IEEE 802.3

{{Short description|Collection of standards for wired Ethernet}}

{{about|the standards working group|Ethernet frame data format|Ethernet frame}}

IEEE 802.3 is a working group and a collection of standards defining the physical layer and data link layer's media access control (MAC) of wired Ethernet. The standards are produced by the working group of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). This set of standards generally applies to local area networks (LANs) and has some wide area network (WAN) applications. Physical connections are made between network nodes and, usually, various network infrastructure devices (hubs, switches, routers) by various types of copper cables or optical fiber.

802.3 standards support the IEEE 802.1 network architecture.

802.3 also defines a LAN access method using carrier-sense multiple access with collision detection (CSMA/CD).

Communication standards

{{sticky header}}

class="wikitable sortable sticky-header"

!Ethernet standard

!data-sort-type="number" | IEEE approval date

!Description

Experimental
Ethernet

|1973{{Efn|developed at Xerox PARC}}{{cite web |url= http://americanhistory.si.edu/collections/search/object/nmah_687626 |title= Ethernet Prototype Circuit Board |publisher=Smithsonian National Museum of American History |access-date= 2014-10-31}}

|2.94 Mbit/s (367 kB/s) over a coaxial cable (coax) bus. A single-octet node address is unique only to an individual network.

Ethernet I
(DIX v1.0)

|1980-09{{Efn|name=DIX|published by DEC, Intel, Xerox PARC}}

| rowspan="2" |10 Mbit/s (1.25 MB/s) over thick coax. Frames have a Type field. This frame format is used on all forms of Ethernet by protocols in the Internet protocol suite. Six-octet MAC address.

Ethernet II
(DIX v2.0)

|1982-11{{Efn|name=DIX}}

802.3-1985

|1983-06

|10BASE5 10 Mbit/s (1.25 MB/s) over thick coax. First edition of the IEEE 802.3 standard. Approved by IEEE in 1983, approved by ANSI in 1984, and published in 1985. Same as Ethernet II (above) except Type field is replaced by Length, and an 802.2 LLC header follows the 802.3 header. Based on the CSMA/CD media access method.

802.3a

|1985-11

|10BASE2 10 Mbit/s (1.25 MB/s) over thin coax (a.k.a. thinnet or cheapernet)

802.3b

|1985-09

|10BROAD36

802.3c

|1985-12

|10 Mbit/s (1.25 MB/s) repeater specifications

802.3d

|1987-12

|Fiber-optic inter-repeater link

802.3e

|1987-06

|1BASE5 or StarLAN, first use of (voice-grade) twisted pair cabling, 1 Mbit/s, maximum reach of 250 to 500 m

802.3h

|1990-09

|10 Mbit/s layer management, DTEs

802.3i

|1990-09

|10BASE-T 10 Mbit/s (1.25 MB/s) over twisted pair

802.3j

|1992-09

|10BASE-F 10 Mbit/s (1.25 MB/s) over optical fiber

802.3k

|1992-09

|10 Mbit/s layer management, repeaters

802.3m

|1995-09

|Maintenance

802.3n

|1995-09

|Maintenance

802.3q

|1993-06

|GDMO (ISO/IEC 10165-4) format for Layer Managed Objects

802.3r

|1996-07

|10BASE5 Medium Attachment Unit PICS

802.3s

|1995-09

|Maintenance

802.3t

|1995-06

|120 Ω informative annex for 10BASE-T

802.3u

|1995-06

|100BASE-TX, 100BASE-T4, 100BASE-FX Fast Ethernet at 100 Mbit/s (12.5 MB/s) with autonegotiation

802.3v

|1995-12

|150 Ω informative annex for 10BASE-T

802.3x

|1997-03

|Full duplex and flow control; also incorporates DIX framing, so there's no longer a DIX/802.3 split

802.3y

|1997-03

|100BASE-T2 100 Mbit/s (12.5 MB/s) over voice-grade twisted pair

802.3z

|1998-06

|1000BASE-X 1 Gbit/s (125 MB/s) Ethernet over optical fiber

802.3-1998

|1998-06

|(802.3aa) A revision of the base standard incorporating earlier amendments and errata

802.3ab

|1999-06

|1000BASE-T 1 Gbit/s (125 MB/s) Ethernet over twisted pair

802.3ac

|1998-09

|Max frame size extended to 1522 bytes (to allow "Q-tag"). The Q-tag includes 802.1Q VLAN information and 802.1p priority information.

