FDDI provides a 100
Mbit/s optical standard for
data transmission in
local area network that can extend in length up to . Although FDDI logical topology is a ring-based token network, it did not use the IEEE 802.5
Token Ring protocol as its basis; instead, its protocol was derived from the IEEE 802.4
token bus timed token protocol. In addition to covering large geographical areas, FDDI local area networks can support thousands of users. FDDI offers both a Dual-Attached Station (DAS), counter-rotating token ring topology and a Single-Attached Station (SAS), token bus passing ring topology. FDDI, as a product of
American National Standards Institute X3T9.5 (now X3T12), conforms to the
Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) model of functional layering using other protocols. The standards process started in the mid 1980s. FDDI-II, a version of FDDI described in 1989, added
circuit-switched service capability to the network so that it could also handle voice and
video signals. Work started to connect FDDI networks to
synchronous optical networking (SONET) technology. An FDDI network contains two rings, one as a secondary backup in case the primary ring fails. The primary ring offers up to 100 Mbit/s capacity. When a network has no requirement for the secondary ring to do backup, it can also carry data, extending capacity to 200 Mbit/s. The single ring can extend the maximum distance; a dual ring can extend . FDDI had a larger maximum frame size (4,352 bytes) than the standard
Ethernet family, which only supports a maximum frame size of 1,500 bytes, allowing better effective data rates in some cases. ==Topology==