Syncword

In computer networks, a syncword, sync character, sync sequence or preamble is used to synchronize a data transmission by indicating the end of header information and the start of data. The syncword is a known sequence of data used to identify the start of a frame, and is also called reference signal or midamble in wireless communications.

Prefix codes allow unambiguous identification of synchronization sequences and may serve as self-synchronizing code.

Examples

In an audio receiver receiving a bit stream of data, an example of a syncword is 0x0B77 for an AC-3 encoded stream.

An Ethernet packet begins with the Ethernet preamble, 56 bits of alternating 1 and 0 bits, allowing the receiver to synchronize its clock to the transmitter, followed by a one-octet start frame delimiter byte and then the header.

A receiver uses a physical layer preamble, also called a physical layer training sequence, to synchronize on the signal by estimating frequency and clock offsets. Some documentation uses "preamble" to refer to a signal used to announce a transmission, to wake-up receivers in a low-power mode. While some systems use exactly the same signal for both physical-layer training and wake-up functions, others use 2 different signals at 2 different times for these 2 functions, or have only one or the other of these signals.[1]

The Bisync protocol of the 1960s used a minimum of two ASCII "SYN" characters (0x16…0x16) to achieve character synchronization in an undifferentiated bit stream, then other special characters to synchronize to the beginning of a frame of characters.[2][3]

The syncwords can be seen as a kind of delimiter. Various techniques are used to avoid delimiter collision, orin other wordsto "disguise" bytes of data at the data link layer that might otherwise be incorrectly recognized as the syncword. For example, HDLC uses bit stuffing or "octet stuffing", while other systems use ASCII armor or Consistent Overhead Byte Stuffing (COBS).

Alternatives

In some communication systems, a receiver can achieve character synchronization from an undifferentiated bit stream, or start-of-header synchronization from a byte stream, without the overhead of an explicit syncword. For example, the FSK441 protocol achieves character synchronization by synchronizing on any "space" characters in the messagein effect, every "space" character in the message does double duty as a syncword. For example, CRC-based framing achieves character and start-of-header synchronization.

In a self-synchronizing code, every character is, in effect, a syncword, and can be used to achieve character synchronization in an undifferentiated bit stream.

Preamble

In digital communication, preamble is a sequence of known bits sent in each frame. It is used for frame synchronization such as in Ethernet frames, as well as for channel estimation.

gollark: So how do I operate this?
gollark: I got it to do this (PNGized for your viewing convenience).
gollark: I have no idea how to operate this, hmm.
gollark: The output is rayMarch.ppm, right?
gollark: ```osmarks@fenrir /t/haskell-ray-marcher (master)> ./ray-tracer/htrace ./ray-tracer/htrace: error while loading shared libraries: libffi.so.6: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory```???

See also

References

  1. Bastian Bloessl; Falko Dressler. "mSync: Physical Layer Frame Synchronization Without Preamble Symbols". 2018.
  2. "BiSync, BSC". Connectivity Knowledge Platform. Made IT. Retrieved July 5, 2011.
  3. John R. Freer (1996). Computer communications and networks (2nd ed.). Taylor & Francis. p. 12. ISBN 978-1-85728-379-2.
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