Information technology — Telecommunications and information exchange between systems — Local and metropolitan area networks — Specific requirements — Part 3: Standard for Ethernet — Amendment 4: Physical layer specifications and management parameters for 1 Gb/s operation over a single twisted-pair copper cable

Technologies de l'information — Télécommunications et échange d'information entre systèmes — Réseaux locaux et métropolitains — Prescriptions spécifiques — Partie 3: Norme pour Ethernet — Amendement 4: Spécifications des couches physiques et paramètres de gestion pour l'exploitation des interfaces à 1 Go/s sur un seul câble de cuivre à paires torsadées

General Information

Status
Withdrawn
Publication Date
28-Nov-2017
Current Stage
9599 - Withdrawal of International Standard
Completion Date
23-Feb-2021
Ref Project

Relations

Buy Standard

Standard
ISO/IEC/IEEE 8802-3:2017/Amd 4:2017 - Physical layer specifications and management parameters for 1 Gb/s operation over a single twisted-pair copper cable
English language
209 pages
sale 15% off
Preview
sale 15% off
Preview

Standards Content (Sample)

INTERNATIONAL
ISO/IEC/IEEE
STANDARD
8802-3
Second edition
2017-03-01
AMENDMENT 4
2017-11
Information technology —
Telecommunications and information
exchange between systems — Local
and metropolitan area networks —
Specific requirements —
Part 3:
Standard for Ethernet
AMENDMENT 4: Physical layer
specifications and management
parameters for 1 Gb/s operation over a
single twisted-pair copper cable
Technologies de l’information — Télécommunications et échange
d’information entre systèmes — Réseaux locaux et métropolitains —
Prescriptions spécifiques —
Partie 3: Norme pour Ethernet
AMENDEMENT 4: Spécifications des couches physiques et paramètres
de gestion pour l’exploitation des interfaces à 1 Go/s sur un seul câble
de cuivre à paires torsadées
Reference number
ISO/IEC/IEEE 8802-3:2017/Amd.4:2017(E)
©
 IEEE 2016

---------------------- Page: 1 ----------------------
ISO/IEC/IEEE 8802-3:2017/Amd.4:2017(E)
COPYRIGHT PROTECTED DOCUMENT
© IEEE 2016
All rights reserved. Unless otherwise specified, no part of this publication may be reproduced or utilized otherwise in any form
or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, or posting on the internet or an intranet, without prior
written permission. Permission can be requested from either ISO or IEEE at the address below or ISO’s member body in the
country of the requester.
ISO copyright office Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc
Ch. de Blandonnet 8 • CP 401 3 Park Avenue, New York
CH-1214 Vernier, Geneva, Switzerland NY 10016-5997, USA
Tel. +41 22 749 01 11
Fax +41 22 749 09 47
copyright@iso.org stds.ipr@ieee.org
www.iso.org www.ieee.org
ii © IEEE 2016 – All rights reserved

