Cisco ONS 15305
Cisco ONS 15305
Cisco ONS 15305
Operation Guide
Software Release 2.0
January 2005
Corporate Headquarters
Cisco Systems, Inc.
170 West Tasman Drive
San Jose, CA 95134-1706
USA
http://www.cisco.com
Tel: 408 526-4000
800 553-NETS (6387)
Fax: 408 526-4100
THE SPECIFICATIONS AND INFORMATION REGARDING THE PRODUCTS IN THIS MANUAL ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. ALL
STATEMENTS, INFORMATION, AND RECOMMENDATIONS IN THIS MANUAL ARE BELIEVED TO BE ACCURATE BUT ARE PRESENTED WITHOUT
WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED. USERS MUST TAKE FULL RESPONSIBILITY FOR THEIR APPLICATION OF ANY PRODUCTS.
THE SOFTWARE LICENSE AND LIMITED WARRANTY FOR THE ACCOMPANYING PRODUCT ARE SET FORTH IN THE INFORMATION PACKET THAT
SHIPPED WITH THE PRODUCT AND ARE INCORPORATED HEREIN BY THIS REFERENCE. IF YOU ARE UNABLE TO LOCATE THE SOFTWARE LICENSE
OR LIMITED WARRANTY, CONTACT YOUR CISCO REPRESENTATIVE FOR A COPY.
The following information is for FCC compliance of Class A devices: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class A digital device, pursuant
to part 15 of the FCC rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference when the equipment is operated in a commercial
environment. This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate radio-frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instruction manual, may cause
harmful interference to radio communications. Operation of this equipment in a residential area is likely to cause harmful interference, in which case users will be required
to correct the interference at their own expense.
The following information is for FCC compliance of Class B devices: The equipment described in this manual generates and may radiate radio-frequency energy. If it is not
installed in accordance with Ciscos installation instructions, it may cause interference with radio and television reception. This equipment has been tested and found to
comply with the limits for a Class B digital device in accordance with the specifications in part 15 of the FCC rules. These specifications are designed to provide reasonable
protection against such interference in a residential installation. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation.
Modifying the equipment without Ciscos written authorization may result in the equipment no longer complying with FCC requirements for Class A or Class B digital
devices. In that event, your right to use the equipment may be limited by FCC regulations, and you may be required to correct any interference to radio or television
communications at your own expense.
You can determine whether your equipment is causing interference by turning it off. If the interference stops, it was probably caused by the Cisco equipment or one of its
peripheral devices. If the equipment causes interference to radio or television reception, try to correct the interference by using one or more of the following measures:
Turn the television or radio antenna until the interference stops.
Move the equipment to one side or the other of the television or radio.
Move the equipment farther away from the television or radio.
Plug the equipment into an outlet that is on a different circuit from the television or radio. (That is, make certain the equipment and the television or radio are on circuits
controlled by different circuit breakers or fuses.)
Modifications to this product not authorized by Cisco Systems, Inc. could void the FCC approval and negate your authority to operate the product.
The Cisco implementation of TCP header compression is an adaptation of a program developed by the University of California, Berkeley (UCB) as part of UCBs public
domain version of the UNIX operating system. All rights reserved. Copyright 1981, Regents of the University of California.
