ZyXEL Communications PLA-470 V2 - V3.0.5 Guide d'installation

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Résumé du contenu

Page 2 - Power Line Communications

MAC Header Format 100Format of an Encrypted MAC Frame 102Format of Control and Management Frames 103PART IIPLC in Practice 105CHAPTER 6Applications 10

Page 3

RADIUS and Diameter802.1x does not define a particular authentication protocol on the server side. Two cli-ent-server authentication protocols, RADIUS

Page 4

Apart from encryption, EAP-TLS has the same characteristics as TLS but theseare encapsulated into EAP packets.•EAP-TTLS. EAP-TTLS (tunneled TLS) is a

Page 5

The authentication is always initiated by the station which sends anEAPoL-Start request. The access point transmits to it one or several requests towh

Page 6 - To Yves, Françoise

message; in this case, the station is not authenticated. The station can deauthenticateitself at any time by sending an EAPoL-Logoff request.802.1x us

Page 7

Virtual Private NetworksThe purpose of the virtual private networks, or VPN, is to provide an end-to-endsecured tunnel between a client and a server.

Page 9

CHAPTER 5FramesTo send information, the PLC stations must prepare data frames, i.e., data blockswith a header and an area indicating the end of the fr

Page 10 - Contents ix

This chapter discusses the structure of the PLC frames used in HomePlug 1.0and introduces the main characteristics of the frames in HomePlug AV.Physic

Page 11

Figure 5.3 illustrates the respective times of these various OFDM blocks.The complete frame time is defined by adding the various OFDM symbol blocktim

Page 12 - Contents xi

Improved transmission speeds are predicted with the evolution of PLC technolo-gies, as indicated in Table 5.3.Architecture of the Physical and Data Li

Page 13

Repeaters 145Filters 146The Cost of PLC148CHAPTER 8Installation 151Frequency Bands 151Regulation of Radio Frequencies 152Electromagnetic Compatibility

Page 14 - Organization of the Book

The OFDM Interface FrameThe OFDM (orthogonal frequency division multiplexing) interface is the accesstechnique used by PLC. This access technique is a

Page 15

Each frequency sub-band conveys OFDM frames comprising two main parts:•The CP (Cyclic Prefix) is used for the temporal delimitation of the part convey

Page 16 - Organization of the Book xv

noise can affect some symbols. In the OFDM technique, symbol losses in a carrier donot affect other carriers.•High bit rate allocation flexibility for

Page 17

The 917 frequency sub-bands at the physical layer are used by HomePlug AV.Each band then uses OFDM symbols in order to encode the data in an orthogona

Page 18 - Acknowledgments

Differences Between HomePlug Frames and 802.11b FramesFrom a functional point of view, there are a few differences between the variousparts of the Hom

Page 19

The PLC Physical FrameIn HomePlug 1.0, the physical layer frames, or PHY PPDU (physical protocol dataunit) are strongly related to the MAC layer frame

Page 20 - Introduction

•The preamble included in the SOF indicates the timestamps of the MAC typeframes.•FC (Frame Check) is used to check the frame. The frame consists of f

Page 21 - Standard Organizations

Physical Frame Start DelimiterThe start delimiter contains two parts, the preamble and FC:•The preamble contains the frame sending time stamp.•FC (fra

Page 22 - PLC Technologies 3

•Contention check used to check the state of the contention periods betweenframes.•Delimiter type specifying whether the delimiter is at the beginning

Page 23 - 4 Introduction

•Variable field specific to this delimiter, which contains the priority level of thePLC station (indicated by the CAP parameter).•FCS, which uses a 16

Page 24 - GOVERNMENT STANDARD:

Configuring the PLC Gateway 224Configuring PLC Security 228Testing Operation of the PLC Network 230Firewall 231VPN and PPPoE 232Configuring an Interne

Page 25 - 6 Introduction

•Protocol version. Defines the value of the protocol used. This value is reservedand will only be used during a standard evolution.•Bridged. Indicates

Page 26 - PLC Technologies 7

The 48-bit address consists of the four following parts:•Individual/Group (I/G). The first bit indicates whether the address is an indi-vidual (1) or

Page 27 - HomePlug Alliance

•IV (initialization vector). Initialization vector with a block of bits concate-nated with the block of main data used for decrypting frames. The IV i

Page 28 - PUA (PLC Utilities Alliance)

104 FramesFigure 5.18 Control and management fields of PLC frames

Page 29 - Future IEEE Standard

PART IIPLC in PracticeThe first part of the book introduced the architecture of PLC networks andexplained how they operate from a theoretical point of

Page 30

lation phase takes place. A number of constraints must be respected in this phase,such as the electrical network topology, security, and performance.B

Page 31 - 12 Introduction

CHAPTER 6ApplicationsMany prospective studies show that, in a few years from now, Ninety percent of thenetworked terminals will not be computers. This

Page 32 - PLC Theory

Telephony over PLCThe bit rate is not a problem in itself to convey telephone speech, since it can be aslow as 5.6 Kbit/s and that such a value is sup

Page 33

The access method used to obtain the right to transmit to the access point, theCSMA/CA (carrier sense multiple access/collision avoidance), makes the

Page 34 - Architecture

Transit TimeIn PLC, the waiting time to access the power line medium can be relatively long. If,for example, five clients are connected to the same el

Page 35 - 16 Architecture

CHAPTER 13Hybrid PLC 295Coexistence of Multiple Networks 295PLC Technologies Between Themselves 296Coexistence of PLC and Wi-Fi 298Coexistence of PLC

Page 36

nal to another one in the same PLC network. After going across the outgoing PLCnetwork, the stream of telephone packets is routed in a fixed IP networ

Page 37 - 18 Architecture

VideoVideo is another application that should develop in the future in PLC networks. Thisapplication especially requires a high rate that becomes acce

Page 38

Necessary Rates for Video RoutingThe video devices mainly use the most recent MPEG standards. DVB (digital videobroadcasting) is also widely used.MPEG

Page 39 - Attenuation

several tens of seconds if this is necessary. In this case, once the streaming applica-tion is started, the first image only appears at the end of thi

Page 40 - Interface Sensitivity

ited to a factor 3. This is the case of imaging applications, in which the quality isessential, such as X-ray radiographies, for example. Factors vary

Page 41 - Modeling Electrical Networks

Internet Connection SharingOne of the most usual PLC applications relates to the sharing of the Internet connec-tion between several terminals or comp

Page 42

Ethernet interface (RJ-45 connector). From then on, the other users can use itas a network printer with its IP address.PLC Local Networks 117Figure 6.

Page 43 - Private Networks

Audio BroadcastingA PLC local area network enables data broadcasting over the electrical networkincluding audio data (see Figure 6.6) originating from

Page 44 - The Concept of PLC Repeaters

Backbone of a Wi-Fi NetworkAs we’ll see in Chapter 13, dedicated to hybrid networks, each computer networktechnology has advantages and disadvantages.