---------------------- Page: 2 ----------------------
ISO/IEC/IEEE 8802-3:2017/Amd.4:2017(E)
Foreword
ISO (the International Organization for Standardization) and IEC (the International Electrotechnical
Commission) form the specialized system for worldwide standardization. National bodies that are
members of ISO or IEC participate in the development of International Standards through technical
committees established by the respective organization to deal with particular fields of technical activity.
ISO and IEC technical committees collaborate in fields of mutual interest. Other international
organizations, governmental and non-governmental, in liaison with ISO and IEC, also take part in the work.
In the field of information technology, ISO and IEC have established a joint technical committee,
ISO/IEC JTC 1.
IEEE Standards documents are developed within the IEEE Societies and the Standards Coordinating
Committees of the IEEE Standards Association (IEEE-SA) Standards Board. The IEEE develops its
standards through a consensus development process, approved by the American National Standards
Institute, which brings together volunteers representing varied viewpoints and interests to achieve the final
product. Volunteers are not necessarily members of the Institute and serve without compensation. While
the IEEE administers the process and establishes rules to promote fairness in the consensus
development process, the IEEE does not independently evaluate, test, or verify the accuracy of any of the
information contained in its standards.
The main task of ISO/IEC JTC 1 is to prepare International Standards. Draft International Standards
adopted by the joint technical committee are circulated to national bodies for voting. Publication as an
International Standard requires approval by at least 75 % of the national bodies casting a vote.
Attention is called to the possibility that implementation of this standard may require the use of subject
matter covered by patent rights. By publication of this standard, no position is taken with respect to the
existence or validity of any patent rights in connection therewith. ISO/IEEE is not responsible for
identifying essential patents or patent claims for which a license may be required, for conducting inquiries
into the legal validity or scope of patents or patent claims or determining whether any licensing terms or
conditions provided in connection with submission of a Letter of Assurance or a Patent Statement and
Licensing Declaration Form, if any, or in any licensing agreements are reasonable or non-discriminatory.
Users of this standard are expressly advised that determination of the validity of any patent rights, and the
risk of infringement of such rights, is entirely their own responsibility. Further information may be obtained
from ISO or the IEEE Standards Association.
ISO/IEC/IEEE 8802-3:2017/Amd.4 was prepared by the LAN/MAN of the IEEE Computer Society
(as IEEE STD 802.3bp-2016). It was adopted by Joint Technical Committee ISO/IEC JTC 1,
Information technology, Subcommittee SC 6, Telecommunications and information exchange
between systems, in parallel with its approval by the ISO/IEC national bodies, under the “fast-track
procedure” defined in the Partner Standards Development Organization cooperation agreement
between ISO and IEEE. IEEE is responsible for the maintenance of this document with participation and
input from ISO/IEC national bodies.
© IEEE 2016 – All rights reserved iii

---------------------- Page: 3 ----------------------
IEEE Std 802.3bp™-2016
(Amendment to
IEEE Std 802.3™-2015
as amended by
IEEE Std 802.3bw™-2015,
IEEE Std 802.3by™-2016, and
IEEE Std 802.3bq™-2016)
IEEE Standard for Ethernet
Amendment 4: Physical Layer Specifications and
Management Parameters for 1 Gb/s Operation over
a Single Twisted-Pair Copper Cable
Sponsor
LAN/MAN Standards Committee
of the
IEEE Computer Society
Approved 30 June 2016
IEEE-SA Standards Board

---------------------- Page: 4 ----------------------
ISO/IEC/IEEE 8802-3:2017/Amd.4:2017(E)
Abstract: This amendment to IEEE Std 802.3-2015 adds point-to-point 1 Gb/s Physical Layer
(PHY) specifications and management parameters for operation on a single twisted-pair copper
cable in an automotive application.
®
Keywords: 1000BASE-T1, Ethernet, IEEE 802 , IEEE 802.3™, IEEE 802.3bp™
The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc.
3 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10016-5997, USA
Copyright © 2016 by The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc.
All rights reserved. Published 9 September 2016. Printed in the United States of America.
IEEE and 802 are registered trademarks in the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office, owned by The Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Incorporated.
Print: ISBN 978-1-5044-2288-8 STD21091
PDF: ISBN 978-1-5044-2289-5 STDPD21091
IEEE prohibits discrimination, harassment, and bullying.
For more information, visit http://www.ieee.org/web/aboutus/whatis/policies/p9-26.html.
No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form, in an electronic retrieval system or otherwise, without the prior written permission
of the publisher.
2
Copyright © 2016 IEEE. All rights reserved.
© IEEE 2016 – All rights reserved

