56 research outputs found

    Unordered Error-Correcting Codes and their Applications

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    We give efficient constructions for error correcting unordered {ECU) codes, i.e., codes such that any pair of codewords are at a certain minimal distance apart and at the same time they are unordered. These codes are used for detecting a predetermined number of (symmetric) errors and for detecting all unidirectional errors. We also give an application in parallel asynchronous communications

    Some new EC/AUED codes

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    A novel construction that differs from the traditional way of constructing systematic EC/AUED/(error-correcting/all unidirectional error-detecting) codes is presented. The usual method is to take a systematic t-error-correcting code and then append a tail so that the code can detect more than t errors when they are unidirectional. In the authors' construction, the t-error-correcting code is modified in such a way that the weight distribution of the original code is reduced. The authors then have to add a smaller tail. Frequently they have less redundancy than the best available systematic t-EC/AUED codes

    Delay-insensitive pipelined communication on parallel buses

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    Consider a communication channel that consists of several subchannels transmitting simultaneously and asynchronously. As an example of this scheme, we can consider a board with several chips. The subchannels represent wires connecting between the chips where differences in the lengths of the wires might result in asynchronous reception. In current technology, the receiver acknowledges reception of the message before the transmitter sends the following message. Namely, pipelined utilization of the channel is not possible. Our main contribution is a scheme that enables transmission without an acknowledgment of the message, therefore enabling pipelined communication and providing a higher bandwidth. However, our scheme allows for a certain number of transitions from a second message to arrive before reception of the current message has been completed, a condition that we call skew. We have derived necessary and sufficient conditions for codes that can tolerate a certain amount of skew among adjacent messages (therefore, allowing for continuous operation) and detect a larger amount of skew when the original skew is exceeded. These results generalize previously known results. We have constructed codes that satisfy the necessary and sufficient conditions, studied their optimality, and devised efficient decoding algorithms. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first known scheme that permits efficient asynchronous communications without acknowledgment. Potential applications are in on-chip, on-board, and board to board communications, enabling much higher communication bandwidth

    Decoding the Golay code with Venn diagrams

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    A decoding algorithm, based on Venn diagrams, for decoding the [23, 12, 7] Golay code is presented. The decoding algorithm is based on the design properties of the parity sets of the code. As for other decoding algorithms for the Golay code, decoding can be easily done by hand

    Coding for skew-tolerant parallel asynchronous communications

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    A communication channel consisting of several subchannels transmitting simultaneously and asynchronously is considered, an example being a board with several chips, where the subchannels are wires connecting the chips and differences in the lengths of the wires can result in asynchronous reception. A scheme that allows transmission without an acknowledgment of the message, therefore permitting pipelined communication and providing a higher bandwidth, is described. The scheme allows a certain number of transitions from a second message to arrive before reception of the current message has been completed, a condition called skew. Necessary and sufficient conditions for codes that can detect skew as well as for codes that are skew-tolerant, i.e. can correct the skew and allow continuous operation, are derived. Codes that satisfy the necessary and sufficient conditions are constructed, their optimality is studied, and efficient decoding algorithms are devised. Potential applications of the scheme are in on-chip, on-board, and board to board communications, enabling much higher communication bandwidth
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