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CONTENTS
About This Guide
xxi
Document Objectives
Audience
xxi
xxi
Document Organization
xxii
Related Documentation
xxii
Document Conventions
xxiii
xxiv
xxiv
xxv
xxvi
CHAPTER
Safety Summary
xxviii
1-1
1-1
1-1
1-2
1-3
1-3
iii
Contents
CHAPTER
Product Overview
2-1
2-1
2-5
2-8
2-10
iv
January 2005
Contents
CHAPTER
Pre-Installation Procedures
2-13
2-14
3-1
3-3
CHAPTER
Installation
3-1
3-4
4-1
4-1
4-4
4-7
Contents
4.4.2.1 Connect the ONS 15305 A-side and B-side Power Connections to the PDP
4.4.3 Install the ONS 15305 AC 230V Power 4-10
4.4.3.1 AC 230V Module Not Installed in ONS15305 4-11
4.4.3.2 Power On 4-11
4.4.3.3 Power Off 4-11
4-9
CHAPTER
4-16
5-1
5-5
5-14
vi
January 2005
Contents
5-19
vii
Contents
CHAPTER
Physical Interfaces
5-43
5-44
6-1
6-1
6-3
viii
January 2005
Contents
6-4
6-5
CHAPTER
6-7
7-1
7-2
7-2
CHAPTER
8-1
8-1
8-1
ix
Contents
CHAPTER
9-1
9-1
CHAPTER
10
10-1
10-1
CHAPTER
11
12
11-1
11-1
CHAPTER
10-2
11-2
12-1
12-1
January 2005
Contents
CHAPTER
13
13-1
13-1
CHAPTER
14
14-1
14-1
CHAPTER
15
15-1
CHAPTER
16
15-1
15-1
16-1
16-2
CHAPTER
17
17-1
17-1
xi
Contents
CHAPTER
18
18-1
18-1
CHAPTER
19
18-3
19-1
19-1
19-3
CHAPTER
20
19-6
xii
January 2005
Contents
20-3
CHAPTER
21
20-7
21-1
21-3
CHAPTER
22
22-1
22-7
xiii
Contents
xiv
January 2005
F I G U R E S
Figure 2-1
System Overview
Figure 2-2
CPE Application
2-3
Figure 2-3
PoP Application
2-3
Figure 2-4
Figure 2-5
Campus Application
Figure 2-6
Figure 2-7
Figure 2-8
Location of DC Power
Figure 2-9
AC 230V Module
Figure 2-10
Location of SYSCONT-SD128-RJ45
Figure 2-11
Figure 2-12
Figure 3-1
Figure 4-1
Figure 4-2
Figure 4-3
Figure 4-4
Figure 4-5
Figure 4-6
AC 230V Module
Figure 4-7
Figure 4-8
Figure 4-9
Figure 5-1
Figure 5-2
5-3
Figure 5-3
5-4
Figure 5-4
Figure 5-5
Figure 5-6
Figure 5-7
VC-4 POH
Figure 5-8
VC-12 POH
Figure 5-9
2-2
2-4
2-4
2-5
2-6
2-6
2-8
2-11
2-12
2-13
3-2
4-3
4-3
4-4
4-5
4-7
4-10
4-13
4-14
4-14
5-2
5-5
5-6
5-7
5-9
5-10
5-12
xv
Figures
Figure 5-10
Figure 5-11
Figure 5-12
Figure 5-13
Figure 5-14
Figure 5-15
Figure 6-1
Figure 8-1
Figure 9-1
Figure 10-1
Figure 11-1
Figure 12-1
Figure 13-1
Figure 14-1
Figure 14-2
14-5
Figure 14-3
32xE1-LFH-RJ45 Panel
14-6
Figure 15-1
S1.1-2-LC Module
Figure 16-1
Figure 17-1
Figure 17-2
Figure 18-1
Figure 19-1
Figure 20-1
Figure 21-1
Figure 22-1
Figure 22-2
Figure 22-3
Figure 22-4
5-22
5-29
5-29
5-31
5-32
5-34
6-2
8-1
9-1
10-1
11-1
12-1
13-1
14-1
15-1
16-1
17-1
17-1
18-2
19-1
20-1
21-1
22-7
22-8
22-9
22-10
xvi
January 2005
T A B L E S
Table 2-1
Table 2-2
Table 2-3
Table 2-4
AC 230V Compliance
Table 2-5
Table 2-6
Table 2-7
Table 2-8
Table 3-1
Table 3-2
Table 3-3
Table 3-4
Table 3-5
Table 4-1
Power Cable
Table 4-2
LED Indications
Table 5-1
Table 5-2
Table 5-3
Table 5-4
Device Alarms
Table 5-5
SDH Alarms
Table 5-6
LAN/WAN Alarms
Table 5-7
Miscellaneous Alarms
Table 5-8
Alarm Parameters
Table 5-9
Table 5-10
Table 5-11
Table 5-12
Table 6-1
Table 6-2
Table 6-3
Table 6-4
2-7
2-7
2-8
2-9
2-9
2-10
2-10
2-12
3-3
3-3
3-3
3-3
3-4
4-9
4-13
5-11
5-21
5-21
5-35
5-36
5-37
5-39
5-40
5-41
5-42
5-42
5-45
6-2
6-3
6-3
6-4
xvii
Tables
Table 6-5
Table 6-6
Table 6-7
Table 6-8
Table 7-1
Chassis Dimensions
Table 7-2
Table 7-3
Table 7-4
Table 7-5
Table 7-6
MTBF Values
Table 8-1
E3 Interface Compliance
Table 9-1
Table 10-1
Table 10-2
Table 11-1
Table 11-2
Table 11-3
Table 12-1
Table 12-2
Table 12-3
Table 13-1
E1 Interface Pinouts
13-2
Table 13-2
Pinout-8xRJ45 2Mb
13-2
Table 13-3
E1 Interface Compliance
Table 14-1
14-1
Table 14-2
14-3
Table 14-3
Multi-Interface E1 Compliance
Table 14-4
Table 15-1
Table 15-2
Table 16-1
Table 16-2
Table 17-1
Table 17-2
Table 17-3
Table 17-4
6-5
6-5
6-6
6-7
7-1
7-1
7-2
7-2
7-2
7-3
8-2
9-2
10-2
10-2
11-2
11-2
11-2
12-2
12-2
12-3
13-3
14-4
14-6
15-2
15-2
16-2
16-4
17-2
17-2
17-3
17-3
xviii
January 2005
Tables
Table 18-1
Table 18-2
Table 18-3
