| Narten T., and C. Burton, "A Caution On The Canonical Ordering Of Link-Layer Addresses", RFC 2469, December 1998. |
.... SOF FC frame content EOF Fig. 4 General FC 2 Frame Format 5. 2 Bit and Byte Ordering FC frames are mapped to TCP using the big endian byte ordering, which corresponds to the standard network byte order or canonical form [8]. 5.3 FC SOF and EOF The FC frame content is composed of 8 bit bytes that can be translated directly for transmission over TCP. The SOF and EOF require 8b 10b special characters that cannot be translated directly to 8 bit bytes, encoded values are required. For this reason, the encapsulated FC ....
Narten, T. and C. Burton, "A Caution on The Canonical Ordering of Link-Layer Addresses", RFC 2469, December
No context found.
Narten T., and C. Burton, "A Caution On The Canonical Ordering Of Link-Layer Addresses", RFC 2469, December 1998.
No context found.
Narten, T. and C. Burton, "A Caution on The Canonical Ordering of Link-Layer Addresses", RFC 2469, December 1998.
No context found.
Narten, T. and C. Burton, "A Caution on the Canonical Ordering of Link-Layer Addresses", RFC 2469, December 1998.
No context found.
Narten, T. and C. Burton, "A Caution On The Canonical Ordering Of Link-Layer Addresses", RFC 2469, December 1998.
No context found.
Narten, T. and C. Burton, "A Caution On The Canonical Ordering Of Link-Layer Addresses", RFC 2469, December 1998.
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