Hi Randy, Table 8-145—TSCH MAC PIB attributes for macTimeslotTemplate of the IEEE802.15.4-2015 define the timeslot timing values. Any transmission should follow that. If not the state machine of the MAC aborts that slot. If you need more time than what is defined in the default value you can increase the slot macTsTimeslotLength value and the rest of PIB values accordingly. Higher data rates are depend to the underlying radio technology and their use may not be standard compliant. The use of longer timeslot is advertised in the EB through the TSCH Timeslot IE.
In the minimal draft you can find an example of a macTimeslotTemplate defining a timeslot of 15ms. hope this helps! regards, Xavi 2016-12-07 21:37 GMT+01:00 Randy Turner <[email protected]>: > Hi All, > Just re-confirming an assumption — from a TSCH perspective, slot > scheduling assumes any single transmission “cannot” exceed a slot boundary > — if transmissions require a certain amount of time, then the slot width is > increased to deal with this ( or possibly increase the TX bit rate if > possible ) > > Is this correct ? > > Thanks! > Randy > > _______________________________________________ > 6tisch mailing list > [email protected] > https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/6tisch >
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