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Serial Communication Glossary




Baudrate
Baud rate indicates the transmission speed on the serial line. With RS232/422/485 interfaces, the baudrate is the same as the transfer rate in bps.



Bit
Binary digit, can have value 0 or 1



Bitrate
The bitrate defines the number of bits transmitted in a specified amount of time



Carrier Detect
Carrier detect, signal line on the DCE to indicate the presence of a carrier signal.



Clear To Send
Clear To Send, signal line on the DCE to handshake with the DTE.



Control Characters
ASCII codes which are used for special functions in serial communications.



Data Communication Equipment
Examples of Data Communication Equipment are modems, faxes and GSM modems.



Data Set Ready
Data Set Ready, signal line on the DCE to handshake with the DTE.



Data Terminal Equipment
Examples of Data Terminal Equipment are computers, printers, terminals and PDA's.



Data Terminal Ready
Data Terminal Ready, signal line on the DTE to handshake with the DCE.



Databits
The number of bits that are used to send a single character over a serial line.



EIA-561
Standard for using a modular connector (RJ45) for asynchronous serial communications.



Electronic Industries Alliance
Electronic Industries Alliance is a standardization organization that defines and maintains all kinds of electronics standards.



First In First Out
FIFO is a buffer where the data is retrieved from in the same order as it was added during recption



Flow Control
Flow control is used to regulate the dataflow between a DTE and DCE to ensure that no buffer overflow and thus no loss of data is caused. There are two sorts of flowcontrol, hardware and software flow control.



Handshaking
Handshaking is used to regulate the dataflow between a DTE and DCE to ensure that no buffer overflow and thus no loss of data is caused. There are two sorts of flowcontrol, hardware and software flow control.



Mark
Transmission of a binary '1'. On a serial line this is a negative voltage (for RS232: -3 to -12 volts).



Modem
Modem is the abbreviation of Modulator Demodulator. A modem is used to convert Digital to Analog signals to be transmitted over a telephone line.



Parity bit
A bit at the end of every character which is used for error detection. This bit is computed from the databits.



Public Services Telephone Network
Your fixed telephone line



Request To Send
Request To Send, signal line on the DTE to handshake with the DCE.



RS232
RS-232 is a long-established standard that describes the physical interface and protocol for low-speed serial data communication between devices. This is the interface that e.g. a computer uses to talk to and exchange data with a modem and other serial devices.



RS422
RS-422 is a serial data communication protocol that specifies 4-wire, full-duplex, differential line, multi-drop communications. It provides balanced data transmission with unidirectional/non-reversible, terminated or non-terminated transmission lines. RS-422 does not allow multiple drivers, only multiple receivers. Maximum recommended range is 4,000 feet (1200 meters). Maximum recommended baud rate is 10Mbit/s.



RS485
RS-485 is an upgraded version of RS-422 that supports up to 32 devices on the same connection. RS-485 is an electrical specification of a two-wire, half-duplex, multipoint serial connection. It enables the configuration of inexpensive local networks and multidrop communications links. It offers high data transmission speeds (up to 10Mbit/s), and as it uses a differential balanced line over twisted pair (like RS-422), it can span relatively large distances (4000 feet or 1200 meters). RS-485 only specifies the electrical characteristics of the driver and the receiver. It does not specify or recommend any data protocol.



Serial Communications
Communications over a single wire, where only one bit is transmitted at a time



Space
Transmission of a binary '0'. On a serial line this is a positive voltage (for RS232: +3 to +12 volts)..



Start bit
A bit that indicates the start of a new character on the serial line.



Stop bit
A bit that indicates the end of a character on the serial line.



Synchronous communications
Normally the clock signals are extracted from the start and stopbits. When using synchronous communications, a clock signal is used to indicate the start and end of every byte. An USART is needed to use synchronous communications.



Universal Asynchronous Receiver Transmitter
The chip used to control the data in serial communication devices. UART's are used in RS232/485 and 422 devices.



Universal Synchronous/Asynchronous Receiver Transmitter
Same as an UART, but it also supports synchronous communications.



V24
European name for RS232



V25
Standard for communication with a modem, also called Hayes AT command protocol.



XON/XOFF
Software handshaking by using XON and XOFF control characters.