Abstract:
According to this invention, the system prepares user data into blocks of manageable size prior to software distribution. A block is similar in principle to memory pages in a file management system and has a predefined size, sequential ordering, and layout from which the original information can be reconstructed. The broadcast protocol is enhanced to include a block identifier to identify where the receiver performs error detection and error correction on each block. Station receiving the data maintains a list of the identity of those blocks of data that it believes have not been received properly. With each retransmission, each work station attempts to receive and recover those blocks marked on its list. Advantageously, each transmitted block is encoded using forward error correction in order to further enhance the probability of proper reception of the data. Thus, a very high-speed broadcast system of data/software updates can be sent to many switching offices simultaneously with a guarantee of high accuracy of reception.

Description:
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS 
     This patent application is related to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/572,248, and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/572,286, filed concurrently herewith. 
     TECHNICAL FIELD 
     This invention relates to the field of electronic software distribution, and, more specifically, to a unique format for such software for distribution, which contributes to the requirement of very highly reliable (zero fault tolerance) data transmission. 
     DEFINITIONS 
     Telephone, computer, and data communications technologies all use common terms that sometimes imply different meanings. A brief definition of terms relating to current application are listed here. 
     1.) Synchronous Satellite: A satellite for which the mean sidereal period of revolution is equal to the sidereal period of rotation of the primary body about which the satellite is revolving. 
     2.) Geosynchronous Satellite: A synchronous satellite with the Earth as its primary body. 
     3.) Satellite earth terminal: That portion of a satellite link which receives, processes, and transmits communications between a ground station on the Earth and a satellite. 
     4.) Satellite Uplink: Communications (usually microwave) link from a ground station to a satellite. 
     5.) Satellite Downlink: Communications link from a satellite to a ground station. 
     6.) Point-to-point connection: An arrangement whereby a communication link is established which exchanges messages between two (and only two) designated stations, such as station A and station B, as illustrated in FIG. 1. The message may include data relating to the application (referred to as a &#34;pay load&#34;), and data relating to the network (such as addressing, message identifier, etc., referred to collectively as a &#34;header&#34;). In addition, messages may require confirmation, i.e., an acknowledgement is expected from the receiver (station B). Alternately, the transmitter, station A, may send a message &#34;unconfirmed,&#34; in which case the transmitting process does not wait for any acknowledgements. In the normal or usual case (i.e., when station A sends a message to station B), a send process 101 in station A receives data from a software process 103, translates and/or formats it according to a previously agreed-to protocol, and sends the message across communications link 105. Receive process 107 in station B performs any translation and/or format function, again according to the protocol, and delivers the message to software process 109. 
     Additionally, send process 111 in station B sends an acknowledgement of receipt or non-receipt (as determined by software process 109) across communications link 105 to receive process 113 in station A. Receive process 113 delivers the acknowledgement message to software process in station A, and determines whether to send the next portion of the data or to retransmit the last data sent. Thus, a reliable one-to-one transmission protocol may be established. However, the tradeoff is that the speed of data delivery is slow, due to the one-to-one connection and the wait for each message to be confirmed being time consuming. 
     7.) Broadcasting and Multicasting: These are broad terms used in the industry to refer to point-to-multipoint and multipoint-to-multipoint communications, as illustrated in FIGS. 2 and 3, respectively. In a point-to-multipoint arrangement (FIG. 2), communication is established similarly to that described in FIG. 1 between one station, designated as the sender, and multiple stations, designated as receivers 1-N. This type of arrangement is typically used in transferring information from one location, e.g., news editors, to many locations that need the information, e.g, printing presses. In this configuration, each receive process 201-203 must acknowledge proper receipt of data through its respective send process 204-206. All of these responses must be received by receive process 207 in sender and delivered to software process 208 for determination whether all receivers received the data correctly. If not, then send process 209 in sender must retransmit the data to one or more receive processes 201-203. 
     As can be readily seen in the above scenario, this type of broadcast is very slow and expensive, for the same reasons cited above, with even more acknowledgement messages to be accounted for. There is also an upper limit to the number of receives that can be attached to sender. With current technology, only 30-40 receivers can be attached successfully to a single sender before the sender exhausts both its memory and computational power. 