---------------------- Page: 5 ----------------------
ISO/IEC/IEEE 8802-3:2017/Amd.4:2017(E)
Important Notices and Disclaimers Concerning IEEE Standards Documents
IEEE documents are made available for use subject to important notices and legal disclaimers. These notices
and disclaimers, or a reference to this page, appear in all standards and may be found under the heading
“Important Notice” or “Important Notices and Disclaimers Concerning IEEE Standards Documents.”
Notice and Disclaimer of Liability Concerning the Use of IEEE Standards
Documents
IEEE Standards documents (standards, recommended practices, and guides), both full-use and trial-use, are
developed within IEEE Societies and the Standards Coordinating Committees of the IEEE Standards
Association (“IEEE-SA”) Standards Board. IEEE (“the Institute”) develops its standards through a
consensus development process, approved by the American National Standards Institute (“ANSI”), which
brings together volunteers representing varied viewpoints and interests to achieve the final product.
Volunteers are not necessarily members of the Institute and participate without compensation from IEEE.
While IEEE administers the process and establishes rules to promote fairness in the consensus development
process, IEEE does not independently evaluate, test, or verify the accuracy of any of the information or the
soundness of any judgments contained in its standards.
IEEE does not warrant or represent the accuracy or content of the material contained in its standards, and
expressly disclaims all warranties (express, implied and statutory) not included in this or any other
document relating to the standard, including, but not limited to, the warranties of: merchantability; fitness
for a particular purpose; non-infringement; and quality, accuracy, effectiveness, currency, or completeness
of material. In addition, IEEE disclaims any and all conditions relating to: results; and workmanlike effort.
IEEE standards documents are supplied “AS IS” and “WITH ALL FAULTS.”
Use of an IEEE standard is wholly voluntary. The existence of an IEEE standard does not imply that there
are no other ways to produce, test, measure, purchase, market, or provide other goods and services related to
the scope of the IEEE standard. Furthermore, the viewpoint expressed at the time a standard is approved and
issued is subject to change brought about through developments in the state of the art and comments
received from users of the standard.
In publishing and making its standards available, IEEE is not suggesting or rendering professional or other
services for, or on behalf of, any person or entity nor is IEEE undertaking to perform any duty owed by any
other person or entity to another. Any person utilizing any IEEE Standards document, should rely upon his
or her own independent judgment in the exercise of reasonable care in any given circumstances or, as
appropriate, seek the advice of a competent professional in determining the appropriateness of a given IEEE
standard.
IN NO EVENT SHALL IEEE BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL,
EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO:
PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR
BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY,
WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR
OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE PUBLICATION, USE OF, OR RELIANCE
UPON ANY STANDARD, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE AND
REGARDLESS OF WHETHER SUCH DAMAGE WAS FORESEEABLE.
3
Copyright © 2016 IEEE. All rights reserved.
© IEEE 2016 – All rights reserved

---------------------- Page: 6 ----------------------
ISO/IEC/IEEE 8802-3:2017/Amd.4:2017(E)
Translations
The IEEE consensus development process involves the review of documents in English only. In the event
that an IEEE standard is translated, only the English version published by IEEE should be considered the
approved IEEE standard.
Official statements
A statement, written or oral, that is not processed in accordance with the IEEE-SA Standards Board
Operations Manual shall not be considered or inferred to be the official position of IEEE or any of its
committees and shall not be considered to be, or be relied upon as, a formal position of IEEE. At lectures,
symposia, seminars, or educational courses, an individual presenting information on IEEE standards shall
make it clear that his or her views should be considered the personal views of that individual rather than the
formal position of IEEE.
Comments on standards
Comments for revision of IEEE Standards documents are welcome from any interested party, regardless of
membership affiliation with IEEE. However, IEEE does not provide consulting information or advice
pertaining to IEEE Standards documents. Suggestions for changes in documents should be in the form of a
proposed change of text, together with appropriate supporting comments. Since IEEE standards represent a
consensus of concerned interests, it is important that any responses to comments and questions also receive
the concurrence of a balance of interests. For this reason, IEEE and the members of its societies and
Standards Coordinating Committees are not able to provide an instant response to comments or questions
except in those cases where the matter has previously been addressed. For the same reason, IEEE does not
respond to interpretation requests. Any person who would like to participate in revisions to an IEEE
standard is welcome to join the relevant IEEE working group.
Comments on standards should be submitted to the following address:
Secretary, IEEE-SA Standards Board
445 Hoes Lane
Piscataway, NJ 08854 USA
Laws and regulations
Users of IEEE Standards documents should consult all applicable laws and regulations. Compliance with the
provisions of any IEEE Standards document does not imply compliance to any applicable regulatory
requirements. Implementers of the standard are responsible for observing or referring to the applicable
regulatory requirements. IEEE does not, by the publication of its standards, intend to urge action that is not
in compliance with applicable laws, and these documents may not be construed as doing so.
Copyrights
IEEE draft and approved standards are copyrighted by IEEE under U.S. and international copyright laws.
They are made available by IEEE and are adopted for a wide variety of both public and private uses. These
include both use, by reference, in laws and regulations, and use in private self-regulation, standardization,
and the promotion of engineering practices and methods. By making these documents available for use and
adoption by public authorities and private users, IEEE does not waive any rights in copyright to the
documents.
4
Copyright © 2016 IEEE. All rights reserved.
© IEEE 2016 – All rights reserved

