The data link layer is level two of
the seven-level OSI model. It responds to service requests from the network layer
and issues service requests to the physical layer.
The data link layer is the layer of the model which ensures that data is transferred
correctly between adjacent network nodes in a wide area network. The data link
layer provides the functional and procedural means to transfer data between
network entities and to detect and possibly correct errors that may occur in
the Physical layer. Examples of data link protocols are Ethernet for local area
networks and PPP, HDLC and ADCCP for point-to-point connections.
The data link is all about getting information from one place to a selection
of other places. At this layer one does not need to be able to go everywhere,
just able to go somewhere else. So in social contact, one needs to know at least
one other person, but not necessarily know Fred Jones of Ohio, USA.
The Data link provides reliable data transfer across the physical link. Frames
are transmitted with the necessary synchronization, error control and flow control.
This layer is made up of two components. The first component is Logical Link
Control. This component determines where one frame of data ends and the next
one starts. In a snail-mail network, each letter is one frame of data, and you
can tell where it begins and ends because it is inside an envelope. You might
also specify that a letter will begin with a phrase like "Dear Sir",
and ends with a phrase like "Yours Sincerely".
The second component is Media Access
Control. This component determines who is allowed to access the media at any
one time. There are generally two forms of media access control: distributed
and centralised. Both of these may be compared to communication between people:
- In a network made up of people
speaking, i.e. a conversation, we look for clues from our fellow talkers to
see if any of them appear to be about to speak. If two people speak at the
same time, they will back off and begin a long and elaborate game of saying
"no, you first".
- In the UK Houses of Parliament,
the speaker determines who can speak at any time and gets to say "order"
very loudly if anybody breaks the rules.
Examples
- ARCnet
- ATM
- Controller Area Network (CAN)
- Econet
- Ethernet
- Fiber Distributed Data Interface
(FDDI)
- Frame Relay
- LocalTalk
- Token ring
- Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)
- Serial Line Internet Protocol
(SLIP) (obsolete)
- StarLan
Interfaces
The data link layer is often implemented
in software as a "network card driver". The operating system will
have a defined software interface between the data link and the network transport
stack above. This interface is not a layer itself, but rather a definition for
interfacing between layers. Examples include:
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