From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bonding protocol (short for "Bandwidth On Demand Interoperability Group") is a generic name for a method of bonding or aggregation of multiple physical links to form a single logical link. [1] Bonding is the term often used in Linux implementations: on Windows based systems the term teaming is often used, and between network-devices we talk about link aggregation, LAG and Link Aggregation Control Protocol.

Major categories

  • Asynchronous bonding protocol
  • Synchronous bonding protocol

See also

References

  1. ^ Fredette, P.H. (1994). "The past, present, and future of inverse multiplexing". IEEE Communications Magazine. 32 (4). IEEE Communications Society: 42–46. doi: 10.1109/35.275334. S2CID  8022507. Abstract.


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bonding protocol (short for "Bandwidth On Demand Interoperability Group") is a generic name for a method of bonding or aggregation of multiple physical links to form a single logical link. [1] Bonding is the term often used in Linux implementations: on Windows based systems the term teaming is often used, and between network-devices we talk about link aggregation, LAG and Link Aggregation Control Protocol.

Major categories

  • Asynchronous bonding protocol
  • Synchronous bonding protocol

See also

References

  1. ^ Fredette, P.H. (1994). "The past, present, and future of inverse multiplexing". IEEE Communications Magazine. 32 (4). IEEE Communications Society: 42–46. doi: 10.1109/35.275334. S2CID  8022507. Abstract.



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