---------------------- Page: 7 ----------------------
ISO/IEC/IEEE 8802-3:2017/Amd.4:2017(E)
Photocopies
Subject to payment of the appropriate fee, IEEE will grant users a limited, non-exclusive license to
photocopy portions of any individual standard for company or organizational internal use or individual, non-
commercial use only. To arrange for payment of licensing fees, please contact Copyright Clearance Center,
Customer Service, 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923 USA; +1 978 750 8400. Permission to
photocopy portions of any individual standard for educational classroom use can also be obtained through
the Copyright Clearance Center.
Updating of IEEE Standards documents
Users of IEEE Standards documents should be aware that these documents may be superseded at any time
by the issuance of new editions or may be amended from time to time through the issuance of amendments,
corrigenda, or errata. An official IEEE document at any point in time consists of the current edition of the
document together with any amendments, corrigenda, or errata then in effect.
Every IEEE standard is subjected to review at least every ten years. When a document is more than ten years
old and has not undergone a revision process, it is reasonable to conclude that its contents, although still of
some value, do not wholly reflect the present state of the art. Users are cautioned to check to determine that
they have the latest edition of any IEEE standard.
In order to determine whether a given document is the current edition and whether it has been amended
through the issuance of amendments, corrigenda, or errata, visit the IEEE-SA Website at http://
ieeexplore.ieee.org/Xplore/home.jsp or contact IEEE at the address listed previously. For more information
about the IEEE-SA or IEEE’s standards development process, visit the IEEE-SA Website at http://
standards.ieee.org.
Errata
Errata, if any, for all IEEE standards can be accessed on the IEEE-SA Website at the following URL: http://
standards.ieee.org/findstds/errata/index.html. Users are encouraged to check this URL for errata
periodically.
Patents
Attention is called to the possibility that implementation of this standard may require use of subject matter
covered by patent rights. By publication of this standard, no position is taken by the IEEE with respect to the
existence or validity of any patent rights in connection therewith. If a patent holder or patent applicant has
filed a statement of assurance via an Accepted Letter of Assurance, then the statement is listed on the IEEE-
SA Website at http://standards.ieee.org/about/sasb/patcom/patents.html. Letters of Assurance may indicate
whether the Submitter is willing or unwilling to grant licenses under patent rights without compensation or
under reasonable rates, with reasonable terms and conditions that are demonstrably free of any unfair
discrimination to applicants desiring to obtain such licenses.
Essential Patent Claims may exist for which a Letter of Assurance has not been received. The IEEE is not
responsible for identifying Essential Patent Claims for which a license may be required, for conducting
inquiries into the legal validity or scope of Patents Claims, or determining whether any licensing terms or
conditions provided in connection with submission of a Letter of Assurance, if any, or in any licensing
agreements are reasonable or non-discriminatory. Users of this standard are expressly advised that
determination of the validity of any patent rights, and the risk of infringement of such rights, is entirely their
own responsibility. Further information may be obtained from the IEEE Standards Association.
5
Copyright © 2016 IEEE. All rights reserved.
© IEEE 2016 – All rights reserved

