPG !Ethernet variant !Minimum transmitted IPG !Minimum received IPG | ||
Classic Ethernet | (47 bit times) | |
Fast Ethernet | (96 bit times)IEEE 802.3 Annex 27A Repeater delay consistency requirements | |
Gigabit Ethernet | (64 bit times) | |
2.5 Gigabit Ethernet | (40 bit times) | |
5 Gigabit Ethernet | (40 bit times) | |
10 Gigabit Ethernet | (40 bit times) | |
25 Gigabit Ethernet | (40 bit times) | |
40 Gigabit Ethernet | (8 bit times) | |
50 Gigabit Ethernet | (8 bit times) | |
100 Gigabit Ethernet | (8 bit times) | |
200 Gigabit Ethernet | (8 bit times) | |
400 Gigabit Ethernet | (8 bit times) |
Some manufacturers design adapters transmitting with a smaller interpacket gap for slightly higher data transfer rates. That can lead to data loss when mixed with standard adaptors.
|
|