Improved Layer 2 Protocol Explained

IL2P (Improved Layer 2 Protocol) is a data link layer protocol originally derived from layer 2 of the X.25 protocol suite and designed for use by amateur radio operators. It is used exclusively on amateur packet radio networks.

IL2P establishes link layer connections, transferring data encapsulated in frames between nodes, and detecting errors introduced by the communications channel.

The Improved Layer 2 Protocol (IL2P) was created by Nino Carrillo, KK4HEJ, based on AX.25 version 2.0 and implements Reed Solomon Forward Error Correction for greater accuracy and throughput than either AX.25 or FX.25. Specifically, in order to achieve greater stability on link speeds higher than 1200 baud.

IL2P can be used with a variety of modulation methods including AFSK and GFSK. The direwolf software TNC contains the first open source implementation of the protocol.

IL2P Specification

The IL2P draft specification v0.6[1] was published via the Terrestrial Amateur Radio Packet Network (TARPN) on March 16, 2024.

As of version 0.6, It added Trailing CRC description. Removed Weak Signal Extensions. Corrected description of block scrambling. Removed reference to Baseline FEC level. Added BPSK and QPSK symbol maps. Updated example encoded packets. Minor edits for readability.

Implementations

IL2P was first implemented in the closed source and proprietary ninoTNC[2] to solve for lossy network links due to low Signal-to-noise ratio or weak signal strength.

The specification itself outlines several design goals including:

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: IL2P protocol description. tarpn.net. 2024-04-27.
  2. Web site: TARPN -- NinoTNC info for Builders. tarpn.net. 2020-01-14.