---------------------- Page: 8 ----------------------
ISO/IEC/IEEE 8802-3:2017/Amd.4:2017(E)
Participants
The following individuals were officers and members of the IEEE 802.3 Working Group at the beginning of
the IEEE P802.3bp Working Group ballot. Individuals may have not voted, voted for approval, disapproval,
or abstained on this standard.
David J. Law, IEEE 802.3 Working Group Chair
Adam Healey, IEEE 802.3 Working Group Vice-Chair
Peter Anslow, IEEE 802.3 Working Group Secretary
Steven B. Carlson, IEEE 802.3 Working Group Executive Secretary
Valerie Maguire, IEEE 802.3 Working Group Treasurer
Steven B. Carlson, IEEE P802.3bp 1000BASE-T1 Task Force Chair
Marek Hajduczenia, IEEE P802.3bp 1000BASE-T1 Task Force Editor-in-Chief
Curtis Donahue, IEEE P802.3bp 1000BASE-T1 Task Force PICS Editor
John Abbott Christopher R. Cole Thomas Hogenmueller
Keith Conroy
David Abramson Brian Holden
Shadi Abughazaleh Eugene Dai Rita Horner
Faisal Ahmad Shaoan Dai Bernd Horrmeyer
Dale Amason John D’Ambrosia Victor Hou
J. Michael Andrewartha Mike Darling
Liang-wei Huang
Oleksandr Babenko Yair Darshan Yasuhiro Hyakutake
Kwang-Hyun Baek Piers Dawe Scott Irwin
Fred Dawson
Amrik Bains Kazuhiko Ishibe
Koussalya Balasubramanian Ian Dedic Hideki Isono
Thananya Baldwin Chris Diminico Tom Issenhuth
Denis Beaudoin Thuyen Dinh Kenneth Jackson
Christian Beia Dan Dove Andrew Jimenez
Yakov Belopolsky Mike Dudek Chad Jones
Michael Bennett Nick Duer Peter Jones
Vipul Bhatt David Dwelley
Antony Joseph
William Bliss Frank Effenberger Manabu Kagami
Brad Booth Hesham Elbakoury Upen Kareti
David Estes
Martin Bouda Keisuke Kawahara
David Brandt John Ewen Yasuaki Kawatsu
Ralf-Peter Braun Josef Faller Michael Kelsen
Theodore Brillhart Shahar Feldman Yongbum Kim
Paul Brooks German Feyh Jonathan King
David Brown Alan Flatman Scott Kipp
Matthew Brown Howard Frazier Michael Klempa
Thomas Brown Richard Frosch
Curtis Knittle
Phillip Brownlee Andrew Gardner Shigeru Kobayashi
Juan-Carlos Calderon Mike Gardner Keisuke Kojima
J. Martin Carroll Ali Ghiasi Paul Kolesar
Clark Carty Joel Goergen Tom Kolze
Mandeep Chadha Zhigang Gong Glen Kramer
David Chalupsky Steven Gorshe Hans Lackner
Jacky Chang James Graba Brett Lane
Xin Chang Robert Grow Jeff Lapak
David Chen Mark Gustlin Efstathios Larios
Wheling Cheng
Bernie Hammond Mark Laubach
Ahmad Chini Takehiro Hayashi Greg Le Cheminant
Golam Choudhury David Hess Arthur Lee
Keng Hua Chuang Yasuo Hidaka David Lewis
Peter Cibula Riu Hirai Jon Lewis
6
Copyright © 2016 IEEE. All rights reserved.
© IEEE 2016 – All rights reserved

