• DocumentCode
    2625797
  • Title

    Binary codes with large symbols

  • Author

    Blaum, Mario ; Bruck, Jehoshua ; Vardy, Alexander

  • Author_Institution
    IBM Res. Div., Almaden Res. Center, San Jose, CA, USA
  • fYear
    1994
  • fDate
    27 Jun-1 Jul 1994
  • Firstpage
    508
  • Abstract
    Maximum distance separable (MDS) codes are those codes whose minimum distance attains the Singleton bound for a given length and given dimension. It is a well-known fact that the only binary linear block codes that are MDS are the simple parity codes and the repetition codes. Known MDS codes (the Reed-Solomon codes, for instance) are defined over larger alphabets. This approach requires that (i) the encoding and decoding procedures are performed as operations over a finite field and (ii) an update in a single information bit (e.g. in storage applications) requires an update in the redundancy symbols and usually affects a number of bits in each redundancy symbol. Thus, the optimal redundancy is achieved at the expense of additional complexity in the encoding/decoding procedures as well as in the number of redundancy bits affected by an update in the information. We construct MDS codes that have the following two properties: (i) the redundancy bits are computed by simple XOR operations; and (ii) an update in an information bit affects a minimal number of redundancy bits
  • Keywords
    Reed-Solomon codes; binary sequences; block codes; decoding; linear codes; redundancy; Reed-Solomon codes; Singleton bound; XOR operations; binary linear block codes; code dimension; code length; decoding; encoding; finite field; information update; maximum distance separable codes; optimal redundancy; parity codes; redundancy symbols; repetition codes; storage applications; Binary codes; Block codes; Computer architecture; Decoding; Encoding; Galois fields; Redundancy; Reed-Solomon codes;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Information Theory, 1994. Proceedings., 1994 IEEE International Symposium on
  • Conference_Location
    Trondheim
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7803-2015-8
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ISIT.1994.395123
  • Filename
    395123