802.3ad

|2000-03

|Link aggregation for parallel links, since moved to IEEE 802.1AX

802.3-2002

|2002-01

|(802.3ag) A revision of the base standard incorporating the three prior amendments and errata

802.3ae

|2002-06

|10 Gigabit Ethernet over fiber: 10GBASE-SR, 10GBASE-LR, 10GBASE-ER, 10GBASE-SW, 10GBASE-LW, 10GBASE-EW

802.3af

|2003-06

| Power over Ethernet (15.4 W)

802.3ah

|2004-06

|Ethernet in the First Mile

802.3ak

|2004-02

|10GBASE-CX4 10 Gbit/s (1,250 MB/s) Ethernet over twinaxial cables

802.3-2005

|2005-06

|(802.3am) A revision of the base standard incorporating the four prior amendments and errata

802.3an

|2006-06

|10GBASE-T 10 Gbit/s (1,250 MB/s) Ethernet over unshielded twisted pair (UTP)

802.3ap

|2007-03

|Backplane Ethernet (1 and 10 Gbit/s (125 and 1,250 MB/s) over printed circuit boards)

802.3aq

|2006-09

|10GBASE-LRM 10 Gbit/s (1,250 MB/s) Ethernet over multimode fiber

P802.3ar

|canceled

|Congestion management (withdrawn)

802.3as

|2006-09

|Frame expansion

802.3at

|2009-09

| Power over Ethernet enhancements (25.5 W)

802.3au

|2006-06

|Isolation requirements for Power over Ethernet (802.3-2005/Cor 1)

802.3av

|2009-09

|10 Gbit/s EPON

802.3aw

|2007-06

|Fixed an equation in the publication of 10GBASE-T (released as 802.3-2005/Cor 2)

802.3ax

|2008-11

|Link aggregation – moved to and approved as 802.1AX

802.3-2008

|2008-12

|(802.3ay) A revision of the base standard incorporating the 802.3an/ap/aq/as amendments, two corrigenda and errata

802.3az

|2010-09

|Energy-Efficient Ethernet

802.3ba

|2010-06

|40 Gbit/s and 100 Gbit/s Ethernet. 40 Gbit/s over a 1 m backplane, 10 m Cu cable assembly (4×25 Gbit/s or 10×10 Gbit/s lanes) and 100 m of multi-mode optical fiber, and 100 Gbit/s over 10 m of Cu cable assembly, 100 m of multi-mode optical fiber and 40 km of single-mode optical fiber

802.3-2008/Cor 1

|2009-12

|(802.3bb) Increase Pause Reaction Delay timings which are insufficient for 10 Gbit/s (Working group name was 802.3bb.)

802.3bc

|2009-09

|Move and update Ethernet-related TLVs (type, length, values), previously specified in Annex F of IEEE 802.1AB (LLDP) to 802.3

802.3bd

|2011-06

|Priority-based Flow Control. An amendment by the IEEE 802.1 Data Center Bridging Task Group (802.1Qbb) to develop an amendment to IEEE Std 802.3 to add a MAC Control Frame to support IEEE 802.1Qbb Priority-based Flow Control.

802.3.1

|2011-05

|(802.3be) MIB definitions for Ethernet. It consolidates the Ethernet-related MIBs present in Annex 30A&B, various IETF RFCs, and 802.1AB annex F into one master document with a machine-readable extract. (Working group name was P802.3be.)

802.3bf

|2011-05

|Provides an accurate indication of the transmission and reception initiation times of certain packets as required to support IEEE P802.1AS

802.3bg

|2011-03

|Provide a 40 Gbit/s PMD which is optically compatible with existing carrier SMF 40 Gbit/s client interfaces (OTU3/STM-256/OC-768/40G POS).

802.3-2012

|2012-08

|(802.3bh) A revision of the base standard incorporating the 802.3at/av/az/ba/bc/bd/bf/bg amendments, corrigenda and errata.

802.3bj

|2014-06

|Defines a four-lane 100 Gbit/s backplane PHY for operation over links consistent with copper traces on "improved FR-4" (as defined by IEEE P802.3ap or better materials to be defined by the Task Force) with lengths up to at least 1 m and a four-lane 100 Gbit/s PHY for operation over links consistent with copper twinaxial cables with lengths up to at least 5 m

802.3bk

|2013-08

|This amendment to IEEE Std 802.3 defines the physical-layer specifications and management parameters for EPON operation on point-to-multipoint passive optical networks supporting extended power budget classes of PX30, PX40, PRX40, and PR40 PMDs.