---------------------- Page: 9 ----------------------
ISO/IEC/IEEE 8802-3:2017/Amd.4:2017(E)
Lei Li John Petrilla Kiyoto Takahata
Mike Peng Li Rick Pimpinella Alexander Tan
Neven Pischl
Shaohua Li
Toshiki Tanaka
Rainer Poehmerer
Thomas Lichtenegger
Mehmet Tazebay
Ru Jian Lin William Powell
Brian Teipen
Robert Lingle Richard Prodan
Geoffrey Thompson
James Liu Rick Rabinovich
Alan Tipper
Saifur Rahman
Zhenyu Liu
Pirooz Tooyserkani
William Lo Adee Ran
Nathan Tracy
Miklos Lukacs Ram Rao
David Tremblay
Kent Lusted Alon Regev
Albert Tretter
Jeffery Maki Duane Remein
Stephen Trowbridge
Victor Renteria
James Malkemus
Wen-Cheng Tseng
Yonatan Malkiman Michael Ressl
Yoshihiro Tsukamoto
Edwin Mallette Poldi (Pavlick) Rimboim
Mike Tu
Arthur Marris Martin Rossbach
Alan Ugolini
Chris Mash Christopher Roth
Ed Ulrichs
Kirsten Matheus Salvatore Rotolo
Sterling A. Vaden
Erdem Matoglu Hisaya Sakamoto
Stefano Valle
Laurence Matola Vineet Salunke
Paul Vanderlaan
Brett Mcclellan Sam Sambasivan
Robert Wagner
Thomas Mcdermott Yasuo Sasaki
Robert Wang
John McDonough Fred Schindler
Roy Wang
Richard Mei Stefan Schneele
Richard Mellitz Peter Scruton Tongtong Wang
Bryan Moffitt Alexander Seiger Xiaofeng Wang
Leo Montreuil Naoshi Serizawa Xinyuan Wang
Paul Mooney Megha Shanbhag
Zhong Feng Wang
Andy Moorwood Masood Shariff
Markus Weber
Thomas Mueller Stephen Shellhammer
Brian Welch
Ron Muir Bazhong Shen
Yang Wen
Dale Murray
Mizuki Shirao
Matthias Wendt
Henry Muyshondt Kapil Shrikhande
Oded Wertheim
Edward Nakamoto Jeff Slavick
Martin White
Gary Nicholl Scott Sommers
Natalie Wienckowski
Paul Nikolich Yoshiaki Sone
Ludwig Winkel
Kevin Noll
Xiaolu Song
Peter Wu
Ronald Nordin Tom Souvignier
Yu Xu
Mark Nowell Bryan Sparrowhawk
Lennart Yseboodt
David Ofelt Edward Sprague
Ting-Fa Yu
Ichiro Ogura
Peter Stassar
Liquan Yuan
Tom Palkert
Leonard Stencel
Hayato Yuki
Hui Pan Robert Stone
Garold Yurko
Sujan Pandey Steve Swanson
Andrew Zambell
Sesha Panguluri Andre Szczepanek
Jin Zhang
Carlos Pardo
William Szeto
Yan Zhuang
Moon Park
Bharat Tailor
George Zimmerman
Petar Pepeljugoski Akio Tajima
Helge Zinner
Gerald Pepper Takayuki Tajima
Ruben Perez De Aranda Alonso Pavel Zivny
Tomoo Takahara
Michael Peters Gaoling Zou
Satoshi Takahashi
7
Copyright © 2016 IEEE. All rights reserved.
© IEEE 2016 – All rights reserved