Page 45 - 26 Architecture

•Voice. Telephony over IP services. The InternetBox behaves like a telephonereceiver to which the analog telephones used on the switched telecommunica

Page 46 - Layered Architecture

PrefaceSince the emergence of the first power line communication (PLC) products in early2000, PLC technologies have been steadily undergoing great imp

Page 47 - 28 Architecture

•set-top boxes;•TV decoders;•electrical over-plugs;•flat screens.New Applications for PLCThe maturity of PLC technologies convinced some manufacturers

Page 48 - Layered Architecture 29

The industrial applications that currently use PLC networks are the following:•sensor networks;•connection of programmable controllers;•PC located in

Page 49

In Europe, the Valeo component manufacturer and the company manufactur-ing PLC products worked together to implement a solution using PLC to communi-c

Page 50 - Functionality

124 ApplicationsFigure 6.10 Number of HomePlug chips sold worldwide

Page 51

CHAPTER 7EquipmentSince the emergence of the HomePlug 1.0 specification in 2003, the PLC networkequipment market has continued to grow. Originally foc

Page 52 - Network Mode Functionality 33

Master-Slave ModeFigure 7.1 illustrates the architecture of an LV (low voltage) PLC network for elec-trical distribution in the master-slave mode. We

Page 53 - Peer-to-Peer Mode

Figure 7.2 illustrates another architecture in the master-slave mode in a domes-tic electrical network. Here we find conventional private electrical n

Page 54 - Network Mode Functionality 35

Conventionally, this is a star topology. The MV/LV transformer used as theinjection point of the PLC signal is located in the middle of the star and t

Page 55

As illustrated in Figure 7.7, the peer-to-peer mode is ideal for local area net-works since the LAN architecture must enable any terminal (typically P

Page 56 - Network Mode Functionality 37

In HomePlug AV PLC networks, one of the devices acts as the central device andmanages the communications between the PLC stations of the network. Thee

Page 57 - 38 Functionality

•Chapter 1. Introduction. This first chapter covers the history of PLC technol-ogies and presents the work carried out by the different working groups

Page 58 - Listening to the Medium

Although the PLC technology does not use the modulation-demodulation pro-cess implemented in the modems, we talk about a PLC modem to designate thedev

Page 59 - Access to the Medium

ments and at temperatures that can be as high as 70°C and are made of plastic for con-sumer equipment and of metal for professional equipment.Inside t

Page 60

Figure 7.11 illustrates a F@st Plug type Sagem USB PLC modem.PLC Ethernet ModemsThe generalization of network interface cards in computers, network te

Page 61 - =×(, )0 time slot

The increased performance of HomePlug PLC devices will probably lead themanufacturers to use 1,000baseT (1,000 Mbit/s) boards so that the throughput i

Page 62 - Number of

The networks of cable operators are much less widespread than the electricalnetwork and generally have few TV sockets. However, such networks can end

Page 63 - 44 Functionality

•data circulation over the cable television network to make it the backbone ofthe PLC network;•use of the coaxial interface with an adapter called “in

Page 64 - Data Transmission Example

Figure 7.17 illustrates Thesys (on the left) and Devolo MicroLink dLAN Wire-less (on the right) PLC/Wi-Fi modems.Some manufacturers are currently work

Page 65 - 46 Functionality

•ADSL/router PLC modem used to transmit the signal originating from theInternet connection over the electrical network. Some devices even add a Wi-Fib

Page 66 - ACK Response

nel) connectors used to broadcast four 192-Kbit/s audio channels over the electricalnetwork.The audio PLC modems must be configured to parameterize th

Page 67 - FAIL Response

Methods for Accessing the MediumIn PLC networks, the method for accessing the medium consists of connecting thePLC devices to the electrical network i

Page 68 - SACK Response in HomePlug AV

•Chapter 12. PLC for Communities. This chapter focuses specifically on thosecommunities faced with the issue of providing Internet access in remoteare

Page 69 - 50 Functionality

CouplingIn the electrical field, coupling can be defined as how two electrical circuits connecttogether in order to generate an electron flow between

Page 70 - Managing Frame Priorities

Figure 7.24 illustrates the same principle but with two magnetic ferrites over athree-phase network.Choice of Injection CableIt is preferable to injec

Page 71 - 52 Functionality

Direct Tap MethodsThe “direct tap” methods are used to connect PLC devices directly to the networkelectrical wirings by perforating the cable insulato

Page 72

•Some types of meters integrating a galvanic isolation also behave as PLC signalcutters. However, these models are relatively rare and most meters all

Page 73 - Frame Level Functionalities

are major components of an electrical network for the PLC signal since they sepa-rate the public electrical network from the electrical network of a b

Page 74 - MAC Encapsulation

Home-Made PLC RepeaterA home-made PLC repeater can be fabricated by using Ethernet PLC modems available instores.All you have to do is to take two Eth

Page 75 - Fragmentation

ticular, these electrical devices send back electromagnetic noises in the frequencyband of the PLC devices. Therefore, it is interesting to install fi

Page 76 - Other Functionalities

The Cost of PLCAs a result of the evolving HomePlug specifications and increased demand, theprices of PLC products did not stop falling in 2005 and 20

Page 77 - 58 Functionality

The emergence at the beginning of 2006 of HomePlug Turbo products accentu-ated this fall. We can consider that the price of the HomePlug 1.0 products

Page 78 - Service Quality

As soon as the first HomePlug AV products appeared at the end of 2006, theprice of HomePlug Turbo products felt in turn by 10 to 20%.For private indiv

Page 80

CHAPTER 8InstallationThe disturbances received and caused by PLC networks must be taken into accountwhen installing the network. The electrical topolo

Page 81 - Cryptology

nologies are installed and implemented under the responsibility of MV electrical net-work operators.The 3- to 148-kHz and 1-to 30-MHz bands are called

Page 82

As explained before, the PLC networks are not radio networks, but their imple-mentation over electrical wiring produces radiated waves that propagate

Page 83 - 64 Security

broadcast digital quality radio programs over very long-range links and also totransfer data at rates of some tens of kilobits/s.The disturbances caus

Page 84 - Blowfish

Particular Case of EDF Pulsadis Signal (France) for Day/Night TariffMetersThe Pulsadis signal is better known as the day-night signal, since it is use

Page 85 - Public-Key Cryptography

ham radio operators are not used. The total HomePlug 1.0 bands are therefore equalto de 84 − 8 = 76.Table 8.2 summarizes the high rate frequency bands

Page 86 - Diffie-Hellman

In addition, and unlike Wi-Fi, the network configuration does not require youto make choices according to the other assigned channels. All the channel

Page 87 - Electronic Signatures

Figure 8.6 shows that the transmission channel can be viewed as N sub-bandswith their sub-carriers, all of them operating simultaneously and each conv

