| Jenny
Hello there. It appears that you have fallen victim to the ol'
analogue/digital phase lock loop problem. May sound like a likley story but
here it is. The early 90 series repeater, the 90c being on of them implements
what is known as digital phase lock loop circuitry. This prevents any
packet that is generated by an analogue phase lock loop device from being
passed.
And yes, you guessed it, the xircom cards use the analogue phase lock loop
circuitry, and so do the dempr's. The only solution is to use, a later series
90 repeater, such as the 90ts, or a dempr. If you would like to discus this
further or it still makes no sense then drop me a mail.
Kernel::frekes.
Regards
Steven Freke
LAN Team
UK CSC
833 3017
[Posted by WWW Notes gateway]
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| Re: .1, I believe Steven was mislead, or at least someone overstated the case.
There is no inoperability issue between devices solely because one uses analog
based PLL's and the other uses a digital circuit. The actual issue is that
some ethernet devices, most frequently low cost NICs, do not comply to the
timing specifications of 802.3. We are not currently aware of any situation
where "in spec" devices, regardless of their PLL technology, fail to communicate
with each other.
The issue that Steven alluded to, and what is discussed in greater detail in
2906, is that the analog based repeaters are more "tolerant" to out-of-spec
devices (i.e. NICs) than are the digital PLL based repeaters.
Please refer to 2906 for more detail.
/mj
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