---------------------- Page: 10 ----------------------
ISO/IEC/IEEE 8802-3:2017/Amd.4:2017(E)
The following members of the individual balloting committee voted on this standard. Balloters may have
voted for approval, disapproval, or abstention.
Shadi Abughazaleh Adam Healey Arumugam Paventhan
Thomas Alexander Marco Hernandez Ruben Perez De Aranda Alonso
David Hess
Richard Alfvin
Michael Peters
Guido Hiertz
Dale Amason
Adee Ran
Peter Anslow Werner Hoelzl
Alon Regev
Butch Anton Rita Horner
Duane Remein
Stefan Aust Tetsushi Ikegami
Maximilian Riegel
Saman Behtash Noriyuki Ikeuchi
Robert Robinson
Jacob Ben Ary Sergiu Iordanescu
Benjamin Rolfe
Michael Bennett Atsushi Ito
Nicola Scantamburlo
Gennaro Boggia Michael Johas Teener
Frank Schewe
Christian Boiger Vincent Jones
Dieter Schicketanz
Adri Jovin
Ralf-Peter Braun
Stefan Schneele
Nancy Bravin Shinkyo Kaku
Shusaku Shimada
Theodore Brillhart Piotr Karocki
Kapil Shrikhande
William Bush John Kay
Ju-Hyung Son
Jairo Bustos Heredia Stuart Kerry
Thomas Starai
William Byrd Yongbum Kim
Peter Stassar
Steven B. Carlson Scott Kipp
Eugene Stoudenmire
Juan Carreon Bruce Kraemer
Mandeep Chadha Mark Laubach Walter Struppler
David J. Law
Minho Cheong Mitsutoshi Sugawara
Ahmad Chini David Lewis
Patricia Thaler
Keng Hua Chuang Jon Lewis
David Thompson
Peter Cibula Arthur H. Light
Geoffrey Thompson
Charles Cook William Lo
Michael Thompson
Rodney Cummings Michael Lynch
Sterling A. Vaden
Shaoan Dai Elvis Maculuba
Dmitri Varsanofiev
John D’Ambrosia Valerie Maguire
Prabodh Varshney
Christopher Diminico Jeffery Maki
George Vlantis
Daniel Dove Arthur Marris
Stephen Webb
Sourav Dutta Michael Maytum
Hung-Yu Wei
Liu Fangfang Brett Mcclellan
Natalie Wienckowski
German Feyh Richard Mellitz
Andreas Wolf
Matthias Fritsche Bryan Moffitt
Peter Wu
Yukihiro Fujimoto Charles Moorwood
Oren Yuen
James Graba Henry Muyshondt
Andrew Zambell
Randall Groves Michael Newman
Zhen Zhou
Robert Grow Nick S. A. Nikjoo
Marek Hajduczenia George Zimmerman
Satoshi Obara
8
Copyright © 2016 IEEE. All rights reserved.
© IEEE 2016 – All rights reserved

---------------------- Page: 11 ----------------------
ISO/IEC/IEEE 8802-3:2017/Amd.4:2017(E)
When the IEEE-SA Standards Board approved this standard on 30 June 2016, it had the following
membership:
Jean-Philippe Faure, Chair
Ted Burse, Vice Chair
John D. Kulick, Past Chair
Konstantinos Karachalios, Secretary
Chuck Adams Gary Hoffman Mehmet Ulema
Masayuki Ariyoshi Michael Janezic Yingli Wen
Stephen Dukes Joseph L. Koepfinger* Howard Wolfman
Don Wright
Jianbin Fan Hung Ling
Yu Yuan
Ronald W. Hotchkiss Kevin Lu
Daidi Zhong
J. Travis Griffith Gary Robinson
Annette D. Reilly
*Member Emeritus
9
Copyright © 2016 IEEE. All rights reserved.
© IEEE 2016 – All rights reserved