Page 88 - The Hash Function

The HomePlug 1.0 technology includes 84 sub-bands of 195.31 kHz, whereasHomePlug AV comprises 918 narrower sub-bands of 24.414 kHz. Therefore, thePSD

Page 89 - 70 Security

Figure 8.8 illustrates the HomePlug AV PSD curve in the 1- to 30-MHz band.We clearly observe that some frequencies are less emissive than other ones (

Page 90

AcknowledgmentsI would like first to extend my appreciation to the people at Artech and namely SimonPluntree, my editor in chief, and Judi Stone, who

Page 91 - Security for PLC Networks

220V and is 190V or 380V between two phase cables. A three-phase electricalnetwork rather than a single-phase network is used in some buildings since

Page 92 - Access to the Physical Medium

162 InstallationGround&222 22222Figure 8.9 Topology of a domestic single-phase electrical networkFigure 8.10 Topology of an apartment single-phase

Page 93 - 74 Security

propagates over the cables then goes via the circuit breaker panel to start at the vari-ous cables again. The wiring length can exceed 300m, which is

Page 94 - Network Keys

Like for single-phase networks, the average distance between the circuit breakerpanel and the last outlet connected to the electrical wiring must not

Page 95 - 76 Security

electrical hazards. The protecting devices are called “circuit breakers” (or fuses forold networks). They may be of several types. Each circuit breake

Page 96 - MD5 Algorithm (RFC 1321)

166 InstallationFigure 8.12 Circuit breaker panel of a domestic installation

Page 97 - Security in HomePlug AV

lets is 15m. The maximum cable length between the circuit breaker panel and the farthestpoint (luminous point or outlet) generally is 50m.It is import

Page 98 - Security for PLC Networks 79

•Identify the areas of the electrical network where the PLC signal is not receivedand the parts of the building connected to other electrical networks

Page 99 - Denial of Service Attacks

are therefore relatively insensitive to electromagnetic disturbances, or aerial cables,in which case they are more sensitive to electromagnetic distur

Page 100 - RADIUS and Diameter

170 InstallationFigure 8.14 Electromagnetic disturbances caused by PLC devices connected to the electricalnetworkFigure 8.15 Disturbance amplitude on

Page 102

Figure 8.16 illustrates how a power strip must be used with a PLC device. Apower strip is inherently a source of noise for PLC devices to which the no

Page 103 - 84 Security

for data at these levels, which is calculated according to the overhead used for man-aging and sending the transmission.As we saw in Chapter 5, the da

Page 104 - Virtual Private Networks

TtMACbytes bit byte14 Mbit/s=×≈1534 80000876,.sThe 120-bit PLCP-PDU header is sent at a rate of 1 Mbit/s. Therefore, its trans-mission time (TtPLCP-PD

Page 105

We are going to calculate the useful throughput associated with this ideal case(Du2). As in the example above, we consider the use of short preambles

Page 106 - CHAPTER 5

The transmission time (Tt3) becomes:Tt T T Tt Tt3+++ + ++WaitCIFSBackoff Data ACKRIFSSince the waiting time and the back-off timer are not fixed, it i

Page 107 - Physical Layer Frames

Iperf is used for generating any type of traffic between a client and a server. Forour test, illustrated in Figure 8.20, we use the following componen

Page 108 - Bit rate

Table 8.10 shows the results obtained for various technologies with this test bed.Table 8.11 summarizes the necessary data rates for certain usual Int

Page 109 - 90 Frames

In the case of all the stations’ different speeds, the waiting time is prolonged.Because of this, the global network data rate falls heavily. If a sta

Page 110 - The OFDM Interface Frame

CHAPTER 9ConfigurationThe installation of a PLC network is rather simple. All you have to do is connect thePLC devices to an Ethernet network or to a

Page 111 - OFDM Transmission Schemes

configuring them according to the targeted operating systems. They are describedfor Windows XP as well as for the Linux and FreeBSD systems.Configurin

Page 112 - The OFDM Interface Frame 93

Power Line Communicationsin Practice

Page 113 - Functional Blocks

CHAPTER 1IntroductionThe PLC (power line communication) designates a technology that uses the mediumand low voltage electrical network to provide tele

Page 114 - The OFDM Interface Frame 95

HomePlug Turbo:DatarateBYTESPHYper sblock=××336840 8 4μ./Mbit swhere Bytesper336 sblockrepresents the number of bytes in a data block at the physical

Page 115 - The PLC Physical Frame

agement of the PLC network, Figure 9.2, management of priority levels foreach VLAN illustrated by Figure 9.3).•SoftPlug from LEA-Thesys (http://209.23

Page 116 - The OFDM Interface Frame 97

This tool provides the same functionalities as the previous tools but with aninterface which is perhaps easier to use.Most PLC modems have Ethernet in

Page 117 - Physical Frame End Delimiter

Once the tool is downloaded, we can proceed with the installation. Once theinstallation is completed, the Power Packet Utility program can be started

Page 118 - The OFDM Interface Frame 99

In Figure 9.6, the NEK password has been replaced with the PLC Networkvalue. The longer this password is, and the more numbers and symbols it has, the

Page 119 - MAC Layer Frames

Figure 9.8 illustrates the configuration of a PLC local area network using DEKread on the living room and bedroom devices connected to the same electr

Page 120 - Address Fields

networks. It is possible to have several PLC local area networks on the same electrical net-work. These PLC local area networks just have to share the

Page 121 - Hexadecimal Format

for 2 seconds. The power on indicator light of the package then blinks. Theuser then has 1 minute to depress the EasyConnect buttons of the other devi

Page 122 - MAC Layer Frames 103

As a configuration example, we are going to use the tool developed byAsokaUSA for its easy implementation and its user-friendly user interface. Once t

Page 123 - 104 Frames

assign a device name to it that will be used for easily retrieving the identity of thisdevice in the PLC logical network supervision.At that level, th

Page 124 - PLC in Practice

(intruder alarm, fire detection, gas leak detection, and so forth). Much less powerneeded to be injected, since the power was reduced to levels of app

Page 125 - 106 PLC in Practice

With all the functionalities of the Power Manager tool, it is then possible toinstall, configure, and supervise a HomePlug AV network easily by follow

Page 126 - Applications

http://download.devolo.biz/webcms/0607105001130251610/dLAN-linux-pack-age-2.0.tar.gzFigure 9.19 illustrates the page of the Devolo site offering PLC c

Page 127 - Telephony over PLC

carcelle@debian:~/Projects/CPL$gunzip dLAN-linux-pack-age-2.0.tar.gzcarcelle@debian:~/Projects/CPL$gunzip dLAN-linux-pack-age-2.0.tar.gzConfiguring a

Page 128 - Actual Rate

The USB PLC device must then be connected to an available port of the PC andthe device recognition must be verified by running the following command:c

Page 129 - Differentiating IP Packets

To compile the USB driver, the next make usbdriver command must then be run(see Figure 9.24):carcelle@debian:~/Projects/CPL/dLAN-linux-package-2.0/dri

Page 130 - Hi-Fi Quality Telephony

carcelle@debian:~/Projects/CPL/dLAN-linux-package-2.0/driver$makeinstallbootenables the USB driver to be loaded when starting up.Simply reboot the co

Page 131 - Streaming

Since the configuration tool under Linux has been decompressed in the samedirectory as the USB driver, it must first of all be placed it in the correc

Page 132 - Capacity Problems

debian:home/carcelle/Projects/CPL/dLAN-linux-package-2.0#./con-figureWe can start by configuring the compilation parameters as illustrated in Figure9.