     In FIG. 3, the multipoint-to-multipoint arrangement, referred to herein as &#34;multicast&#34;), establishes communication among many designated stations. This type of arrangement is typically found in such applications as local area networks and conferencing. At any given time, one of the stations is designated as the sender by means of a token and other stations are designated as receivers. The token passing arrangement may be pre-defined, sequential, cyclic, or passed from station to station on demand (as is well known in the art). However, for the purpose of the current application, the term &#34;broadcast&#34; is used to refer to point-to-multipoint arrangement, similar to FIG. 2. 
     8.) Reliable: This term refers to procedures that guarantee delivery of information without errors. On point-to-point connections, protocols are generally implemented to recover lost or unacknowledged messages through retransmission. In broadcast and multicast connections, different techniques are used to improve the efficiency of a protocol for reliable transfer of messages. As a general practice, messages are retransmitted at the data-link level, which includes header and payload information, or at a &#34;frame&#34; level, wherein the frame encapsulates several messages involving header and payload data into a larger message. As used herein, the term &#34;reliable&#34; is used from an application perspective, not a message perspective. A further objective of the current application is to maintain reliability of data through simple recovery procedures even when individual messages are lost or corrupted during data transmission. 
     9.) Scalable: This term refers to a network architecture where the number of receivers may be variable and may increase by several orders of magnitude. As known in the prior art, an increase in the number of receivers demands corresponding increase in performance requirements on the sender (as described above in FIGS. 2 and 3 and accompanying text). A typical server in a local area network supports broadcast service for approximately 10 to 15 receivers. If the number of receivers were to increase to a larger number such as 100 or 150 (a ten-fold increase), current approaches to broadcast and multicast communications would become ineffective as the requirements on the server grows beyond its system capacity. Therefore, an object of this invention is to provide a communication means which meets high standards of reliability, message structure, integrity, and transmission speed. 
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     Distribution of software, and specifically object code, for use in processing systems has been a problem since the beginning of stored program controlled systems. For example, in the area of telephone switching systems, stored program control has been used since the middle 1960&#39;s. In order to distribute a new operational program (software) that operates these systems, initially a technician had to go to each switching office and physically remove magnetically encoded cards and install new magnetically encoded cards. As technology improved, magnetic tapes were used to transport programs from the point at which they are made to their point of utilization; in fact, magnetic tapes are still used for generic updates which currently involve large quantities (70-100 mega-bytes (MB)) of object code. All such systems required manual steps and high transportation costs for delivery of such software, especially as the size of the software loads grew over time. 
     Some recent systems rely on telephone data links for distribution of software. For example, the prior art system of FIG. 4 illustrates a typical software distribution system for various switching systems in a telephone network. Such switching systems could be local central office switches supported by a particular manufacturer, such as 5ESS® switches manufactured and supported by AT&amp;T, or, alternatively, may be long distance-type switches such as the 4ESS™ switch, also manufactured and supported by AT&amp;T. Other types of program-controlled systems may benefit from this invention without departing from the scope of the appended claims. 
     Each switch is connected to a software change and notification system (SCANS) 102. SCANS, as known in the art, provides software updates for switching systems 104-118 by way of data transmissions over lines 120-134 using dedicated point-to-point communication links typically operating at 9600 bits per second with an X.25 protocol. 
     FIG. 5 illustrates such a prior art SCANS-to-switching system connection. In the system of FIG. 5, SCANS 100 includes an application program 500, which processes the data to be sent (in the example of switching offices, the object code required). Application program 500 delivers the processed object code to a plurality of communications terminal processes 502-5NN, which communicate with the switching offices. In each communications terminal process 502-5NN, there is a send module 504 and a receive module 506. Send module sends the object code (again, for purposes of this example) over line 120 to switching system 104. Receive module 506 in terminal process 502 of SCANS 100 receives acknowledgement requests for re-tries, etc., as is known in the art, from switching module 104, via line 120. 