802.3bm

|2015-02

|100G/40G Ethernet for optical fiber

802.3bn

|2016-09

|10G-EPON and 10GPASS-XR, passive optical networks over coax

802.3bp

|2016-06{{cite web|url=http://www.ieee802.org/3/bp/ |title=IEEE P802.3bp 1000BASE-T1 PHY Task Force |date=2016-07-29 |access-date=2016-10-02}}

|1000BASE-T1 – Gigabit Ethernet over a single twisted pair for automotive & industrial environments

802.3bq

|2016-06{{Cite web|url=http://www.ieee802.org/3/NGBASET/email/msg00972.html | publisher = IEEE | title = Approval of IEEE Std 802.3by-2016, IEEE Std 802.3bq-2016, IEEE Std 802.3bp-2016 and IEEE Std 802.3br-2016 |date=2016-06-30}}.

|25GBASE-T/40GBASE-T Ethernet for four-pair balanced–twisted-pair cabling with two connectors over 30 m distances

802.3br

|2016-06

|Specification and Management Parameters for Interspersing Express Traffic

802.3bs

|2017-12

|200GbE (200 Gbit/s) over single-mode fiber and 400GbE (400 Gbit/s) over optical physical media

802.3bt

|2018-09

| Third generation Power over Ethernet with up to 100 W using four pairs in balanced–twisted-pair cabling (4PPoE), including 10GBASE-T, lower standby power and specific enhancements to support IoT applications (e.g. lighting, sensors, building automation).

802.3bu

|2016-12

|Power over Data Lines (PoDL) for single twisted pair Ethernet (100BASE-T1)

802.3bv

|2017-02

|Gigabit Ethernet over plastic optical fiber (POF)

802.3bw

| 2015-10{{Cite web|url=http://www.ieee802.org/3/bw/ |title=IEEE P802.3bw 100BASE-T1 Task Force|date=2015-10-27|quote=The work of the IEEE P802.3bw 100BASE-T1 Task Force completed with the approval of IEEE Std 802.3bw-2015 by the IEEE-SA Standards Board on 27 October 2015.}}

|100BASE-T1{{dash}}100 Mbit/s Ethernet over a single twisted pair for automotive applications

802.3-2015

| 2015-09

| 802.3bx{{dash}}A new consolidated revision of the 802.3 standard including amendments 802.3bk/bj/bm

802.3by

|2016-06{{Cite web|url=http://www.ieee802.org/3/25GSG/email/msg00556.html |title=[STDS-802-3-25G] IEEE Std 802.3by-2016 Standard Approved!|date=2016-06-30}}

| Optical fiber, twinax and backplane 25 Gigabit Ethernet{{Citation | url = http://www.ieee802.org/3/by/ | publisher = IEEE | title = P802.3by 25 Gbit/s Ethernet Task Force}}.

802.3bz

|2016-09{{Cite web|title=[802.3_NGBASET] FW: Approval of IEEE Std 802.3bz 2.5GBASE-T and 5GBASE-T |publisher=IEEE P802.3bz Task Force |url=http://www.ieee802.org/3/NGBASET/email/msg00996.html |access-date=2016-09-24}}

| 2.5GBASE-T and 5GBASE-T{{dash}}2.5 Gigabit/s and 5 Gigabit/s Ethernet over Cat-5e/Cat-6 twisted-pair cable

802.3ca

|2020-06

|25G-EPON and 50G-EPON{{dash}}Downstream/Upstream rates of 25/10, 25/25, 50/10, 50/25, 50/50 Gbit/s over Ethernet Passive Optical Networks

802.3cb

|2018-09

|2.5 Gbit/s and 5 Gbit/s Operation over Backplane

802.3cc

|2017-12

|25 Gbit/s over Single-Mode Fiber

802.3cd

|2018-12

|Media Access Control Parameters for 50 Gbit/s and Physical Layers and Management Parameters for 50, 100, and 200 Gbit/s Operation

802.3ce

|2017-03

|Multilane Timestamping

802.3.2-2019

|2019-03

|802.3cf, YANG Data Model Definitions

802.3cg

|2019-11

|10BASE-T1L and 10BASE-T1S{{dash}}10 Mbit/s Single–twisted-pair Ethernet

802.3ch

|2020-06

|MultiGigBASE-T1 Automotive Ethernet (2.5, 5, 10 Gbit/s) over 15 m with optional PoDL

802.3-2018

|2018-08

|802.3cj{{dash}}802.3-2015 maintenance, incorporating recent amendments bn/bp/bq/br/bs/bu/bv/bw/by/bz/cc/ce

