SAE J 2366-4 : 2002
SAE J 2366-4 : 2002
ITS DATA BUS - THIN TRANSPORT LAYER
SAE International
1 Scope
2 References
2.1 Applicable documents
2.1.1 SAE Publications
2.1.2 CAN publication
2.2 Related publications
2.2.1 SAE publications
2.2.2 ISO publication
3 Definitions
3.1 ACK
3.2 AMH
3.3 AML
3.4 Bit
3.5 Clear
3.6 Dominant
3.7 Frame
3.8 Frame group
3.9 IDB
3.10 ITS
3.11 NACK or NAK
3.12 Node
3.13 Octet
3.14 OEM
3.15 OSI
3.16 Out of band
3.17 PDU
3.18 Recessive
3.19 Set
3.20 TTC
3.21 TTD
3.22 Time intervals
3.22.1 Frame group acknowledge timer, T[MaxAck]
3.22.2 Inactivity timer, T[inactivity]
3.22.3 Frame group timer, T[FrameGroup]
4 Protocol overview
4.1 Basic concepts
4.2 Frame format overview
4.3 Frame elements
4.3.1 Data frame elements
4.3.2 Control frame elements
4.4 Frame grouping, acknowledgement and resynchronization
4.4.1 Frame grouping
4.4.2 Positive acknowledgement
4.4.3 Negative acknowledgement
4.4.4 Resynchronization
4.5 Data frame type usage
4.5.1 Use of DATAFRAMESINGLE frame
4.5.2 Use of DATAFRAMESTART, DATAFRAMECONT, DATAFRAMEEND
and DATAFRAMERESYNC frames
4.6 Message data ordering
4.7 Transport layer primitives
4.7.1 Primitives invoked by upper layers
4.7.2 Primitives invoked by SAE J 2366-4
4.7.3 Primitives invoked by lower layers
4.8 Transport layer diagnostics
4.8.1 BrdcastMsgErrCntr
4.8.2 NAKRcvCntr
4.8.3 NAKTxCntr
Specifies the handling of such activities as the packetizing of long messages and message reassembly. Design of the messages and headers has stressed economy, in terms of bits within a CAN 2.0B frame. The ITS Data Bus (IDB) is a non-proprietary virtual token passing bus, designed to allow disparate consumer, vehicle, and commercial electronic components to communicate and share information across a standard, open data bus.
Document Type | Standard |
Status | Current |
Publisher | SAE International |