     At the switching system side, switching systems (in this example 102 and 104), also include a terminal process 508-508&#39; which contain a send module 504 and a receive module 506 which are the same, or substantially similar, to the send 504 and receive processes 506 in the communications terminal process 502 of SCANS 100. Terminal process 508 in switching system 104 receives data in receive process 506 and delivers received data to terminal process 508. Terminal process 508 determines whether the data is received in tact, and if so, sends acknowledgements of good reception through send process 504 or re-try requests for data if the data appeared to be corrupted. Switching systems 104 and 102 are shown as having several layers that communicate with communications terminal process 508. First there is a SCANS interface 510 which performs protocol verification, etc. and other functions, as known in the art, with SCANS 100. If the data received appears correct, then SCANS interface 510 passes the received data to input/output process 512, which causes administrative module 514 to further distribute the received software to where the other processes reside. This hierarchy is very much like the system of FIG. 2. 
     In this manner, changes to the programs which run switching systems 102-118 may be made through a central location, for example, at a SCANS facility 100 outside of Chicago, and then sent to each switching system which requires the change. Furthermore, software updates, where entire sections of programs change, may also be sent to each switch 102-118 in this manner. Finally, an entire generic update (changing the entire operating code) may be sent from SCANS 100, via lines 120-134, to all switching systems 102-118 which subscribe to or purchase the new generic. Therefore, the size of the data load being transmitted to each switch may vary from a few hundred bytes for a small bug fix to several hundred megabytes for an entire generic. 
     Turning now to FIG. 6, a prior art system is shown, wherein a switching office is connected to SCANS 100 by way of data line 120. Switching office 104 is, for example, a 5ESS switch, as manufactured by AT&amp;T. As is known in the art, a 5ESS switch (local switch 104) may be a distributed control ISDN electronic telephone switching system such as the system disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,592,048, issued to M. W. Beckner, et al. on May 27, 1986, and assigned to the assignee of this application. Alternatively, local switch 104 may be a digital switch such as a 5ESS switch manufactured by AT&amp;T and described in the AT&amp;T Technical Journal, Vol. 64, Number 6, July/August, 1995, pages 1303-1564. 
     The architecture of switch 104 includes a communication module 602 as a hub, with switching modules 604, 606, and 608 illustrated (there may be other switching modules but these are not shown for clarity) and an administrative module (AM) 610, emanating from communication module 602. Communication module 602 includes a time-shared, space division switch or time-multiplexed (TM) switch as a fabric for communications among switch modules 604, 606, 608, and between switch modules 604, 606 and 608 the AM 610. AM 610 provides coordination of the functional components of switch 104 and human-machine interface. Switch modules 604, 606, and 608 terminate analog and/or digital subscriber lines through line units (not shown but well-known in the art) and analog or digital trunk units (again, not shown but well known in the art) and communicates with CM 602 over control timeslots 611 (for sending control data) and other timeslots 613 (for call processing). AM 610 also provides connections to other switching systems through, for example, a signaling system 612 (such as a common channel signaling network) by which the switching systems in a network communicate, and to SCANS 100 via connection 120. 
     In the current art, SCANS 102 sends data on line 120 at typically 9600 baud. This data rate is adequate when SCANS 100 is sending small changes (or &#34;patches&#34;) for code to switching office 104. However, when SCANS 100 is sending major updates or a generic update over line 120, this transmission may take many hours, depending on the size of the load or generic which is being sent to the administrative module 610. Further, because of the nature of object code being one large block, a major error in delivery requires a total restart of the system. 
     The burden of distributing large software loads, particularly object code, at 9600 bps to AM 610 may slow down or delay other processing work of AM 610. For example, receiving an entire generic causes AM 610 to respond more slowly to signaling messages from signaling network 612 and for routing and administrative function requests from SMs 604-608 and CM 602. Therefore, it has been proposed that AM 610 be assisted by a work station, such as 614 (shown in phantom). Work station 614 is connected to SCANS 100 (instead of AM 610) and then communicates with AM 610 to build loads and otherwise direct AM 610 with the information delivered from SCANS 100. However, there is still a great deal of time involved delivering data from SCANS 100 to work station 614; work station 614 merely eases some of the processing burden on AM 610. 