Table 18-4
Table 19-1
Table 19-2
19-3
Table 19-3
19-4
Table 19-4
Multi-Interface E1 Compliance
Table 19-5
Table 19-6
Table 20-1
Table 20-2
Table 20-3
Table 20-4
Table 20-5
Table 20-6
Table 21-1
Table 22-1
Table 22-2
Table 22-3
18-2
18-3
18-3
18-3
19-2
19-6
19-6
19-7
20-4
20-4
20-5
20-5
20-5
20-6
21-4
22-2
22-3
22-10
xix
Tables
xx
January 2005
Document Objectives
Audience
Document Organization
Related Documentation
Document Conventions
Obtaining Documentation
Documentation Feedback
Document Objectives
This chapter explains the functionality of the Cisco Edge Craft for the Cisco ONS 15302 and ONS 15305
system. It contains installation and user information for the Cisco ONS 15302 and ONS 15305 system.
Use this chapter in conjunction with the appropriate publications listed in the Related Documentation
section.
Audience
To use this publication, you should be familiar with Cisco or equivalent optical transmission hardware
and cabling, telecommunications hardware and cabling, electronic circuitry and wiring practices, and
preferably have experience as a telecommunications technician.
xxi
Document Organization
This Cisco ONS 15305 Installation and Operation Guide is organized into the following chapters:
Chapter 1, Safety Summary provides safety considerations for operating the Cisco ONS 15305
system
Chapter 2, Product Overview describes the functionality and the features of the ONS 15305.
Chapter 3, Pre-Installation Procedures provides pre-installation procedures for the ONS 15305.
Chapter topics include shipment verification, site preparation, and equipment unpacking.
Chapter 4, Installation provides instructions for installing ONS 15305, including power
connections.
Chapter 5, ONS 15305 Features provides an overview of the SDH features of the ONS15305.
Chapter 6, Physical Interfaces provides descriptions and parameters for the physical interfaces on
ONS15305.
Chapter 7, Mechanics and Other Characteristics provides descriptions of mechanics and other
characteristics.
The following chapters describe the features and functions of the ONS 15305 Service Modules:
Chapter 20, Dual Optical LAN 1000Base-LX Module with Mapper, GigE-WAN-2
The following chapter described the line-oriented ASCII-based management interface, ONSCLI
Related Documentation
Use this Cisco ONS 15305 Installation and Operation Guide in conjunction with the following
referenced publications:
xxii
January 2005
Document Conventions
This publication uses the following conventions:
Convention
Application
boldface
italic
{x|x|x}
Ctrl
The control key. For example, where Ctrl + D is written, hold down the
Control key while pressing the D key.
screen font
<
>
Note
Means reader take note. Notes contain helpful suggestions or references to material not covered in the
document.
Caution
Means reader be careful. In this situation, the user might do something that could result in equipment
damage or loss of data.
Warning
xxiii
Obtaining Documentation
Cisco documentation and additional literature are available on Cisco.com. Cisco also provides several
ways to obtain technical assistance and other technical resources. These sections explain how to obtain
technical information from Cisco Systems.
Cisco.com
You can access the most current Cisco documentation at this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/univercd/home/home.htm
You can access the Cisco website at this URL:
http://www.cisco.com
You can access international Cisco websites at this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/public/countries_languages.shtml
Documentation DVD
Cisco documentation and additional literature are available in a Documentation DVD package, which
may have shipped with your product. The Documentation DVD is updated regularly and may be more
current than printed documentation. The Documentation DVD package is available as a single unit.
