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Chapter 7

Error Detection and Correction


Types of error Detection Correction

7.1 Types of Errors

Single bit error only one bit is changed from 1 to 0 or from 0 to 1.

Burst error two or more bits in the data unit have changed.

7.2 Detection

Error detection uses the concepts of redundancy, which means adding extra bits detecting errors at the destination.

3 common error detection techniques

Parity Check (most basic)

Checksum
(used primarily by upper layers)

Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC)

(normally implemented in link layer)

Parity check: 2 method

VRC Vertical Redundancy Check LRC Longitudanal Redundancy Check Redundancy ????

Parity : 2 type

Odd parity Even parity

Parity Check

Simplest technique. A redundant bit (parity bit), is appended to every data unit. Even parity - the total number of 1's in the data plus parity bit must be an even number.

Even Parity Generator


Data 0110110 0011111 0000000 1010100 1111111 #1's in data 4 (Even) 5 (Odd) 0 (Even) 3 (Odd) 7 (Odd) P 0 1 0 1 1 Total # 1's (data and P) 4 (Even) 6 (Even) 0 (Even) 4 (Even) 8 (Even)

example

Vertical Redundancy Check (VRC)

Example 1
Even Parity
Suppose the sender wants to send the word world. In ASCII the five characters are coded as 1110111 1101111 1110010 1101100 1100100

The following shows the actual bits sent


11101110 11011110 11100100 11011000 11001001

Example 2
Even Parity
Now suppose the word world in Example 1 is received by the receiver without being corrupted in transmission. 11101110 11011110 11100100 11011000 11001001

The receiver counts the 1s in each character and comes up with even numbers (6, 6, 4, 4, 4). The data are accepted.

Example 3
Even Parity
Now suppose the word world in Example 1 is corrupted during transmission. 11111110 11011110 11101100 11011000 11001001

The receiver counts the 1s in each character and comes up with even and odd numbers (7, 6, 5, 4, 4). The receiver knows that the data are corrupted, discards them, and asks for retransmission.

VRC Performance

VRC can detect all single-bit errors. It can also detect burst errors as long as the total number of bits changed is odd (1,3,5etc) How bout if the total number of bit changed is even ??? Yea.. There is problem !!! In short VRC can detect all single-bit errors. It can detect burst errors only if the total number of errors in each data unit is odd.

LONGITUDINAL REDUNDANCY CHECK (LRC)


IN longitudinal redundancy check LRC, a block of bits is divided into rows and a redundant row of bits is added to the whole block

Original data
11100111 11011101 00111001 10101001

11100111
11011101 00111001 10101001 ----------------1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 LRC 11100111 11011101 00111001 10101001 10101010

The above is the original data plus LRC

e.g. problem in LRC


Suppose the following block is sent 10101001 00111001 11011101 11100111 10101010 (LRC) However, it is hit by a burst noise of length eight and some bits are corrupted. 10100011 10001001 11011101 11100111 10101010 (LRC) When the receiver checks the LRC, some of the bits do not follow the evenparity rule and the whole block is discarded (the nonmatching bits are shown in blue)

10100011 10001001 11011101 11100111 10101010 (LRC)

Performance of LRC

LRC increases the likelihood of detecting burst errors. As we showed in the previous e.g. an LRC of n bits can easily detect a burst error of n bits. A burst error of more than n bits is also detected by LRC with a very high probability.

-note for Jabatan Tanah daerah Temerloh Mr. Hakim (2004 co)

7.5 CRC

The most powerful of the redundancy checking technique. Based on binary division. The redundancy bits used by CRC are derived by dividing the data unit by a predetermined divisor; the remainder is the CRC. A CRC must: have exactly one less bit than the divisor appending it to the end of the data string must make the resulting bit sequence exactly divisible by the divisor.

7.9

CRC generator and checker

1. 2. 3.

Receive the frame. Divide it by divisor. Check the reminder.

1. 2. 3. 4.

Get the raw frame. Left shift the raw frame by n bits and divide it by divisor. The remainder is the CRC bit. Append the CRC bit to the frame and transmit.

Figure 10.15 Division in CRC encoder

Figure 10.16 Division in the CRC decoder for two cases

7.5 CRC

CRC generator at the sending node. CRC checker at the receiving node. Polynomial: The CRC generator (the divisor) is most often represented as an algebraic polynomial. e.g.

7.13

A polynomial representing a divisor

Table 7.2 Standard polynomials


Name CRC-8 CRC-10 Polynomial x8 + x2 + x + 1 x10 + x9 + x5 + x4 + x 2 + 1 Application ATM header ATM AAL

ITU-16
ITU-32

x16 + x12 + x5 + 1
x32 + x26 + x23 + x22 + x16 + x12 + x11 + x10 + x8 + x7 + x5 + x4 + x2 + x + 1

HDLC
LANs

7.6 Checksum

The error detection used by the higher-layer protocols. Check generator in the sending node Checksum checker at receiving node

Ethernet frame

Checksum generator
In the sender, the checksum generator subdivides the data unit into equal segments of n bits (usually 16). These segments are added together using ones complement arithmetic in such a way that the total is also n bits long. The total(sum) is then complemented and appended to the end of the original data unit as redundancy bits, called checksum field. The extended data unit is transmitted across the network. So if the sum of the data segment is T, the checksum will be -T

7.15

Data unit and checksum

Checksum checker

The receiver subdivides the data unit as above and adds all segments together and complements the result. If the extended data unit is intact, the total value found by adding the data segments and the checksum field shud be zero. If the result is not zero, the packet contains an error and the receiver rejects it.