Page 133 - Multimedia

•“set local network password,” used for configuring the PLC network key(NEK) on the PLC device or devices directly connected to the configurationPC us

Page 134 - PLC Local Networks

•“set remote network password,” used for configuring the PLC network key onremote PLC devices connected to the electrical network (DEK);•“list remote

Page 135 - File and Printer Sharing

A “standard” is a document from any national body, such as the IEEE (USA), orfrom a Community of States, such as ETSI. To make the difference, it is s

Page 136 - PLC Local Networks 117

after performing a check-out on the development repository using the follow-ing command:#svn co http://svn.open-plc.org/•Installation of the Debian fa

Page 137 - Video Surveillance

option, he or she obtains the information on the firmware versions available on theIntellon chip as illustrated below:Choose the frame type (Ctrl-C to

Page 138 - InternetBox and PLC

00000000: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0C B9 08 47 0F 88 E1 00 3900000016: A0 00 B0 52 01 B0 F2 E6 95 66 6B 03 0E 01 00 0000000032: 0C B9 08 47 10 03 01 00 0C

Page 139 - 120 Applications

PB received failed...: 0TBE errors over successfully...: 21TBE errors over failed...: 0-- Rx interval 2 --Rx PHY rate...

Page 140 - New Applications for PLC

Powerline Bridge config version 0.2 by Manuel Kasper<[email protected]>Usage: plconfig [-pqrh] [-b device] [-s key] interface-s key set

Page 141 - PLC in Motor Vehicles

•The Tasks Communications stack: Used with mails and events for tasks com-munication, interrupt handlers, and buffers for exchanging information witht

Page 142 - Economic Perspectives

Configuring a DS2 Network 207Figure 9.33 DS2 configuration HTTP tool homepageFigure 9.32 Addressing planes of a DS2 PLC network

Page 143 - 124 Applications

208 ConfigurationFigure 9.34 DS2 PLC device configuration parametersFigure 9.35 DS2 PLC device MAC and network parameters configuration

Page 144 - Equipment

placed at 255.255.0.0. In this case, the default gateway is not important since theconfiguration PC has an address in the same addressing plane (10.10

Page 145 - Master-Slave Mode

The priority of each of the network PLC devices can then be configured by set-ting the “Default priority” parameter of the “Priority configuration” se

Page 146 - PLC Technologies 127

For European countries, this is a fundamental level since the international stan-dards, the specifications of which will be used as a reference for CE

Page 147 - Case of Ascom APA Devices

Configuring Network ParametersTo complete the configuration of a PLC network, it is still necessary to assign thecorrect network parameters to each de

Page 148 - Centralized Mode

There are two versions of the IP protocol: IPv4 and IPv6. The IPv4 address,which is most frequently used nowadays, is on 4 bytes and only limitedfunct

Page 149 - PLC Modems

0000000 and 0111111 in the binary format. Knowing that addresses 0.0.0.0.and 127.0.0.0 are reserved, there are therefore 27– 2, i.e., 126 available cl

Page 150 - Dissipation in PLC Modems

Subnet MaskThe mask is used for knowing the network address of a computer via a binary sub-traction between the mask and the computer IP address.If th

Page 151 - PLC USB Modems

Configuring Network Parameters Under Windows XPIn the Configuration panel, select “Network” then, in the network componentsarea, choose the TCP/IP com

Page 152 - PLC Ethernet Modems

the IAP like DNS addresses. If there are several DNS addresses, just add a line withnameserver adress_IP_DNS for each additional DNS address.This conf

Page 153 - PLC Cable TV Modems

CHAPTER 10PLC in the HomeIn spite of the still relatively high cost of PLC devices, more and more people aretempted to install a power line communicat

Page 154 - PLC Modems 135

The main electrical safety rules to be complied with are the following:•Install a 500 mA differential circuit breaker for protection against short cir

Page 155 - PLC/Wi-Fi Modems

•Do not overload power strips or extension cords in order not to increase elec-trocution or fire risk.•Comply with the operating instructions of the P

Page 156 - Multifunction PLC Modems

offered by Internet access providers from anywhere in an installation, requiresdevices with a throughput around 200 Mbit/s at the physical layer level

Page 157 - 138 Equipment

COMPANY STANDARD:Consensus among the employees of an organization.CONSORTIUM STANDARD:Consensus among a small group of organizations, usually like-min

Page 158 - PLC Modems 139

Figure 10.4 illustrates the same home network with all the devices installed forthe broadcasting of the various Internet flows to the outlets of the e

Page 159 - 140 Equipment

available for the IP network applications based on the PLC network. According tothis table, it is important to find an outlet 5 that gives a minimum 1

Page 160 - Coupling

The following Niroda devices of the RJ-11 PLC network can be placed as indi-cated in Figure 10.6:•InternetBox connected to the electrical network to o

Page 161 - Choice of Injection Cable

coverage area that can extend beyond the home area. This allows anybody to accessthe network and to use its Internet connection, for example.PLC netwo

Page 162 - Transformers and Meters

Figure 10.8 illustrates the location of these various gateway types in a domesticinstallation.For a HomePlug device, the PLC gateway requires no speci

Page 163 - Transformers

226 PLC in the HomeFigure 10.7 Broadcasting of the analog telephone signal over the electrical home networkFigure 10.8 Location of the various gateway

Page 164 - Repeaters

The WinPCap tool used for managing inputs/outputs on the network interfacecard must be installed beforehand. This tool is generally pre-installed by t

Page 165 - Home-Made PLC Repeater

Once the network interface card has been chosen, the DOS window closes; thisindicates that the priority configuration is completed.It is important to

Page 166 - Filters 147

This key must have between 4 and 24 characters and include numerals and(lowercase and uppercase) letters if possible, for example, PLCNetworks. Just c

Page 167 - The Cost of PLC

•MAC device = 00:0C:B9:08:47:0F to living room device: “good” quality with24.55 Mbit/s displayed throughput;•MAC device = 00:0C:B9:08:47:10 to bedroom

Page 168 - The Cost of PLC 149

Cenélec and ETSI. This international standard is not aimed at limiting the deploy-ment of wired networks but at limiting their interfering emissions.A