Registered Cisco.com users (Cisco direct customers) can order a Cisco Documentation DVD (product
number DOC-DOCDVD=) from the Ordering tool or Cisco Marketplace.
Cisco Ordering tool:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/partner/ordering/
Cisco Marketplace:
http://www.cisco.com/go/marketplace/
xxiv
January 2005
Ordering Documentation
You can find instructions for ordering documentation at this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/es_inpck/pdi.htm
You can order Cisco documentation in these ways:
Registered Cisco.com users (Cisco direct customers) can order Cisco product documentation from
the Ordering tool:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/partner/ordering/
Nonregistered Cisco.com users can order documentation through a local account representative by
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You can send comments about technical documentation to bug-doc@cisco.com.
You can submit comments by using the response card (if present) behind the front cover of your
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Attn: Customer Document Ordering
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San Jose, CA 95134-9883
We appreciate your comments.
A current list of security advisories and notices for Cisco products is available at this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/go/psirt
If you prefer to see advisories and notices as they are updated in real time, you can access a Product
Security Incident Response Team Really Simple Syndication (PSIRT RSS) feed from this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/products_psirt_rss_feed.html
xxv
Tip
Emergencies security-alert@cisco.com
Nonemergencies psirt@cisco.com
We encourage you to use Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) or a compatible product to encrypt any sensitive
information that you send to Cisco. PSIRT can work from encrypted information that is compatible with
PGP versions 2.x through 8.x.
Never use a revoked or an expired encryption key. The correct public key to use in your correspondence
with PSIRT is the one that has the most recent creation date in this public key server list:
http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?search=psirt%40cisco.com&op=index&exact=on
1 877 228-7302
1 408 525-6532
Note
Use the Cisco Product Identification (CPI) tool to locate your product serial number before submitting
a web or phone request for service. You can access the CPI tool from the Cisco Technical Support
Website by clicking the Tools & Resources link under Documentation & Tools. Choose Cisco Product
Identification Tool from the Alphabetical Index drop-down list, or click the Cisco Product
Identification Tool link under Alerts & RMAs. The CPI tool offers three search options: by product ID
xxvi
January 2005
or model name; by tree view; or for certain products, by copying and pasting show command output.
Search results show an illustration of your product with the serial number label location highlighted.
Locate the serial number label on your product and record the information before placing a service call.
xxvii
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Internet Protocol Journal is a quarterly journal published by Cisco Systems for engineering
professionals involved in designing, developing, and operating public and private internets and
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World-class networking training is available from Cisco. You can view current offerings at
this URL:
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xxviii
January 2005
C H A P T E R
Safety Summary
This chapter lists installation warnings and safety precautions for the Cisco ONS 15305.
Do not perform cabling on an electrically-live system. Ensure that all power is removed from the shelf
before continuing with this procedure. Actual wire gauge should be determined based on local
engineering standards and practices.
Warning
Before connecting 48 V power to the ONS 15305, remove the fuses from both the A and B sides of the
power distribution panel (PDP). Failure to do so can cause serious injury or death. Actual wire gauge
should be determined based on local engineering standards and practices.
Warning
Before connecting 230 V power to the ONS 15305, remove the fuse from the 230 V power supply. Failure
to do so can cause serious injury or death. Actual wire gauge should be determined based on local
engineering standards and practices.
Warning
Before installing the ONS 15305, remove the fuses from both the A and B sides of the PDP. Failure to
do so can cause serious injury or death.
Warning
Touching electrical connectors or other exposed electrical circuitry inside the ONS 15305, when they
are energized can cause serious injury or death.
Know standard electrical safety and electrical wiring and connection practices.
1-1
Chapter 1
Safety Summary
Be familiar with cardio-pulmonary resuscitation (CPR). Obtain this information through the
appropriate national authority (such as the Red Cross or the local equivalent). This knowledge is
imperative for personnel working with or near voltages with levels capable of causing injury or
death.
All electrical cables must not exit the building where the equipment is installed.
Keep your work area tidy and free of obstructing objects at all times.
Do not wear loose clothing, jewelry, or other items that could be caught in the components during
installation or use.
Use the equipment only in accordance with the electrical power rating.
Install the ONS 15305 components in compliance with the following local and national electrical
codes:
In the United States: National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) 70; US National Electrical
Code
In Canada: Canadian Electrical Code, part I, CSA C22.1
Elsewhere: International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) 364, part 1-7
Connect only a DC power source that complies with the safety extra-low voltage (SELV)
requirements in UL1950, CSA 950, EN 60950 (CLASS 3), and IEC950 to an ONS 15305 DC power
supply input.