     Data being transmitted in any form is subject to becoming corrupt and, thus, producing errors at the receiving end. Such corruption may be caused by transients in electrical networks, atmosphere conditions, satellite broadcasts, etc. Such data errors are well known and are the basic reasons for the various protocols described in FIGS. 1, 2, and 3. However, the less preparation of the code for transmission, the more likely it is for the code to become corrupt during transmission and not recoverable at the far end. Various methods have been described in the prior art to help alleviate this problem. For example, forward error correction is noted in the art which adds data to a block or a predetermined amount of data being transmitted in order to be able to recover the data being transmitted. However, these systems are normally as good as the amount of redundant data stored and, thus, further slow down any systems as the amount of data increases. 
     Therefore, a problem in the art is that there is no method for delivering data at a high rate of speed to multiple units simultaneously, while still maintaining reliability the same or better of point-to-point communications. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     This problem is solved and a technical advance is achieved in the art by a system and method which can improve data integrity at very high data transmission speeds to many locations simultaneously. According to this invention, data is packaged for reliable transportation from one system to another by sequentially transforming a source file into a plurality of blocks, where the blocks are stored in a first matrix. A second matrix is appended to the first matrix, wherein the second matrix contains organizational and destination information of the first matrix. Each column of the resulting matrix is then sequentially loaded into a transport medium, advantageously an ATM cell payload, for being transported. The data, when received, is then removed from the transport medium and each column is reassembled into the blocks as above. The blocks are again transformed into the first matrix, and the data is removed from the blocks into a copy of the source file. Advantageously, a third matrix containing forward error correction information is added to the resultant matrix and used at the destination to correct errors in the columns were determined that the columns cannot be corrected. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING 
     A more complete understanding of the invention may be obtained from a consideration of the following description in conjunction with the drawings, in which: 
     FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a prior art point-to-point communication link; 
     FIG. 2 is a block diagram of a prior art point-to-multipoint configuration of data transmission; 
     FIG. 3 is a block diagram of a prior art multipoint-to-multipoint data distribution system; 
     FIG. 4 is a prior art block diagram of the current approaches to software update system as used in telecommunication systems; 
     FIG. 5 is an example of a block diagram of a prior art system of FIG. 4 showing the numerous processes required in order to distribute software through the system of FIG. 4; 
     FIG. 6 is a block diagram of a prior art switching office illustrating how software received from the system as shown in FIGS. 4 and 5 is distributed through the switching office; 
     FIG. 7 is a block diagram of a satellite transmission system according to an exemplary embodiment of this invention; 
     FIG. 8 is a block diagram of data or code packaging as used in the exemplary embodiment of FIG. 7; 
     FIG. 9 is an example of a fully packaged data transmission load of FIG. 8; 
     FIG. 10 is a diagram illustrating encoding forward error correction information into the data as packaged in FIG. 9; 
     FIG. 11 illustrates transmission of the package blocks as shown in FIG. 10; 
     FIG. 12 illustrates individual cell transmissions according to the structure of FIG. 11; 
     FIG. 13 shows the interaction between the satellite and the switching office for receiving data according to the exemplary embodiment of this invention; 
     FIG. 14 illustrates the iterative nature of the transmission of data blocks according to the exemplary embodiment of this invention; 
     FIG. 15 illustrates those portions of a work station as illustrated in FIG. 13 which tracks the blocks that were not received properly; 
     FIG. 16 illustrates the processing of work station of FIG. 15 illustrating how lost blocks are determined; 
     FIG. 17 is a flow chart illustrating the processing according to FIG. 16; 
     FIG. 18 is a flow chart illustrating the general operation of the work station according to FIG. 15; 
     FIG. 19 illustrates using the current invention in a point-to-point system, wherein such point-to-point system requires absolute reliability. 
     FIG. 20 illustrates a further application of this invention in the area of personal computers. 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION 
     FIG. 7 illustrates an exemplary embodiment of this invention distributing data to a plurality of destinations simultaneously. In this exemplary embodiment, telephone switching systems 102-118 will again be used to illustrate the invention; however, this invention is applicable whenever large amounts of data, software--particularly executable or object code--needs to be transferred to other places. 