Page 169 - 150 Equipment

To test the good operation of the PLC network, it can also be useful to run“Ping” commands from the PC connected to the PLC network to the InternetBox

Page 170 - Installation

Hardware firewalls must be installed on the computer connected to the Internet.This is ideally a dedicated computer, such as the access gateway define

Page 171 - 152 Installation

Another way of improving the security of the PLC network and of the IP localarea network consists of installing a PPPoE server and an associated RADIU

Page 172 - Frequency Bands 153

234 PLC in the HomeFigure 10.17 PLC network with access gateway protected by a firewallFigure 10.18 PLC network with gateway protected by VPN or RADIU

Page 173 - Low Bit Rate PLC

This protection technique based on PPPoE tunnels is widely used by Internetaccess providers to ensure the separation between the various Internet acce

Page 174 - High Bit Rate PLC

The disadvantage of this type of typology is that the PLC device only rarely has afirewall used for blocking various traffic types and avoiding attack

Page 175 - 156 Installation

offers a user-friendly station configuration mode, but this configuration canalso be performed manually by modifying the board parameters directly.DNS

Page 176 - Frequency Bands 157

In the case where NAT and DHCP functionalities are not built into the Internetmodem or the InternetBox used as an Internet access gateway, it is still

Page 177 - 158 Installation

DHCP can provide a station with a certain range of addresses and that each of theseaddresses is negotiated and is valid only for a given period of tim

Page 178 - Frequency Bands 159

240 PLC in the HomeFigure 10.24 Architecture of a PLC home network with a dedicated gateway for accessing theInternetFigure 10.25 DHCP architecture

Page 179 - 160 Installation

any enforcement measures related to powerline communication systems). Thefirst such report is due on 31 December 2005.8. This Recommendation is addres

Page 180 - Single-Phase Wiring

Once these parameters have been received, the computer can dialogue freelywith other computers on the network or have access to the Internet if there

Page 181 - 222 22222

Configuration Under Windows XPConfiguring a DHCP client under Windows XP is very simple:•When inserting an Ethernet board under Windows, it is automat

Page 182 - Three-Phase Wiring

Configuring an Internet Gateway 243Figure 10.28 Status of the connection to the local area networkFigure 10.29 Properties of the connection to the loc

Page 183 - The Circuit Breaker Panel

The board configuration can be checked via the ipconfig command:•In the Start menu, click on the “Execute” button, and enter cmd to open theMS-DOS com

Page 184

Configuring an Internet Gateway 245Figure 10.33 TCP/IP parameters of the board via ipconfig

Page 186

CHAPTER 11PLC for BusinessesThe PLC networks increasingly invade the business world, and more generally thenetworks of professional and industrial bui

Page 187 - Propagation of the PLC Signal

Network ArchitectureIn a company, there can be great differences in the architecture of a PLC networkaccording to the network size, to the number of s

Page 188 - Interference

The terminals can be connected to the network PLC devices in different ways asfollows:•Terminals directly connected to a PLC device connected to the e

Page 189 - 170 Installation

The PLC technologies operate at the data link layer level (MAC layer); they can-not be used for the direct remote SNMP interrogation. However, a numbe

Page 190 - Network Data Rates

and national standards relating to PLC in Europe, in particular the IEC, Cenélec,and the ETSI.Consortiums and AssociationsIn addition to the bodies an

Page 191 - 172 Installation

The AsokaUSA company develops products intended for professionals based on theHomePlug specification, which makes these products interoperable with th

Page 192 - Network Data Rates 173

•Integration of advanced network functions (NAT router, DHCP server,firewall, switch, Wi-Fi, and so forth).As far as the PLC devices are concerned (fi

Page 193 - 174 Installation

(guaranteed high thrughput, propagation time, jitter) are crucial for the good transmis-sion operation without data loss.These constraints can be tole

Page 194 - Network Data Rates 175

•Each phase (each cable), with three different injectors connected to the cableTV PLC device via a “one-to-three” TV signal splitter. The induction ta

Page 195 - 176 Installation

Placing EquipmentThe location of the PLC devices on the electrical network clearly influences the PLCsignal propagation over the various electrical wi

Page 196 - Data Rate Variation

cast the Ethernet (Internet or LAN) frames to the various PLC devices connected tothe outlets.It is important to recover a wiring diagram of the build

Page 197 - Security

cal network outlets. This central location can be in the technical room as close to theLAN Ethernet network devices as possible.In the case of a centr

Page 198 - Configuration

In the case of a company, it is however necessary to see to it that the firewalls foraccess to the Internet are correctly configured and that the vari

Page 199 - 180 Configuration

as a gateway capable of managing all these network keys. The 8950 switch fromAsokaUSA does this by being capable of managing up to 253 PLC network key

Page 200

According to the manufacturers of PLC devices and to the PLC technologies, it ismore or less possible to configure advanced security functionalities.

Page 201 - 182 Configuration

The IEEE distributes both information and resources to its members, as well asproviding technical and professional services. To stimulate interest in

Page 202

network. To remedy this attenuation problem and obtain an optimum and com-plete PLC signal coverage for a building, it may be useful to install device

Page 203 - 184 Configuration

To enable active PLC devices from Oxance to behave as a repeater (or bridge),an option must be activated by connecting to the PLT320 via the interface

Page 204

Sample Implementation of PLC in a HotelA hotel wants to be fitted with a multi-purpose computer network for the variousservices it proposes to its cus

Page 205 - Electrical Network

The following elements must be taken into account in the network architecture,as illustrated in Figure 11.13:•Place and configuration of the various P

Page 206

Sample Implementation of PLC in a Hotel 265Figure 11.13 Complete architecture of the hotel PLC networks

Page 207 - 188 Configuration

Hotel Story PLC NetworksThe hotel proposes to the customers to connect to the Internet in their bedrooms viaa lent PLC device to be connected to the b

Page 208

devices. For 22 bedrooms, it is just necessary to have two segments (one with 15 andone with 7) to cover the story requirements.Figure 11.16 illustrat

Page 209 - 190 Configuration

Configuring a DHCP Client Under LinuxFinding Linux systems in corporate networks, whether on servers or client stations,is more and more frequent. The

Page 210

Configuring a DHCP/NAT ServerMost Linux distributions propose a DHCP server called dhcpd.The configuration of the DHCP server just requires the creati

Page 211 - 192 Configuration

It can also be started automatically by creating a script in the /etc/rc directoryand by incorporating the following command:/usr/sbin/dhcpd eth0NAT (

Page 212

PLC ForumThe PLC Forum is an international body created at the beginning of the 2000s fromthe merger of two associations. It develops its activities i

Page 213 - 194 Configuration

ally after having switched on the gateway, or to write a script in the /etc/rc directoryin order to automatize the NAT execution when starting the gat

Page 215 - 196 Configuration

CHAPTER 12PLC for CommunitiesDuring the last years, high throughput Internet accesses proposed by Internet accessproviders have spectacularly develope