Install DC power supplies used in restricted access areas in accordance with Articles 110-16,
110-17, and 110-18 of the National Electric Code, ANSI/NFPA 70.
Disconnect the input end of an optical fiber jumper cable before disconnecting the output end.
Handle glass fiber with care. Glass fiber can be broken if mishandled. Using broken fiber can result
in permanent equipment damage.
Protect skin from exposed glass fiber. It can penetrate the skin.
Limit the number of personnel that have access to lightwave transmission systems. Personnel should
be authorized and properly trained if access to laser emissions is required.
Limit the use of laser test equipment to authorized, trained personnel during installation and service.
This precaution includes using optical loss test (OLT) set, optical spectrum analyzer, and optical
time domain reflectometer (OTDR) equipment.
Exclude any unauthorized personnel from the immediate laser radiation area during service and
installation when there is a possibility that the system may become energized. Consider the
immediate service area to be a temporary laser-controlled area.
1-2
January 2005
Chapter 1
Safety Summary
1.4 Safety Symbols and Labels
The ONS 15305 system functions in the 1270 1335 nm window, which is considered invisible
radiation. You cannot see the laser light being emitted by a fiber, a pigtail, or a bulkhead connector.
Use appropriate eye protection during fiber-optic system installation or maintenance whenever there
is potential for laser radiation exposure, as recommended by the companys health and safety
procedures. Observe this precaution whether warning labels have been posted.
Ensure that you are grounded with a grounded wriststrap or equivalent while working with
ESD-sensitive devices.
Warning
Waarschuwing
Varoitus
Before performing any of the following procedures, ensure that power is removed from the
DC circuit.
Voordat u een van de onderstaande procedures uitvoert, dient u te controleren of de stroom naar het
gelijkstroom circuit uitgeschakeld is.
Varmista, ett tasavirtapiiriss ei ole virtaa ennen seuraavien toimenpiteiden suorittamista.
Attention
Avant de pratiquer l'une quelconque des procdures ci-dessous, vrifier que le circuit en courant
continu n'est plus sous tension.
Warnung
1-3
Chapter 1
Safety Summary
Figyelem!
Avvertenza
Advarsel
Aviso
Advertencia!
Antes de proceder con los siguientes pasos, comprobar que la alimentacin del circuito de
corriente continua (CC) est cortada (OFF).
Varning!
Innan du utfr ngon av fljande procedurer mste du kontrollera att strmfrsrjningen till
likstrmskretsen r bruten.
Warning
Waarschuwing
The plug-socket combination must be accessible at all times, because it serves as the main
disconnecting device.
De combinatie van de stekker en het elektrisch contactpunt moet te allen tijde toegankelijk zijn
omdat deze het hoofdmechanisme vormt voor verbreking van de aansluiting.
Varoitus
Attention
La combinaison de prise de courant doit tre accessible tout moment parce qu'elle fait office de
systme principal de dconnexion.
Warnung
Figyelem!
1-4
January 2005
Chapter 1
Safety Summary
1.6 Translated Warnings
Avvertenza
Advarsel
Il gruppo spina-presa deve essere sempre accessibile, poich viene utilizzato come dispositivo di
scollegamento principale.
Kombinasjonen stpsel/uttak m alltid vre tilgjengelig ettersom den fungerer som
hovedfrakoplingsenhet.
Aviso
A combinao ficha-tomada dever ser sempre acessvel, porque funciona como interruptor
principal.
Advertencia!
El conjunto de clavija y toma ha de encontrarse siempre accesible ya que hace las veces de
dispositivo de desconexin principal.
Varning!
Man mste alltid kunna komma t stickproppen i uttaget, eftersom denna koppling utgr den
huvudsakliga frnkopplingsanordningen.
Warning
Invisible laser radiation may be emitted from disconnected fibers or connectors. Do not stare into
beams or view directly with optical instruments.
Waarschuwing
Varoitus
Irrotetuista kuiduista tai liittimist voi tulla nkymtnt lasersteily. l tuijota steit tai katso
niit suoraan optisilla vlineill.
Attention
Les fibres ou connecteurs dbranchs risquent d'mettre des rayonnements laser invisibles l'il.
Ne regardez jamais directement les faisceaux laser l'il nu, ni d'ailleurs avec des instruments
optiques.
Warnung
Figyelem!
