IEEE 802 is a family of
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) is a 501(c)(3) professional association for electronic engineering and electrical engineering (and associated disciplines) with its corporate office in New York City and its operation ...
(IEEE) standards for
local area networks (LANs),
personal area networks (PANs), and
metropolitan area networks (MANs). The IEEE 802 LAN/MAN Standards Committee (LMSC) maintains these standards. The IEEE 802 family of standards has had twenty-four members, numbered 802.1 through 802.24, with a
working group of the LMSC devoted to each. However, not all of these working groups are currently active.
The IEEE 802 standards are restricted to
computer networks carrying variable-size packets, unlike
cell relay networks, for example, in which
data is transmitted in short, uniformly sized units called cells.
Isochronous signal networks, in which data is transmitted as a steady stream of
octets, or groups of octets, at regular time intervals, are also outside the scope of the IEEE 802 standards.
The number 802 has no significance: it was simply the next number in the sequence that the IEEE used for standards projects.

The services and protocols specified in IEEE 802 map to the lower two layers (data link and physical) of the seven-layer
Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) networking reference model. IEEE 802 divides the OSI data link layer into two sub-layers:
logical link control (LLC) and
medium access control (MAC), as follows:
*
Data link layer
**LLC sublayer
**MAC sublayer
*
Physical layer
In the seven-layer OSI model of computer networking, the physical layer or layer 1 is the first and lowest layer; The layer most closely associated with the physical connection between devices. This layer may be implemented by a PHY chip.
The ...
Everything above LLC is explicitly out of scope for IEEE 802 (as "upper layer protocols", presumed to be parts of equally non-OSI
Internet reference model).
The most widely used standards are for
Ethernet, Bridging and Virtual Bridged LANs,
Wireless LAN,
Wireless PAN,
Wireless MAN
A metropolitan area network (MAN) is a computer network that interconnects users with computer resources in a geographic region of the size of a metropolitan area. The term MAN is applied to the interconnection of local area networks (LANs) in ...
,
Wireless Coexistence
Wireless communication (or just wireless, when the context allows) is the transfer of information between two or more points without the use of an electrical conductor, optical fiber or other continuous guided medium for the transfer. The most ...
, Media Independent Handover Services, and
Wireless RAN.
Working groups
References
*IEEE Std 802–1990: IEEE standards for Local and Metropolitan Networks: Overview and Architecture New York:1990
External links
802 Committee websiteIEEE 802 Standardsavailable via IEEE Get Program
{{DEFAULTSORT:Ieee 802
Working groups