Page 216

The various subnets of the electrical network partly differ by the networkowner, on the one hand (cables, pylons, infrastructure devices, and so forth

Page 217

the framework of an electrical network that has safety rules different from those oftwisted pair, cable TV, or optical fiber networks.For electrical u

Page 218 - PC using Ethernet;

•Network topology;•Distance between pylons;•Distance between the transformer and the various meters that it supplies;•Number of meters behind a MV/LV

Page 219 - 200 Configuration

The electrical network construction rules determine the PLC engineering to beimplemented to obtain the best coverage and the best performance of the I

Page 220

and the PLC infrastructure in collaboration with the operational teams of the localelectrical utility.The prime contractor team consists of electrical

Page 221

•Distribution networks. Used for connecting the exchanges of the Internetaccess providers and the subscribers to the Internet and to IP networks in ge

Page 222

Constraints of the Electrical Network for PLC ArchitectureIf the electrical network of a country supposedly not interconnected to its neighborsis exam

Page 223

For a listing of recent titles in the Artech HouseTelecommunications Library, turn to the back of this book.

Page 224 - Configuring an HD-PLC Network

Among the disadvantages, there is the relative immaturity of the products con-cerning the outdoor (external) and the access networks. In the case of h

Page 225 - Configuring a DS2 Network

tecture that we have seen in Chapters 10 and 11 dedicated to home and corporatePLC networks.The topology of the low voltage HTA electrical network of

Page 226 - Configuring a DS2 Network 207

•PLC gateway used for the connection to other IP networks.•PLC injectors used in the public electrical network installations as illustratedin Figure 1

Page 227 - 208 Configuration

•Intervention on PLC devices by authorized people.The authorizations for interventions on an electrical network (deenergized,close or energized) are o

Page 228 - Configuring a DS2 Network 209

The information in this table is only given as an indication but it should enabledesigners to choose the PLC technology best suited to the community s

Page 229 - 210 Configuration

All the infrastructure devices can be supervised with the SNMP or TR-069 pro-tocols using tools used for retrieving information (throughputs, status o

Page 230 - IP Addresses

•PLC distribution network, with the master PLC gateway or gateways at theelectrical substation (hosting the MV/LV transformer, the repeaters and thesl

Page 231 - Address Classes

For this purpose, it is necessary to connect to the HTTP configuration interface of theproducts via VPN tunnels between the NOC and the PLC infrastruc

Page 232

(France), with the support of the Tiscali Internet access provider for the Internet con-nection.This distribution network was intended to test the qua

Page 233 - DNS (Domain Name Service)

The deployment of PLC distribution networks has enabled the introduction ofhigh throughput in “white” areas not served by ADSL offers. So, these two c

Page 234

As far as the United States is concerned, a good example is given by CurrentTechnology.In the USA, Current Technology deployed at the end of 2006, a B

Page 235 - 216 Configuration

•quick deployment;•no additional wiring;•a robust encryption method.12 Introduction

Page 236 - PLC in the Home

Current Technologies has developed a repeater-amplifier product at the level ofthe physical layer that is used for reamplifying the PLC signal over th

Page 237 - 218 PLC in the Home

Current proposes a system for collecting meter information over the MV and LVnetwork. This information relates to the various electrical parameters av

Page 238 - Choosing Equipment

The interface can be operated with the GIS (Geographical Information Systems)of the utility. Therefore, the data of a transformer or meter can be disp

Page 240

CHAPTER 13Hybrid PLCThe recent developments of computer communication media have multiplied thenetwork media (wired Ethernet, Wi-Fi, PLC, optical fibe

Page 241 - 222 PLC in the Home

PLC Technologies Between ThemselvesAs we have seen throughout this book, there is no IEEE PLC standard as yet. As aresult, a number of PLC technologie

Page 242

•Management of hybrid accesses between FDMA (frequency division multipleaccess) and TDMA (time division multiple access);•Management of the QoS by a T

Page 243 - Configuring the PLC Gateway

Coexistence of PLC and Wi-FiThere are no problems with coexisting PLC and Wi-Fi technologies since differentfrequency bands are used, with PLC operati

Page 244

The NBG318S devices from Zyxel, illustrated in Figure 13.5, will be used toillustrate the configuration of such an architecture.Zyxel proposes a route

Page 245 - 226 PLC in the Home

The next configuration step concerns the parameters specific to the Wi-Fi net-work and to its security. First, an SSID (i.e., a Wi-Fi network name) mu

Page 246

PART IPLC TheoryThis part of the book is devoted to the HomePlug specification. Created by theindustrial alliance of the same name, HomePlug focuses o

Page 247 - Configuring PLC Security

Choosing the IEEE 802.11 ModeWhen the network is configured in the “802.11 Super G dynamic” mode, it isimportant to make sure that all the 802.11 clie

Page 248

The network PLC devices must also be named in order to have a better readabil-ity of the network with respect to the MAC addresses of each device. In

Page 249 - 230 PLC in the Home

Coexistence of Multiple Networks 303Figure 13.9 Confirmed association of a new PLC device on the networkFigure 13.10 Configuring the WAN interface cho

Page 250 - Firewall

Coexistence of PLC and Wired EthernetThe coexistence of PLC and wired networks (Ethernet cable, optical fiber, cable TV,telephone cable, and so forth)

Page 251 - VPN and PPPoE

The network engineering study aims at identifying the following characteristicsin particular:•Structure of the buildings (size of the rooms, raceway p

Page 252

•Open-endedness, removal requirements, temporary networks, test networks,and so forth;•User groups and requirements of specific logical networks;•Easy

Page 253 - 234 PLC in the Home

•IP links between the telecommunications premises and the buildings usingSHDSL modems over twisted pair telephone cables;•Ethernet backbone along the

Page 254

HomePlug AV and IEEE 802.11 Super G dynamic to market in order to providebetter throughputs and the broadcasting of HD video streams.Figure 13.13 illu

Page 255 - 236 PLC in the Home

ResourcesWeb SitesStandardizations OrganizationsIEEE: http://www.ieee.orghttp:// grouper.ieee.org/groups/1901/ for the PLC network working groupETSI:

Page 256 - DNS Addresses

http://www.atlantisland.it/http://bewan.comhttp://www.billion-france.com/http://cometlabs.com/http://www.courantmultimedia.frhttp://www.connectland.ne

Page 258 - DHCP Architecture

Low Bit Rate PLC Technologieshttp://www.siconnect.comhttp://www.itrancomm.comhttp://www.arianecontrols.comBooks and ArticlesDOSTERT (KLAUS), Powerline

Page 260 - MAC Address

About the AuthorXavier Carcelle earned an M.Sc. in EE from Ecole Normale Supérieure, France. Hehas held different positions in the industries of energ

Page 262

IndexAACK response, 46, 47Active repeaters, 145Address classes, 212–213AES (Advanced Encryption Standard), 65–66AIFS (allocation interframe spacing),