     In this exemplary embodiment, SCANS 100 receives the software or data to be transmitted, as in the prior art. This data, for a typical switching system such as the AT&amp;T 5ESS Switch, is approximately 70 MB of executable code in compressed form. The data is processed into blocks, as will be described below, and sent from SCANS 100 to satellite uplink 200. Satellite uplink optionally processes the data further, according to its own format and error correction system, and transmits the data (from first block to last block without pause) to satellite 202. Satellite 202 retransmits the data to a dish antenna at each switch office 102-118. As will be described below, a system at each switching office 102-118 translates the data back into usable form, processes and delivers it as required. SCANS 100 resends the data from first block to last through satellite uplink 200 via satellite 202. Any data blocks not received in the previous transmission(s) may thus be received. Thus, a new system for delivering large amounts of data is shown in FIG. 7. 
     Turning to FIG. 8, according to one aspect of this invention, the data is divided into memory pages of 9400 bytes, each arranged in a matrix of 40 rows and 235 columns. The collection of memory pages for the data is called an Information matrix (I). 
     Turning now to FIG. 9, each page of FIG. 8, matrix I, is augmented with 1880 bytes of information arranged in a matrix form of 8 rows and 235 columns, as shown in FIG. 9, which contains operational information. The operational information includes such information as file numbers, software package identification, sequence numbers for memory pages, ATM transport cell identification, methods for encryption/decryption, information regarding decompression of the user data, and broadcast addressing scheme to activate preset receiving stations. The resulting data is called the Operations matrix (O). Together, data from I and O arranged in 48 rows and 235 columns comprises the user data. 
     Turning to FIG. 10, advantageously, user data being transmitted via satellite is encoded using forward error correction. The forward error correction of this exemplary embodiment is known in the art as the &#34;block-interleaved Reed-Solomon system.&#34; This system allows for receiving stations to recover from bit-errors and burst errors that otherwise may render an information page to be discarded. The encoding of data is performed on a row-by-row basis so that, for each memory page of user data, 48×235 bytes, the resulting data is arranged in 48 rows and 255 columns as shown in FIG. 10. The resulting data is referred to as a &#34;data block,&#34; designated by matrix B. The encoding of information is well known in the prior art, for example see &#34;The Theory of Error Correcting Codes,&#34; by F. J. Macwilliams and N. J. A. Sloane, and thus, will not be discussed here. Those familiar with the art will recognize that the resulting matrix satisfies that, for a symbol size of one byte (or 8 bits), the number of symbols in the field is 255 (2 8  -1=255) and that a loss of up to 10 symbols (1/2 the redundancy, wherein 255-235=20) can be corrected when error positions are unknown and up to 20 symbols can be corrected when the knowledge of the exact positions of errored symbols is known. 
     Turning now to FIG. 11, after encoding, SCANS 100 has the software arranged in blocks of 12,240 bytes, each in 48 rows and 255 columns as described above. The original user data is encoded to form blocks 1-N respectively. One column of each block (48 bytes) is then loaded into the payload of an ATM cell. 
     Turning now to FIG. 12, in this exemplary embodiment, SCANS 100 is connected to a satellite uplink station 200. Satellite uplink stations such as 200, are well known in the art of, for example, audio, video, and data transmissions, and thus will not be described further. Satellite uplink transmitter transmits data to satellite 202. Satellite 202 may be in geosynchronous, low earth, or medium earth orbit depending on the nature of application and geographic area to be covered. Satellite 202 retransmits the data signal to multiple locations, in this example, to a plurality of switching offices, such as 102-118 (FIG. 7). 
     In this exemplary embodiment, SCANS 100 starts transmitting data from the beginning to the end, i.e., block-1 through block-N (FIG. 11). Within each block, SCANS transmits a single column of 48 rows as payloads of the ATM cells as shown in FIG. 11. In this arrangement, one block of information is transmitted as 255 ATM cells, whose beginning and end are identified by the information encoded in the Operations matrix (O) FIG. 10. 
     In this embodiment, SCANS 100 sends each block of data without waiting for any acknowledgements of receipt of previous blocks back from switching systems 102-118 (as in for example, User Datagram Protocol (UDP)). UDP is a well-known protocol used in computer and data communications, and, more particularly, in the Internet connected systems and, thus, will not be described further. 