---------------------- Page: 12 ----------------------
ISO/IEC/IEEE 8802-3:2017/Amd.4:2017(E)
Introduction
This introduction is not part of IEEE Std 802.3bp™-2016, IEEE Standard for Ethernet—Amendment 4: Physical
Layer Specifications and Management Parameters for 1 Gb/s Operation over a Single Twisted-Pair Copper Cable.
IEEE Std 802.3 was first published in 1985. Since the initial publication, many projects have added
functionality or provided maintenance updates to the specifications and text included in the standard. Each
IEEE 802.3 project/amendment is identified with a suffix (e.g., IEEE Std 802.3ba™-2010).
The half-duplex Media Access Control (MAC) protocol specified in IEEE Std 802.3-1985 is Carrier Sense
Multiple Access with Collision Detection (CSMA/CD). This MAC protocol was key to the experimental
Ethernet developed at Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, which had a 2.94 Mb/s data rate. Ethernet at
10 Mb/s was jointly released as a public specification by Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC), Intel, and
Xerox in 1980. Ethernet at 10 Mb/s was approved as an IEEE standard by the IEEE Standards Board in 1983
and subsequently published in 1985 as IEEE Std 802.3-1985. Since 1985, new media options, new speeds of
operation, and new capabilities have been added to IEEE Std 802.3. A full duplex MAC protocol was added
in 1997.
Some of the major additions to IEEE Std 802.3 are identified in the marketplace with their project number.
This is most common for projects adding higher speeds of operation or new protocols. For example,
IEEEStd 802.3u™ added 100 Mb/s operation (also called Fast Ethernet), IEEE Std 802.3z™ added
1000 Mb/s operation (also called Gigabit Ethernet), IEEE Std 802.3ae™ added 10 Gb/s operation (also
called 10 Gigabit Ethernet), IEEE Std 802.3ah™ specified access network Ethernet (also called Ethernet in
the First Mile), and IEEE Std 802.3ba added 40 Gb/s operation (also called 40 Gigabit Ethernet) and
100 Gb/s operation (also called 100 Gigabit Ethernet). These major additions are all now included in and are
superseded by IEEE Std 802.3-2015 and are not maintained as separate documents.
At the date of IEEEStd802.3bp-2016 publication, IEEEStd802.3 is composed of the following
documents:
IEEE Std 802.3-2015
Section One—Includes Clause 1 through Clause 20 and Annex A through Annex H and Annex 4A.
Section One includes the specifications for 10 Mb/s operation and the MAC, frame formats, and
service interfaces used for all speeds of operation.
Section Two—Includes Clause 21 through Clause 33 and Annex 22A through Annex 33E. Section
Two includes management attributes for multiple protocols and speed of operation as well as
specifications for providing power over twisted-pair cabling for multiple operational speeds. It also
includes general information on 100 Mb/s operation as well as most of the 100 Mb/s Physical Layer
specifications.
Section Three—Includes Clause 34 through Clause 43 and Annex 36A through Annex 43C. Section
Three includes general information on 1000 Mb/s operation as well as most of the 1000 Mb/s Physical
Layer specifications.
Section Four—Includes Clause 44 through Clause 55 and Annex 44A through Annex 55B. Section
Four includes general information on 10 Gb/s operation as well as most of the 10 Gb/s Physical Layer
specifications.
10
Copyright © 2016 IEEE. All rights reserved.
© IEEE 2016 – All rights reserved

---------------------- Page: 13 ----------------------
ISO/IEC/IEEE 8802-3:2017/Amd.4:2017(E)
Section Five—Includes Clause 56 through Clause 77 and Annex 57A through Annex 76A. Clause 56
through Clause 67 and Clause 75 through Clause 77, as well as associated annexes, specify subscriber
access and other Physical Layers and sublayers for operation from 512 kb/s to 10 Gb/s, and defines
services and protocol elements that enable the exchange of IEEE 802.3 format frames between stations
in a subscriber access network. Clause 68 specifies a 10 Gb/s Physical Layer specification. Clause 69
through Clause 74 and associated annexes specify Ethernet operation over electrical backplanes at
speeds of 1000 Mb/s and 10 Gb/s.
Section Six—Includes Clause 78 through Clause 95 and Annex 83A through Annex 93C. Clause 78
specifies Energy-Efficient Ethernet. Clause 79 specifies IEEE 802.3 Organizationally Specific Link
Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP) type, length, and value (TLV) information elements. Clause 80
through Clause95 and associated annexes include general information on 40 Gb/s and 100 Gb/s
operation as well the 40 Gb/s and 100 Gb/s Physical Layer specifications. Clause 90 specifies Ethernet
support for time synchronization protocols.
IEEE Std 802.3bw-2015
Amendment 1—This amendm
...

Questions, Comments and Discussion

Ask us and Technical Secretary will try to provide an answer. You can facilitate discussion about the standard in here.