10.1 Chapter 10 Error Detection and Correction.. 10.2 Data can be corrupted during transmission....
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Transcript of 10.1 Chapter 10 Error Detection and Correction.. 10.2 Data can be corrupted during transmission....
10.1
Chapter 10
Error Detection and
Correction
.
10.2
Data can be corrupted during transmission.
Some applications require that errors be detected and corrected.
Note
10.3
10-1 INTRODUCTION10-1 INTRODUCTION
Let us first discuss some issues related, directly or Let us first discuss some issues related, directly or indirectly, to error detection and correction.indirectly, to error detection and correction.
Types of ErrorsRedundancyDetection Versus CorrectionForward Error Correction Versus RetransmissionCodingModular Arithmetic
Topics discussed in this section:Topics discussed in this section:
10.4
In a single-bit error, only 1 bit in the data unit has changed.
Note
10.5
Figure 10.1 Single-bit error
10.6
A burst error means that 2 or more bits in the data unit have changed.
Note
10.7
Figure 10.2 Burst error of length 8
10.8
To detect or correct errors, we need to send extra (redundant) bits with data.
Note
10.9
Figure 10.3 The structure of encoder and decoder
10.10
In modulo-N arithmetic, we use only the integers in the range 0 to N −1, inclusive.
Note
10.11
Figure 10.4 XORing of two single bits or two words
10.12
10-2 BLOCK CODING10-2 BLOCK CODING
In block coding, we divide our message into blocks, In block coding, we divide our message into blocks, each of k bits, called each of k bits, called datawordsdatawords. We add r redundant . We add r redundant bits to each block to make the length n = k + r. The bits to each block to make the length n = k + r. The resulting n-bit blocks are called resulting n-bit blocks are called codewordscodewords..
Error DetectionError CorrectionHamming DistanceMinimum Hamming Distance
Topics discussed in this section:Topics discussed in this section:
10.13
Figure 10.5 Datawords and codewords in block coding
10.14
The 4B/5B block coding is a good example of this type of coding. In this coding scheme, k = 4 and n = 5. As we saw, we have 2k = 16 datawords and 2n = 32 codewords. We saw that 16 out of 32 codewords are used for message transfer and the rest are either used for other purposes or unused.
Example 10.1
10.15
Figure 10.6 Process of error detection in block coding
10.16
Let us assume that k = 2 and n = 3. Table 10.1 shows the list of datawords and codewords. Later, we will see how to derive a codeword from a dataword.
Assume the sender encodes the dataword 01 as 011 andsends it to the receiver. Consider the following cases:
1. The receiver receives 011. It is a valid codeword. The receiver extracts the dataword 01 from it.
Example 10.2
10.17
2. The codeword is corrupted during transmission, and 111 is received. This is not a valid codeword and is discarded.
3. The codeword is corrupted during transmission, and 000 is received. This is a valid codeword. The receiver incorrectly extracts the dataword 00. Two corrupted bits have made the error undetectable.
Example 10.2 (continued)
10.18
Table 10.1 A code for error detection (Example 10.2)
10.19
An error-detecting code can detect only the types of errors for which it is designed; other types of errors may
remain undetected.
Note
10.20
Figure 10.7 Structure of encoder and decoder in error correction
10.21
The Hamming distance between two words is the number of differences
between corresponding bits.
Note
10.22
Let us find the Hamming distance between two pairs of words.
1. The Hamming distance d(000, 011) is 2 because
Example 10.4
2. The Hamming distance d(10101, 11110) is 3 because
10.23
The minimum Hamming distance is the smallest Hamming distance between all possible pairs in a set of words.
Note
10.24
Find the minimum Hamming distance of the coding scheme in Table 10.1.
SolutionWe first find all Hamming distances.
Example 10.5
The dmin in this case is 2.
10.25
Find the minimum Hamming distance of the coding scheme in Table 10.2.
SolutionWe first find all the Hamming distances.
The dmin in this case is 3.
Example 10.6
10.26
A simple parity-check code can detect an odd number of errors.
Note
10.27
Figure 10.11 Two-dimensional parity-check code
10.28
Figure 10.11 Two-dimensional parity-check code
10.29
Figure 10.11 Two-dimensional parity-check code
10.30
10-4 CYCLIC CODES10-4 CYCLIC CODES
Cyclic codesCyclic codes are special linear block codes with one are special linear block codes with one extra property. In a cyclic code, if a codeword is extra property. In a cyclic code, if a codeword is cyclically shifted (rotated), the result is another cyclically shifted (rotated), the result is another codeword.codeword.
Cyclic Redundancy CheckHardware ImplementationPolynomialsCyclic Code Analysis
Topics discussed in this section:Topics discussed in this section:
10.31
CRC
Transmit polynomial P(x) that is evenly divisible by C(x), and receive polynomial P(x) + E(x); E(x)=0 implies no errors.
Recipient divides (P(x) + E(x)) by C(x); the remainder will be zero in only two cases: E(x) was zero (i.e. there was no error), or E(x) is exactly divisible by C(x). Choose C(x) to make second case extremely rare.
10.32
Example
Make all legal messages divisible by 3 If you want to send 10
First multiply by 4 to get 40 Now add 2 to make it divisible by 3 = 42
When the data is received .. Divide by 3, if there is no remainder there is no
error If no error, divide by 4 to get sent message
If we receive 43, 44, 41, 40, then error
10.33
Figure 10.14 CRC encoder and decoder
10.34
Figure 10.15 Division in CRC encoder
10.35
Figure 10.16 Division in the CRC decoder for two cases
10.36
The divisor in a cyclic code is normally called the generator polynomial
or simply the generator.
Note