The sender follows these steps:

The unit is divided into k sections, each of n bits All sections are added together using ones complement to get the sum. The sum is complemented and becomes the checksum. The checksum is sent with the data.

The receiver follows these steps

The unit is divided into k sections, each of n bits. All sections are added together using ones complement to get the sum. The sum is complemented. If the result is zero, the data are accepted. Otherwise, they are rejected.

Example 6
Suppose the following block of 16 bits is to be sent using a checksum of 8 bits.
10101001 00111001

The numbers are added using ones complement


10101001 00111001 -----------11100010 00011101

Sum Checksum

The pattern sent is

10101001 00111001 00011101

Example 7
Now suppose the receiver receives the pattern sent in Example 6 and there is no error.
10101001 00111001 00011101

When the receiver adds the three sections, it will get all 1s, which, after complementing, is all 0s and shows that there is no error.
10101001

00111001
00011101 ------------

Sum
Complement

11111111
00000000 means that the pattern is OK.

Example 8
Now suppose there is a burst error of length 5 that affects 4 bits. Original data 10101001 00111001 00011101

Corrupted data

10101111 11111001 00011101


10101111

When the receiver adds the three sections, it gets

11111001
00011101 Partial Sum 1 11000101

Carry
Sum Complement

1
11000110 00111001 the pattern is corrupted.

7.7 Error Correction


Hamming Code

Focus on Correction

simple

case:

Single-Bit

Error

Use the relationship redundancy bits

between

data

and

Developed by Richard Hamming

Data and redundancy bits


Number of data bits m Number of redundancy bits r Total bits m+r

1
2 3 4 5 6 7

2
3 3 3 4 4 4

3
5 6 7 9 10 11

To calculate the no. of redundancy bits use : 2r m + r + 1

Positions of redundancy bits in Hamming code (11,7)

* Check bits occupy positions that are powers of 2 In the Hamming code, each r bit is the VRC bit for one combination of data bits: r1 is the VRC bit for one combination of data bits, r2 is the VRC bit for another combination of data bits, and so on. The combinations used to calculate each of the four r values for a seven-bit data sequence are as follows: r1 : bits 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11 r2 : bits 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11 r4 : bits 4, 5, 6, 7 r5 : bits 8, 9, 10, 11

All bit positions that are powers of 2 are used as parity bits. (positions 1, 2, 4, 8) All other bit positions are for the data to be encoded. (positions 3, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11) Each parity bit calculates the parity for some of the bits in the code word. The position of the parity bit determines the sequence of bits that it alternately checks and skips. General rule for position n: skip n1 bits, check n bits, skip n bits, check n bits...
Position 1 (n=1): skip 0 bit (0=n1), check 1 bit (n), skip 1 bit (n), check 1 bit (n), skip 1 bit (n), etc. (1,3,5,7,9,11...) Position 2 (n=2): skip 1 bit (1=n1), check 2 bits (n), skip 2 bits (n), check 2 bits (n), skip 2 bits (n), etc. (2,3,6,7,10,11...) Position 4 (n=4): skip 3 bits (3=n1), check 4 bits (n), skip 4 bits (n), check 4 bits (n), skip 4 bits (n), etc. (4,5,6,7,12...) Position 8 (n=8): skip 7 bits (7=n1), check 8 bits (n), skip 8 bits (n), check 8 bits (n), skip 8 bits (n), etc. (8-15,24-31,40-47,...)

7.18

Redundancy bits calculation

r1 will take care of these


bits

1011 11

1001 9

0111 7

0101 5

0011 3

0001 1

r8

r4

r2

r1

r2 will take care of these bits

1011

1010

0111

0110

0011

0010

11
d

10
d d r8

7 d

6 d d r4

3 d

2 r2 r1

r4 will take care of these bits

0111

0110

0101

0100

7 d d d r8 d

6 d

5 d

4 r4 d r2 r1

r8 will take care of these bits

1011

1010

1001

1000

11
d

10
d

9 d

8
r8 d d d r4 d r2 r1

7.19

Example of redundancy bit calculation

7.20

Single-Bit Error

7.21b Error detection using Hamming code

Error Detection

Example Question

The data is 1011011 Add the parity bit. ???????????????

Consider the transmitted data to be 00101010111. Show how the error bit position is determined ???????????????

answer

The data is 1011011

1. Add the parity bit.

10101010111
2. Consider the transmitted data to be 00101010111. Show how the error bit position is determined.

1011 = 11

THANK YOU

Hakim for Jab parit dan Saliran daerah Temerloh

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