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・ Trunk protocol
・ Trunk Records
・ Trunk road
・ Trunk road agency
・ Trunk roads in Ireland
・ Trunk shot
・ Trunk show
・ Trunk Space
・ Trunk to Cairo
・ Trunk Train
・ Trunk versus toll telephony
・ Trunked radio system
・ Trunkelsberg
・ Trunkey Creek, New South Wales
・ Trunki
Trunking
・ Trunking gateway
・ Trunkline
・ Trunkline LNG
・ Trunkline Pipeline
・ Trunko
・ Trunks
・ Trunks (clothing)
・ Trunks (Dragon Ball)
・ Trunks Integrated Record Keeping System
・ Trunnion
・ Trunojoyo
・ Trunojoyo Airport
・ Trunojoyo University
・ Trunomi


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Trunking : ウィキペディア英語版
Trunking

In telecommunications, trunking is a method for a system to provide network access to many clients by sharing a set of lines or frequencies instead of providing them individually. This is analogous to the structure of a tree with one trunk and many branches. Examples of this include telephone systems and the VHF radios commonly used by police agencies. More recently port trunking has been applied in computer networking as well.
A trunk is a single transmission channel between two points, each point being either the switching center or the node.
== Radio communications ==
(詳細はTrunked radio systems (TRS) pool all of the cashiers (channels) into one group and use a store manager (site controller) that assigns incoming shoppers to free cashiers as determined by the store's policies (TRS protocols).
In a TRS, individual transmissions in any conversation may take place on several different channels. In the shopping analogy, this is as if a family of shoppers checks out all at once and are assigned different cashiers by the traffic manager. Similarly, if a single shopper checks out more than once, they may be assigned a different cashier each time.
Trunked radio systems provide greater efficiency at the cost of greater management overhead. The store manager's orders must be conveyed to all the shoppers. This is done by assigning one or more radio channels as the "control channel". The control channel transmits data from the site controller that runs the TRS, and is continuously monitored by all of the field radios in the system so that they know how to follow the various conversations between members of their talkgroups (families) and other talkgroups as they hop from radio channel to radio channel.
TRS's have grown massively in their complexity since their introduction, and now include multi-site systems that can cover entire states or groups of states. This is similar to the idea of a chain of grocery stores. The shopper generally goes to the nearest grocery store, but if there are complications or congestion, the shopper may opt to go to a neighboring store. Each store in the chain can talk to each other and pass messages between shoppers at different stores if necessary, and they provide backup to each other: if a store has to be closed for repair, then other stores pick up the customers.
TRS's have greater risks to overcome than conventional radio systems in that a loss of the store manager (site controller) would cause the system's traffic to no longer be managed. In this case, most of the time the TRS will automatically switch to an alternate control channel, or in more rare circumstances, conventional operation. In spite of these risks, TRS's usually maintain reasonable uptime.
TRS's are more difficult to monitor via radio scanner than conventional systems; however, larger manufacturers of radio scanners have introduced models that, with a little extra programming, are able to follow TRS's quite efficiently.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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