     SCANS 100 broadcasts the entire program (comprising blocks 1-N) via satellite uplink-downlink multiple times, with a waiting period between each broadcast. Currently, broadcast speeds of up to 30 and 40 Mbps (mega bits per second) are available. It is estimated that an entire switching system generic, originally 70 MB of executable code, can be transmitted in approximately 45 seconds (7447 blocks, each 12240 bytes transmitted at 30 Mbps). Therefore, even with a 5-10 minute wait period between broadcasts, it is possible to transmit and retransmit the entire switching system generic more than five times in one hour of satellite usage. It is thus obvious that the relative cost of usage is minimal compared to other alternatives used in the prior art. 
     Turning now to FIG. 13, a specific switching office is illustrated, operating to receive data from satellite 202. The program is transmitted from the SCANS 100 through satellite uplink 200, to switching office 104, which is fitted with an outside satellite antenna 1302. In an exemplary embodiment, this may be similar to, or the same as, the satellite receiver dishes commercially available for satellite television reception. Satellite receiver dish 1302 is connected to work station 614 by a receiver 1310 and modem 1312. Work station 614 includes an interface for receiving data from modem 1312, and, as known in the art, performs any usually modem-performed translations. Furthermore, data may be encrypted and/or compressed in order to prevent others from intercepting the data transmission and to cut down on transmission time. Work station 614 also performs such decryption and decompression functions in order to process the received data and make available the original object code for the switching system 104. Further, work station 614 receives information from AM 610 regarding office configuration and compiles such data into a usable generic. Work station 614 then downloads the generic to AM 610, which in turn, propagates CM data to CM 602 and SM data through CM 602 to the SMs represented by 604-608. The physical link connecting CM 602 to SMs 604-608 supports 512 timeslots, and in one instance of the exemplary embodiment, two timeslots are used as control timeslots and the remainder are used for telephone calls. 
     Turning now to FIG. 14, a time chart showing the transmissions of data blocks is shown. It is recognized that not every switching office will necessarily receive every ATM cell, data frame, or data block correctly. Furthermore, each switching office may have problems with reception of a different data block. However, since, SCANS 100 broadcasts the data multiple times, each individual office has a high probability of receiving all of the data blocks after all iterations. In the example of FIG. 14, the first transmission of, for example, a generic object code, begins at time X and ends at time Y. There is a wait time of interval W during which each work station processes the data received and determines which data blocks were incorrectly received and could not be recovered through means of error correction. A second transmission then begins at time A and proceeds through to end at time B. The data transmitted in Transmission A-B is identical to the data transmitted in Transmission X-Y. This mechanism of data transmission and wait time of interval W continues through to the last transmission, which again broadcasts the exact same data as Transmission X-Y and Transmission A-B. The number of transmissions is a parameter which may be varied according to field of experience, environment and weather conditions, and the nature and criticality of an application. 
     Turning now to FIG. 15, the operation of work station 614 is illustrated in block diagram form. Work station 614 comprises, as is generally known in the art, a CPU 1502, memory 1504, an interface to the switch 1506 (specifically AM 610), and a bus 1508. Additionally, work station has a SCANS interface 610, as known in the art. Finally, work station 614 also includes a satellite dish interface 1312. The satellite dish interface includes a receiver and a modem as used in data communications. In one implementation, the interface 1512 may process all data transmissions received from the satellite dish interface and pass the received ATM cells to work station 614 for further processing. In this arrangement, satellite dish interface includes transmitter-receiver units which can be supplied by a variety of service providers and maintain an open (non-proprietary) interface between the work station bus 1508 and SCANS interface 1510. Alternatively, the receiver and interface 1512 may be enhanced with software provided by the SCANS 100, i.e., combine the functions of satellite antenna 1302 and the SCANS interface 1510 into one integrated system which allows SCANS error detection, correction, and recovery procedures to work directly with the satellite receiver for efficient processing. It is known in the prior art that such integration of functions can be efficiently implemented in hardware but be proprietary to the manufacturer where as the software structure, described above, may be inefficient but have an open architecture. 