1-5
Chapter 1
Safety Summary
Avvertenza
Le fibre ottiche ed i relativi connettori possono emettere radiazioni laser. I fasci di luce non devono
mai essere osservati direttamente o attraverso strumenti ottici.
Advarsel
Det kan forekomme usynlig laserstrling fra fiber eller kontakter som er frakoblet. Stirr ikke direkte
inn i strlene eller se p dem direkte gjennom et optisk instrument.
Aviso
Advertencia!
Varning!
Radiao laser invisvel pode ser emitida de conectores ou fibras desconectadas. No olhe
diretamente para os feixes ou com instrumentos pticos.
Es posible que las fibras desconectadas emitan radiacin lser invisible. No fije la vista en los
rayos ni examine stos con instrumentos pticos.
Osynlig laserstrlning kan avges frn frnkopplade fibrer eller kontaktdon. Rikta inte blicken in i
strlar och titta aldrig direkt p dem med hjlp av optiska instrument.
Warning
Invisible laser radiation may be emitted from the end of the unterminated fiber cable or connector.
Do not view directly with optical instruments. Viewing the laser output with certain optical
instruments (for example, eye loupes, magnifiers, and microscopes) within a distance of 100 mm may
pose an eye hazard.
Waarschuwing
Er kunnen onzichtbare laserstralen worden uitgezonden vanuit het uiteinde van de onafgebroken
vezelkabel of connector. Niet in de straal kijken of deze rechtstreeks bekijken met optische
instrumenten. Als u de laseruitvoer met bepaalde optische instrumenten bekijkt (zoals bijv. een
oogloep, vergrootgras of microscoop) binnen een afstand van 100 mm kan dit gevaar voor uw ogen
opleveren.
Varoitus
Pttmttmn kuitukaapelin tai -liittimen pst voi tulla nkymtnt lasersteily. l tuijota
sdett tai katso sit suoraan optisilla vlineill. Lasersteen katsominen tietyill optisilla
vlineill (esim. suurennuslasilla tai mikroskoopilla) 10 cm:n pst tai sit lhemp voi olla
vaarallista silmille.
1-6
January 2005
Chapter 1
Safety Summary
1.6 Translated Warnings
Attention
Des missions de radiations laser invisibles peuvent se produire lextrmit dun cble en fibre ou
dun raccord sans terminaison. Ne pas fixer du regard le rayon ou lobserver directement avec des
instruments optiques. Lobservation du laser laide certains instruments optiques (loupes et
microscopes) une distance infrieure 100 mm peut poser des risques pour les yeux.
Warnung
Eine unsichtbare Laserstrahlung kann vom Ende des nicht angeschlossenen Glasfaserkabels oder
Steckers ausgestrahlt werden. Nicht in den Laserstrahl schauen oder diesen mit einem optischen
Instrument direkt ansehen. Ein Betrachten des Laserstrahls mit bestimmten optischen Instrumenten,
wie z.B. Augenlupen, Vergrerungsglsern und Mikroskopen innerhalb eines Abstands von 100 mm
kann fr das Auge gefhrlich sein.
Figyelem!
A lezratlan optikai kbelek s a csatlakozk lthatatlan lzerfnyt bocsthatnak ki. Ne nzzen bele
a sugrba, s ne nzze kzvetlenl, optikai berendezsek segtsgvel! Ha a kibocstott lzert 100
mm-esnl kisebb tvolsgbl nzi bizonyos optikai eszkzkkel (pldul nagytval vagy
mikroszkppal), ltskrosodst szenvedhet.
Avvertenza
Lestremit del connettore o del cavo ottico senza terminazione pu emettere radiazioni laser
invisibili. Non fissare il raggio od osservarlo in modo diretto con strumenti ottici. Losservazione del
fascio laser con determinati strumenti ottici (come lupette, lenti di ingrandimento o microscopi)
entro una distanza di 100 mm pu provocare danni agli occhi.
Advarsel
Usynlig laserstrling kan emittere fra enden av den ikke-terminerte fiberkabelen eller koblingen.
Ikke se inn i strlen og se heller ikke direkte p strlen med optiske instrumenter. Observering av
laserutgang med visse optiske instrumenter (for eksempel yelupe, forstrrelsesglass eller
mikroskoper) innenfor en avstand p 100 mm kan vre farlig for ynene.
Aviso
Radiao laser invisvel pode ser emitida pela ponta de um conector ou cabo de fibra no terminado.
