Uni Pro Protocol Stack
In mobile-telephone technology, the UniPro protocol stack follows the architecture of the classical OSI Reference Model. In UniPro, the OSI Physical Layer is split into two sublayers: Layer 1 (the actual physical layer) and Layer 1.5 (the PHY Adapter layer) which abstracts from differences between alternative Layer 1 technologies. The actual physical layer is a separate specification as the various PHY options are reused in other MIPI Alliance specifications.
Layer # | Layer name | Functionality | Data unit name | |
---|---|---|---|---|
LA | Application | Payload and transaction semantics | Message | |
DME | ||||
Layer 4 | Transport | Ports, multiplexing, flow control | Segment | |
Layer 3 | Network | Addressing, routing | Packet | |
Layer 2 | Data link | Single-hop reliability and priority-based arbitration | Frame | |
Layer 1.5 | PHY adapter | Physical layer abstraction and multi-lane support | UniPro symbol | |
Layer 1 | Physical layer (PHY) | Signaling, clocking, line encoding, power modes | PHY symbol |
The UniPro specification itself covers Layers 1.5, 2, 3, 4 and the DME (Device Management Entity). The Application Layer (LA) is out of scope because different uses of UniPro will require different LA protocols. The Physical Layer (L1) is covered in separate MIPI specifications in order to allow the PHY to be reused by other (less generic) protocols if needed.
OSI Layers 5 (Session) and 6 (Presentation) are, where applicable, counted as part of the Application Layer.
Read more about Uni Pro Protocol Stack: PHY Adapter Layer (L1.5), Data Link Layer (L2), Network Layer (L3), Transport Layer (L4), Device Management Entity (DME)
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