     In operation, data is received from the satellite dish 1302, and is sent to interface 1512. Interface 1512 processes the data received based on data link layer checks, such as frame check sequence and/or cyclical redundancy checks to determine bit-errors during data transmission. Some errors may be recovered based on procedures built into the transmitter and the receiver. For example, when using ATM transport, the 5 bytes of ATM header information may correct 1 bit error during data transmission. Advantageously, additional layers of Forward Error Correction are generally built into the commercially available transmitter-receiver systems. The receiver interface 1512 processes the received data as necessary and sends the data via bus 1508 to memory 1504, under control of CPU 1502. SCANS interface 1510 assimilates all of the received data in the block structure, block-1 through block-N, as arranged at the transmitting end. 
     SCANS interface 1510, under the control of CPU 1502, performs the error detection, correction, and recovery procedures to determine if any of the blocks are unusable due to bit-errors, corruption, or lost cells. This procedure is performed on each of the received blocks, (as illustrated in FIG. 16). Data link layer checks performed by the satellite receiver interface 1512 may report lost ATM cells. A lost ATM cell corresponds to a loss of one column in a block. In other words, in each row of the block, the satellite receiver interface marks the same cell as errored/lost or improperly received as illustrated in column 1610 (FIG. 16). If the number of registered errors in block 1608 exceed 20 (which is the redundancy built into the system by block-interleaved Reed-Solomon encoding from FIG. 10), no further attempt is made to recover the block and the block is marked for recovery through future retransmissions from the SCANS 100. If the number of errors are less than 20, the error locations are known from the satellite interface 1512, and may also be obtained from the Operational matrix (O). Thus, decoding procedures of forward error correction are applied to recover the block. The decoding procedures are well known in the prior art and will not be described further. 
     CPU 1502 stores a list of blocks that could not be recovered, in a location of the memory 1504. For example, at the end of first iteration (i.e., after completion of the first SCANS transmission and before the commencement of second SCANS transmission), CPU 1502 stored in memory 1504 a list as illustrated in 1514 containing block numbers 12, 73, 256, etc. up through 725. In the second iteration, during error detection, correction, and recovery processing by SCANS interface 1510 after the second transmission of SCANS system 100 ends at time B as shown in FIG. 14, the list is updated to show blocks still to be recovered as the list 1516, i.e., numbers 73, 256, and 725. 
     After the last iteration, the list of blocks to be recovered should be an empty list in most cases. An example of non-empty list is presented to demonstrate the completeness of the design of this exemplary embodiment. After all iterations, CPU 602 indicates a non-empty list 618, illustrating that block 256 is still on the list and is yet to be recovered. At this point, CPU 1502 causes a connection to be made through SCANS interface 1510 to SCANS 100 (FIG. 4). CPU 1502 then requests that SCANS send block 256 in the manner of the prior art. However, since only one block is being requested, a point-to-point connection is arranged for a very short duration of time for such data transmission. CPU 1502 then processes the data as known in the art. Alternately, some receiving stations at regional maintenance centers may be equipped to support point-to-point communication links for delivering small quantities of information, such as block 256 in this example. 
     Turning now to FIG. 17, a flow chart illustrating processing for determining whether a block can be recovered is shown. Processing begins in circle 1700 and proceeds to decision diamond 1702 where it is determined if the number of lost columns is greater than 20. If it is, then processing proceeds to block 1704 where the block is deemed to be unrecoverable and is marked for retry at the next transmission. If, in decision diamond 1702 the number of lost columns is not greater than 20, then processing proceeds to the box marked 1706, where the decoding rules are applied to each row in turn. Starting with block 1708, I is set to 1 for the first row. Processing then proceeds to action box 1720, where row I is recovered by the Reed Solomon decoder as known in the art. Processing next proceeds to box 1722, where I is incremented so that the next row is handled. The activity of decode box 1720 is applied iteratively under control of decision diamond 1723 until all row is recovered. Processing then proceeds to box 1724 where the recovered rows are stored for further processing according to this invention. Processing of the block ends in box 1726. 
