> Mr wrote:
>
>> What kind of checksum is appropriate for a data package with a
>> maximum length of 255 byte?
>>
>> Is an one byte XOR checksum sufficient or should i use some kind
>> of 16-bit checksum or is that overkill for so litle data?
>>
>> The data is to be transmitted on an RS232 line at 115200 kbit/s.
>
> Depends on how frequently you are sending packets and how much a
> bad one will cost you.
>
> My personal, totally empirical, preference would be crc16. It
> only takes a few more instructions to implement than checksum.
I agree completely. Use the CCITCRC polynomial, and initialize the
checksum to 0xffff.
--
Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukah, Happy New Year
Joyeux Noel, Bonne Annee.
Chuck F (cbfalconer at maineline dot net)
<http://cbfalconer.home.att.net>
--
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Reply by Jim Stewart●December 20, 20072007-12-20
Mr wrote:
> What kind of checksum is appropriate for a data package with a maximum
> length of 255 byte?
>
> Is an one byte XOR checksum sufficient or should i use some kind of 16-bit
> checksum or is that overkill for so litle data?
>
> The data is to be transmitted on an RS232 line at 115200 kbit/s.
Depends on how frequently you are sending
packets and how much a bad one will cost you.
My personal, totally empirical, preference
would be crc16. It only takes a few more
instructions to implement than checksum.
Reply by Rich Webb●December 20, 20072007-12-20
Mr wrote:
> What kind of checksum is appropriate for a data package with a maximum
> length of 255 byte?
>
> Is an one byte XOR checksum sufficient or should i use some kind of 16-bit
> checksum or is that overkill for so litle data?
>
> The data is to be transmitted on an RS232 line at 115200 kbit/s.
What are the consequences of a packet error? A misplaced dot on a graph
that a user will eyeball-out or somebody dies?
A CRC or checksum plus structured data plus sanity checking on the
receiving end is often adequate but more robust error detection and
correction techniques are certainly available and may be warranted.
P(error) will never be exactly zero. How small does it need to be?
--
Rich Webb Norfolk, VA
Reply by Stan●December 20, 20072007-12-20
"Mr" <Mr@mr.com> a �crit dans le message de
news:476a88bc$0$90275$14726298@news.sunsite.dk...
> What kind of checksum is appropriate for a data package with a maximum
> length of 255 byte?
>
> Is an one byte XOR checksum sufficient or should i use some kind of 16-bit
> checksum or is that overkill for so litle data?
>
> The data is to be transmitted on an RS232 line at 115200 kbit/s.
>
The rfc 1071 summarizes some algorithms :
http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1071.html
In one section there are example of Internet checksum implementation
algorithms that have been found to be efficient on a variety of
CPU's.
It's very easy to implemente...
--
-Stan
Reply by Mr●December 20, 20072007-12-20
What kind of checksum is appropriate for a data package with a maximum
length of 255 byte?
Is an one byte XOR checksum sufficient or should i use some kind of 16-bit
checksum or is that overkill for so litle data?
The data is to be transmitted on an RS232 line at 115200 kbit/s.