

In electrical and electronic engineering, adaisy chain is a wiring scheme in which multiple devices are wired together in sequence or in a ring,[1] similar to agarland of daisy flowers. Daisy chains may be used for power, analog signals, digital data, or a combination thereof.
The termdaisy chain may refer either to large scale devices connected in series, such as a series ofpower strips plugged into each other to form a single long line of strips, or to the wiring patterns embedded inside of devices. Other examples of devices which can be used to form daisy chains are those based onUniversal Serial Bus (USB),FireWire,Thunderbolt andEthernet cables.
Foranalog signals, connections usually consist of a simpleelectrical bus and, especially in the case of achain of many devices, may require the use of one or morerepeaters oramplifiers within the chain to counteractattenuation (the natural loss of energy in such a system).Digital signals between devices may also travel on a simple electrical bus, in which case a busterminator may be needed on the last device in the chain. However, unlike analog signals, because digital signals arediscrete, they may also be electrically regenerated, but not modified, by any device in thechain.
Some hardware can be attached to a computing system in a daisy chain configuration by connecting each component to another similar component, rather than directly to the computing system that uses the component. Only the last component in the chain directly connects to the computing system. For example, chaining multiple components that each have aUART port to each other. The components must also behave cooperatively. e.g., only one seizes the communications bus at a time.
Any particular daisy chain forms one of two network topologies:
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Users can daisy chain computing sessions together. Using services such asTelnet orSSH, the user creates a session on a second computer via Telnet, and from the second session, Telnets to a third and so on. Another typical example is the "terminal session inside a terminal session" usingRemote Desktop Protocol. Reasons to create daisy chains include connecting to a system on a non-routed network via a gateway system, preserving sessions on the initial computer while working on a second computer, to save bandwidth or improve connectivity on an unstable network by first connecting to a better connected machine. Another reason for creating a daisy chain is to camouflage activity while engaged incybercrime.
The last phase IC is connected back to ... the control IC to complete the daisy chain loop