     Turning now to FIG. 18, a flow chart of operation of work station 614 during receipt of data is described. Processing starts in circle 1800 and moves to action block 1802 where the transmission is received. The transmission is received through the antenna interface and stored in memory, as described above. Processing then proceeds to action box 1804, where forward error correction is reversed (i.e., decoding techniques are applied) so that a determination can be made as to which blocks are properly received and which blocks are not received, as according to the previous flow chart (FIG. 17). 
     Processing continues to decision diamond 1806, where a determination is made if any blocks were not received. If so, then in action box 1808, then the block number or numbers are stored in memory. Processing continues to decision diamond 1810 where a determination is made whether the transmission received in action box 1802 was the last transmission. If not, then processing proceeds back to action box 1802 where the next transmission is received. 
     If, in decision diamond 1810, the transmission were the last transmission, then processing proceeds to action box 1812 where SCANS 100 is called and any block or blocks not received are requested. Processing proceeds to action box 1814 where such blocks are received from the SCANS or a regional maintenance center. Processing ends at circle 1816. At this point, work station 614 has all of the data it needs in order to update switching office 104. 
     Turning now to FIG. 19, a further application of the transmission of blocks using this invention is illustrated. In the area of data communications, particularly ATM networks, data transport may be unreliable during congestion times, even in point-to-point communications. Critical applications requiring point-to-point communication with greater reliability than what may be offered by a transport network such as transport network 1902 may integrate this invention. Network 1902 comprises a SCANS 1904, which sends and receives messages from SCANS 1906. These two systems do not necessarily have to be SCANS systems. They could be a supplier of information and an end user, or any other form of data communication where high reliability is a requirement. SCANS 1904 includes an information source (or software data) and a send 1910 and receive 1920 process as described previously. Send 1910 and receive 1920 processes are connected to an ATM line 1922. Again, as described above, except that of formatting for satellite transmission, the ATM cells are routed through local switch router 1924 into an ATM network 1926. ATM network 1926 comprises a plurality of ATM switches 1928 that take the ATM cell and route to various destinations. 
     In this example, all ATM cells from SCANS 104 via local switch 1924, are routed to local switch 1930. Local switch 1930 (again, possibly a router) forwards the ATM cells to a receive process 1920 at an information distribution system 1932 and SCANS 1906. Again, the data would be sent from beginning to end without pause, and received in the receive block 1920 and decoded as described above. Further, information could be sent in the opposite direction using send process 1910 and information distribution system 1932 back to the receive process 1920 and information source 1908. Thus, the two-way (or multi-way) LAN line based system may be developed using applicants&#39; encoding methods to ensure high-speed delivery of data. In this embodiment, the reliability of a transport network can be enhanced above and beyond the reliability offered by the data transmission network which may be used in critical applications such as banking and transaction management. 
     Turning now to FIG. 20, another application of the instant invention is shown. In the area of personal computers (such as PC 2000), there are many instances when it is desirable to transfer a program from one PC, such as 2000, to another PC, such as 2002. However, when local area networks and other data transfer protocols are not available to the PCs, it is not possible to transfer files that are larger than approximately 1.44 megabits, because that is the capacity of disks, such as disk 2006, which operates in floppy disk drives 2008 and 2010. Therefore, if it is desired to transfer, for example, a 6 megabit file, such as file 2012 (shown in phantom at 2014), to PC 2002, there is no current system or method for performing such. However, a program 2018, according to the proceeding text, may be loaded on both PCs 2000 and 2002, then the file can be moved into blocks with forward error correction added, etc., as described above, and packed onto as many disks 2006 as necessary in approximately 1.4 megabits. Another program, 2018, according to this invention, operating on computer 2002, can unpack the files, as described above, into a copy of the 6 megabit file 2014 (as shown in phantom). In this manner, large files, such as populated databases, spread sheets, etc., may be transferred from one system to another without having to compress/uncompress individual files, retype large data files, or recreate executable (object code) files from source programs on the new system. 
     It is to be understood that the above-described embodiments are merely illustrative principles of the invention, and that many variations may be devised by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of this invention. It is, therefore, intended that such variations be included within the scope of the appended claims.