Page 263 - 244 PLC in the Home

Broadcast address, 102Brute force attacks, 72Business PLC, 247–271access to electrical medium, 253–255application classes, 255architecture illustratio

Page 264

HomePlug AV network, 187–191HomePlug AV network under Linux,200–204HomePlug Turbo network, 179–187Internet gateway, 235–245network parameters, 211–216

Page 265

EAP (extensible authentication protocol)(continued)EAP-MD5, 81EAP-TLS, 81–82, 82LEAP, 82PEAP, 82EAPoL (EAP over LAN), 82–83EIFS (extended interface sp

Page 266 - PLC for Businesses

electromagnetic compatibility and, 157–160high bit rate, 155–157illustrated, 153low bit rate, 154–155MV networks, 151OFDM, 91radio frequency regulatio

Page 267 - Network Architecture

HomePlug 1.0/Turbo network configuration(continued)under Windows, 180–187USB device, 183–187visible parameters, 181HomePlug Alliance, 8HomePlug AV net

Page 268 - Supervising a PLC Network

CHAPTER 2ArchitecturePLC, or power line communication, is the generic name for a network technologythat transmits data over electrical wiring. It is t

Page 269 - Choosing a Standard

DHCP client configuration, 268–271HomePlug 1.0 network configuration,191–200HomePlug AV network configuration,200–204network parameter configuration,

Page 270

Network parametersaddress classes, 212–213configuration, 211–216configuration (Linux/BSD), 215–216configuration (Windows XP), 215DNS (domain name serv

Page 271 - QoS in HomePlug AV

hybrid architecture example, 299modems, 136–137optimized, 307–308See also Wi-Fi“Power line carriers,” 2Power line communications. See PLCPowerPacket U

Page 272

Security parameters (home PLC) (continued)configuring, 228–230firewall, 231–232PLC gateway, 224–228testing operation, 230–231VPN and PPPoE, 232–235Seg

Page 273 - 254 PLC for Businesses

Transmission channel (continued)segment bursting, 53–54synchronization and frame controls, 49–51Transmission power, 158–160Transmission time, 173, 175

Page 275 - 256 PLC for Businesses

Recent Titles in the Artech HouseTelecommunications SeriesVinton G. Cerf, Senior Series EditorAccess Networks: Technology and V5 Interfacing, Alex Gil

Page 276 - Security Parameters

Digital Clocks for Synchronization and Communications, Masami Kihara,Sadayasu Ono, and Pekka EskelinenDigital Modulation Techniques, Second Edition, F

Page 277 - Security Topologies

Marketing Telecommunications Services: New Approaches for aChanging Environment, Karen G. StrouseMission-Critical Network Planning, Matthew LiotineMul

Page 278 - HomePlug AV

Telecommunications Cost Management, S. C. StrotherTelecommunications Department Management, Robert A. GableTelecommunications Deregulation and the Inf

Page 279 - VLAN (Virtual LAN)

Drawing a parallel to the PSTN (public switched telephony network) model of anational telephone company, the electrical distribution network’s power p

Page 280

In terms of responsibility, each part of the electrical network is operated by dis-tinct organizations, responsible for supply and transport of electr

Page 281 - VoIP Under PLC

This section introduces some of the physical properties of electrical wiring inorder to understand its capabilities (both advantages and limitations)

Page 282 - Network Implementation

also be expressed in terms of electrical flux (φ) and associated with the electricalpotential between the two surfaces of the dipole:CV=φ(expressed in

Page 283 - 264 PLC for Businesses

•harmonic noise, composed of multiple frequencies used by electrical equip-ment connected to the network and which are multiples of the line frequency

Page 284

Power Line Communicationsin PracticeXavier Carcelleartechhouse.com

Page 285 - Hotel Story PLC Networks

The signal frequency of a HomePlug 1.0 modem is between 4 and 25 MHz, giv-ing a power spectral density of –50 dBm/Hz. We will examine the consequences

Page 286

Depending on the electronic components used, the analog interface has a char-acteristic “sensitivity” that affects its ability to transmit the PLC sig

Page 287 - 268 PLC for Businesses

Work by Nicholson and Malak has allowed us to express the average imped-ance of an electrical line by the formula:ZLCc=whereL = μH/m (linear inductanc

Page 288 - Configuring a DHCP/NAT Server

With the exception of EMTP, which allows modeling an entire electrical net-work and all its wiring as a function of its topology, there exist few tool

Page 289 - NAT Configuration

main circuit breaker panel, and the PLC signal circulates in all branches by passingthrough the panel.Figure 2.7 illustrates a simplified example of a

Page 290 - MASQUERADE

At points in the electrical wiring where the PLC signal becomes too weak to beused by the network’s PLC devices, the repeater amplifies and regenerate

Page 291

signal and not on the data frames. Therefore, this type of repeater does notreduce the bandwidth of the overall PLC network.•“Logical” PLC repeaters r

Page 292 - PLC for Communities

28 ArchitectureFigure 2.10 Sum of the modulated PLC signal and the power signal (for example, 110 V/60 Hz)Figure 2.9 Position of PLC technologies in t

Page 293 - Electrical Network Operators

Two frequency bands are allocated to PLC technologies:•3 to 148 kHz for low bit rate PLC;•2 to 20 MHz for high bit rate PLC.Figure 2.11 illustrates th

Page 295 - Topology of LV Networks

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication DataA catalog record of this book is available from the Library of CongressBritish Library Cataloguing i

Page 296 - Figure 12.6 Mesh topology

CHAPTER 3FunctionalityThe functionalities of the PLC networks are introduced in this chapter. The technol-ogies used in these networks are simple enou

Page 297 - 278 PLC for Communities

•Peer-to-peer mode. May be compared to a peer-to-peer IP network, where allthe PLC devices of the network play the same role and have the same hierar-

Page 298

numbers of bits/Hz, and so forth). This QoS management is ensured by usinga quality table for the various links located at the PLC master level.•Possi

Page 299 - POP = Point of Presence

Peer-to-Peer ModeThe telecommunication network theory has been much based on the network devicehierarchy principle. This principle was put into questi

Page 300 - University

•Selection of the best suited modulation mode and FEC (forward error correc-tion) type in view of the PLC link qualities. In the case of HomePlug 1.0,

Page 301 - Issues in Electrical Networks

HomePlug 1.0 PLC Network Hierarchy by Means of PrioritiesWithin IEEE 802.3 Ethernet frames, a VLAN field may be placed described in the IEEE802.1Q sta

Page 302

The data is communicated between the PLC1 and PLC2 devices in the followingway:1. PLC1 and PLC2 put in place an estimate of the transmission channel (

Page 303 - 284 PLC for Communities

If managing the medium access is handled by the CCo centralizing device like inthe master-slave mode, the data is exchanged directly between the devic