802.3ck

|2022-09

|100, 200, and 400 Gbit/s Ethernet using 100 Gbit/s lanes, chaired by Beth Kochuparambil{{cite web |url=https://www.ieee802.org/3/contacts.html#NGBIDI | title=IEEE 802.3 Ethernet Task Force, Study Group, and Ad Hoc Officers |publisher=IEEE |date=30 April 2021 |access-date=2021-05-26}}

802.3cm

|2020-01

|400 Gbit/s over multimode fiber (four and eight pairs, 100 m)

802.3cn

|2019-11

|50 Gbit/s (40 km), 100 Gbit/s (80 km), 200 Gbit/s (four λ, 40 km), and 400 Gbit/s (eight λ, 40 km and single λ, 80 km over DWDM) over single-mode fiber and DWDM

802.3cp

|2021-06

|10/25/50 Gbit/s single-strand optical access with at least 10/20/40 km reach, chaired by Frank Effenberger

802.3cq

|2020-01

|Power over Ethernet over two pairs (maintenance)

802.3cr

|2021-02

|Isolation (maintenance)

802.3cs

|2022-09

|"Super-PON"{{dash}}Increased-reach, 10 Gbit/s optical access with at least 50 km reach and 1:64 split ratio per wavelength pair, 16 wavelength pairs, chaired by Claudio DeSanti

802.3ct

|2021-06

|100 Gbit/s over DWDM systems (80 km reach using coherent modulation), chaired by John D'Ambrosia

802.3cu

|2021-02

|100 Gbit/s and 400 Gbit/s over SMF using 100 Gbit/s lanes

802.3cv

|2021-05

|Power over Ethernet maintenance, chaired by Chad Jones

802.3cw

|canceled

|400 Gbit/s over DWDM Systems{{dash}}chaired by John D'Ambrosia, withdrawn

802.3cx

|2023-03

|Improved PTP time-stamping accuracy, chaired by Steve Gorshe

802.3cy

|2023-06

|MultiGigBASE-T1 25 Gbit/s electrical automotive Ethernet,{{cite web | url = https://standards.ieee.org/ieee/802.3cy/10280/ | title = Physical Layer Specifications and Management Parameters for 25 Gb/s – Electrical Automotive Ethernet | publisher = IEEE | date = 2023-08-11 | access-date = 2023-09-01 | archive-date = 2023-09-01 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20230901155233/https://standards.ieee.org/ieee/802.3cy/10280/ | url-status = dead }} chaired by Steve Carlson

802.3cz

|2023-03

|Multi-gigabit optical automotive Ethernet, chaired by Bob Grow

802.3da

|(TBD)

|10BASE-T1S 10 Mb/s operation over single–balanced-pair multi-drop segments, extends length up to 50 m{{dash}}scheduled for mid 2025, chaired by Chad Jones

802.3db

|2022-09

|100 Gbit/s, 200 Gbit/s, and 400 Gbit/s operation over optical fiber using 100 Gbit/s signaling, chaired by Robert Lingle

802.3-2022

|2022-07

|802.3dc{{dash}}802.3-2018 maintenance, incorporating recent amendments bt/ca/cb/cd/cg/ch/cm/cn/cp/cq/cr/ct/cu/cv, chaired by Adam Healey

802.3dd

|2022-06

|Power over Data Lines of single-pair Ethernet maintenance, chaired by George Zimmerman

802.3de

|2022-09

|Time synchronization for point-to-point single-pair Ethernet, chaired by George Zimmerman

802.3df

|2024-02

|200 Gb/s, 400 Gb/s and 800 Gb/s using 100 Gbit/s lanes, chaired by John D’Ambrosia

802.3dg

|(TBD)

| 100BASE-T1L (100 Mbps over a single pair with extended length to 500 m){{dash}}scheduled for mid 2025, chaired by George Zimmerman

802.3dh

|canceled

|Multi-gigabit-per-second automotive Ethernet over plastic optical fiber, chaired by Yuji Watanabe

802.3dj

|(TBD)

|200 Gb/s, 400 Gb/s, 800 Gb/s and 1.6 Tbit/s using 200 Gbit/s lanes{{dash}}scheduled for spring 2026, chaired by John D'Ambrosia

802.3dk

|(TBD)

|Greater than 50 Gbit/s bidirectional optical access, chaired by Yuanqiu Luo

802.3dm

|(TBD)

|Asymmetrical Electrical Automotive Ethernet, chaired by Jon Lewis

802.3dn

|2024-09

|802.3-2022/Cor 1 Multi-Gigabit Automotive MDI Return Loss, chaired by Brett McClellan

{{notelist}}

See also

References

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