No olhe fixa ou diretamente para o feixe ou com instrumentos pticos. Visualizar a emisso do
laser com certos instrumentos pticos (por exemplo, lupas, lentes de aumento ou microscpios) a
uma distncia de 100 mm pode causar riscos viso.
Advertencia!
El extremo de un cable o conector de fibra sin terminacin puede emitir radiacin lser invisible.
No se acerque al radio de accin ni lo mire directamente con instrumentos pticos. La exposicin
del ojo a una salida de lser con determinados instrumentos pticos (por ejemplo, lupas y
microscopios) a una distancia de 100 mm puede comportar lesiones oculares.
Varning!
Osynlig laserstrlning kan komma frn nden p en oavslutad fiberkabel eller -anslutning. Titta inte
rakt in i strlen eller direkt p den med optiska instrument. Att titta p laserstrlen med vissa
optiska instrument (t.ex. lupper, frstoringsglas och mikroskop) frn ett avstnd p 100 mm kan
skada gonen.
1-7
Chapter 1
Safety Summary
Warning
Waarschuwing
Varoitus
Attention
Warnung
Figyelem!
Avvertenza
Advarsel
Laserprodukt av klasse 1.
Aviso
Advertencia!
Varning!
1-8
January 2005
C H A P T E R
Product Overview
This chapter describes the functionality and the features of the ONS 15305.
Main card
Back plane
2-1
Chapter 2
Product Overview
2.2 Applications
Figure 2-1
System Overview
Backplane
Power
module
1
Power
module
2
System
controller
Traffic
module 1
Traffic
module 2
Traffic
module 3
Traffic
module 4
Traffic
interface
Traffic
interface
Traffic
interface
91471
Fan
module
Main card
Alarms
Traffic
interface
2.2 Applications
The following sections show examples of ONS15305 Applications.
2-2
January 2005
Chapter 2
Product Overview
2.2 Applications
Figure 2-2
CPE Application
ONS 15305
CPE
A large number of
E1 interfaces
91466
A large number of
LAN interfaces
PoP Application
E1
Lan
ONS 15302
Packet-based
core network
E1
Lan
E1
Lan
ONS 15302
TDM-based
core network
96551
ONS 15305
2-3
Chapter 2
Product Overview
2.2 Applications
Typical an internal ONS 15305 is used to groom traffic from a number of ONS 15305's that is connected
to the access network. The internal ONS 15305 is connected to the core network. Two ONS 15305 nodes
are used for redundancy.A typical application is shown in Figure 2-4.
Figure 2-4
ONS 15305
1
Packet-based
core network
ONS 15305
Fiber or radio
interfaces toward
customers
ONS 15305
2
ONS 15305
ONS 15305
3
96550
TDM-based
core network
Campus Application
A large number of
E1 interfaces
A large number of
E1 interfaces
ONS 15305
CPE
ONS 15305
CPE
A large number of
LAN interfaces
91465
A large number of
LAN interfaces
2-4
January 2005
Chapter 2
Product Overview
2.3 Alarm and Fan Module, FAN-ALARM
Figure 2-6
Packet-based
core network
ONS 15302
ONS 15305
ONS 15302
STM-16
ring
E1
LAN
96549
ONS 15305
S 15305
ONS 15305
2.3.1 Protection
The fan unit consists of four fans. To equalize wear-out time between both fan pairs, they interchange
active/stand-by roles every 24-hour. In case of an abnormal temperature rise, all fans will operate
simultaneously. The fans operate in pairs; there are two standby fans and two main fans. The maximum
temperature measured in the ONS 15305 controls the fans. The only modules not containing temperature
sensing are the fan unit itself, the power modules and the system controller card. The FAN module is
connected to the main card through the backplane. The O_TEMP_ALM alarm is detected on the main
card when temperature rises above 85 oC. The alarm, specific for each fan, is processed and presented
Fan Failure Alarm.
2-5
Chapter 2
Product Overview
Figure 2-7
DC Power
SYSCONT
PW
EQ
TS
TR
STATUS
RES
PROT
SYNC
VT 100
AUX
MNGT
96712
FAN ALARM
OV -48DC-48DC
Location of DC Power
DC Power
96713
OV -48DC-48DC
Note
It is not recommended that AC power module and DC power module are mixed in one unit. Because of
their different characteristics they cannot fully protect each other. Therefore two modules of the same
kind should be used in a single unit.