Page 304 - Configuring the Network

increases when a station could not emit, making it possible to bring the use of thenetwork in line with this priority level.Figure 3.5 illustrates the

Page 305 - 286 PLC for Communities

Two types of mechanisms are used in the VCS:•detection of fields at the beginning of the frame;•wait for response information provided by the frame co

Page 307 - Medium-Scale PLC Networks

•RIFS (response interframe spacing). When a station waits for a response fromthe destination station, the latter waits for a RIFS time of 26 μs before

Page 308 - Large-Scale PLC Networks

frames coming from the source station from the response frames coming fromthe destination station.•RGIFS (reverse grant interframe spacing). Used for

Page 309 - 290 PLC for Communities

Figure 3.7 illustrates the variation of the contention window (CW) and of thetransmission failure counter (DC) according to the number of retransmissi

Page 310

If CW and DC reach their maximum value defined by the HomePlug 1.0 stan-dard, these values are maintained, even if the BPC is decremented.As explained

Page 311 - 292 PLC for Communities

Data Transmission ExampleWhen a source station wants to transmit data to a destination station, it makes surethat the medium is not busy. If no activi

Page 312

The destination station can resend three types of acknowledgment frames:•ACK. The destination station has correctly received the data contained in the

Page 313

ACK ResponseIn the case of an ACK acknowledgment by the source station, the destination stationresends to it a response frame containing the RFCS fiel

Page 314 - Hybrid PLC

NACK ResponseIn the case a NACK type acknowledgment, the destination station resends to thesource station a response frame after a contention period i

Page 315 - 296 Hybrid PLC

SACK Response in HomePlug AVIn the AV version of the HomePlug standard, an additional response, the SACK (SelectiveACK) response, has been added to co

Page 316

Synchronization of HomePlug AV FramesRecent PLC developments made it possible to improve the performance of thedevices while keeping the interoperabil

Page 318

lish the specifications of the HomePlug AV (for Audio and Video) version which ismuch more efficient for the management of the quality of service (QoS

Page 319 - 300 Hybrid PLC

The CAP variable is used by a PLC station to inform the other stations of itsmedium access priority. This variable determines the values of the PRP1 a

Page 320 - Choosing the IEEE 802.11 Mode

the number of possible PLC stations in the same PLC network (16 stations forHomePlug 1.0 and 1.1 and 250 stations in HomePlug AV). Some values arerese

Page 321 - 302 Hybrid PLC

Frame Level FunctionalitiesIt is important to remind the structure of the data frames transported over the elec-trical network in order to understand

Page 322

The network modeling into seven layers according to the OSI model makes itpossible to understand how the PLC technologies structure data exchanges for

Page 323 - 304 Hybrid PLC

Fragmentation ReassemblyIn a PLC transmission using a shared medium disturbed by other uses with a wiredEthernet link using a cable dedicated to data

Page 324

the destination station or is damaged when it is received, NACK (non-acknowledg-ment) or FAIL (failure) processes are implemented between the source s

Page 325 - 306 Hybrid PLC

This is achieved with the dynamic adaptation of the data rate at the physicallevel according to the quality of the PLC links.Optimum use of the global

Page 326

The unicast mode is also possible: since the PLC stations are identified by theirMAC address, if a station knows the MAC address of another station, i

Page 327 - 308 Hybrid PLC

delimiter and response frames is used to prioritize the frames with respect to those ofthe stations with the same priority level or a lower priority l

Page 328 - Resources

ContentsPreface xiiiOrganization of the Book xiiiAcknowledgmentsxviiCHAPTER 1Introduction1PLC Technologies 1Standard Organizations 2What Kinds of Stan

Page 329 - 310 Resources

CHAPTER 4SecuritySecurity has been the main problem for Wi-Fi networks. In the case of PLC, this isnot so much of a concern as it is difficult to have

Page 330 - Books and Articles

to send data; and integrity control, which is used to know whether the data sent was notmodified during the transmission.CryptographyMaking a text or

Page 331

Various symmetric-key cryptography algorithms have been developed, in par-ticular DES (data encryption standard), IDEA (international data encryption

Page 332 - About the Author

However, the DES hasn’t been used since 1998 as its reliability was consideredto be poor. Its encryption algorithm has been altered and improved.3-DES

Page 333

RC5 and RC6RC5, another proprietary algorithm of RSA Security, is an encryption algorithm inblocks with a variable block size between 32 and 128 bits,

Page 334

the next round. At the end of the last round, which does not require transformationmechanism M, the data block is considered encrypted.Once all the bl

Page 335 - 316 Index

As with symmetric-key cryptography, various algorithms are used, in particularRSA (Rivest, Shamir, Adelman) and Diffie-Hellman.Though this technique m

Page 336 - Index 317

Mixed-Key CryptographyMixed-key cryptography, illustrated in Figure 4.6, uses the two aforementionedtechniques, i.e. symmetric-key cryptography and pu

Page 337 - 318 Index

A message to be sent can be signed using various techniques. One of them usespublic-key algorithms but hash functions are mostly used.Use of Public Ke

Page 338 - Index 319

Figure 4.8 illustrates a sender who wishes to send a message while making sureof its authenticity. For this purpose, a message digest is created by th

Page 339 - 320 Index

Peer-to-Peer Mode 34Centralized Mode 36Transmission Channel Functionalities 38Access to the Medium Using CSMA/CA Techniques 38The ARQ (Automatic Repea

Page 340 - Index 321

Various hash techniques are used, in particular the following ones:•MD2, MD4, and MD5. Message digests 2, 4, and 5 were developed by RonRivest for RSA

Page 341 - 322 Index

•Brute force attack. This attack consists of working through all the possiblecombinations in order to recover a password or an encryption key used in

Page 342 - Index 323

Therefore, a PLC logical network is based on an encryption key called a NEK(network encryption key) in the HomePlug specification that encrypts the da

Page 343 - 324 Index

However, several more or less realistic techniques are used to have access to thedata exchanged over a PLC network; in particular, these techniques co

Page 344 - Index 325

Access to Physical FramesThe data exchanged over a PLC network is carried in PLC frames known as “physi-cal frames.”The PLC frames circulate over the

Page 345

The NEK identifies the PLC network in the same manner as the WEP (wiredequivalent privacy) is used to protect the data of a Wi-Fi network. It also car

Page 346 - Telecommunications Series

Calculating the NEKThe PKCS#5 standard specifies two methods for the implementation of a cryptogra-phy derived from passwords. The PBFDK1 method was c

Page 347

m is the input message of arbitrary length converted to a bit stream.mpadconsists of pad bits (1 followed by 0’s) concatenated to m such that the leng

Page 348

Decryption AttacksThe purpose of this attack is to try to discover the NEK of a PLC network in order toconnect to it and to recover the exchanged data

Page 349

We notice that this technique requires too much time to be used efficiently.Denial of Service AttacksThe purpose of an attack is not necessarily to cr

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