2-6
January 2005
Chapter 2
Product Overview
2.5 Power Module, AC 230V
2.4.2 Connectors
The -48V DC supply input is provided through a 4- pin power connector, (Molex Mini-fit) with the
pin-out shown in Table 2-1.
Table 2-1
Pin
Signal
0V
-48V (supply 1)
-48V (supply 2)
GND
2.4.3 Parameters
The -48V DC input conform to the specifications given in Table 2-2.
Table 2-2
Parameter
Limit
Power dissipation
Fuse
7A
-40,5 to -60V DC
2-7
Chapter 2
Product Overview
Note
It is not recommended that AC power module and DC power module are mixed in one unit. Because of
their different characteristics they can not fully protect each other. Therefore two modules of the same
kind should be used in a single unit.
AC 230V Module
220-240VAC
0,5A;50/60Hz
30003
-04AB
ED02
110999
Figure 2-9
Parameter
Limit
Power dissipation
Fuse
1.0A (Slow)
Mains voltage
2.5.4.1 Compliance
AC 230V Compliance is shown in Table 2-4.
2-8
January 2005
Chapter 2
Product Overview
2.6 Limitations - Module Configurations
Table 2-4
AC 230V Compliance
Standard
Comment
EN/IEC 60950
Module Name
Base unit
E3/T3-6
11
S16.1-1-LC
13
S4.1-2-LC
9,5
GigE-2-LC
11
E100-8
5,5
E1-8
3,5
E1-63
21
S1.1-2-LC
S1.1-8-LC
25
L16.2-1-LC
18
L4.2-2-LC
13
S1.1-2-LC/E1-21
15
GigE-WAN-2
25
E100-WAN-8
27,5
2-9
Chapter 2
Product Overview
Module Name
Power Consumption
Base unit
20
E1-8
3,5
S16.1-1-LC
13
S1.1-8-LC
25
GigE-2-LC
11
Total
72,5 W
Module Name
Power consumption
Base unit
20
S16.1-1-LC
13
S16.1-1-LC
13
GigE-WAN-2
25
GigE-WAN-2
25
Total
96 W
2-10
January 2005
Chapter 2
Product Overview
2.7 System Controller Module, (SYSCONT-SD128-RJ45)
LEDs to indicate the status of the ONS 15305. The LED's are visible from the rear of the ONS 15305.
The LEDs have the same functionality as the LEDs in the chassis. The fifth LED indicates the status of
the management port.
SYSCONT
EQ
TR
STATUS
RES
PROT
SYNC
VT 100
AUX
MNGT
96599
2-11
Chapter 2
Product Overview
2.7.2.6 Power
The voltages are generated on board with the exception of the +5.2V that comes directly from the power
module(s). The module is equipped with a reset-circuit resetting the card in case of a fault in one of the
voltages.
2.7.2.7 Reset
Caution
The reset switch accessible in front of the system controller module will reset the ONS 15305.
A special tool like a small screwdriver or a pencil may be used to activate the switch, Figure 2-11.
Figure 2-11 Location of the Reset Push Button
STATUS
RES
96601
MNGT
2.7.2.8 LEDs
LEDs are visual indicators that show ONS 15305 failure conditions. These LEDs are placed on the
System Controller Unit front cover and the front of the ONS 15305, Figure 2-12. These LEDs are placed
on the main card and have the same functionality as the ones on the system controller card. The color
and functionality of the LED's are described in Table 2-8.
Table 2-8
Identity
Color
Function
Power
Green
Equipment
Red
Traffic
Red
Test
Yellow
2-12
January 2005
Chapter 2
Product Overview
2.8 Service Modules
EQ
TS
TR
96600
SYSCONT
PW
PROT
The LEDs are controlled by the SETS FPGA and are not affected by the external alarms.
A fifth, green LED is also mounted in the front of the system controller card. This LED indicates the
link status of the management port.
2.8.2.1 Memory
All modules store inventory data in non-volatile memory, EPROM.
2-13
Chapter 2
Product Overview
2.8.2.4 DCC
The modules terminating one or more STM-N lines are able to terminate both the DDC-R (192 kbit/s),
and DCC-M (576 kbit/s) channels.
2.8.2.5 G.Link
All modules with IP switching capability are interconnected with a high speed link, to a crossbar on the
Main card. The link is called G-link.
2.8.2.6 TDM
The mapping of IP traffic into VC12 containers is performed at service module level. There is no
connection between the IP and SDH traffic on the main card. (in the base unit).
All modules with IP switching capability are interconnected with a high speed link, to a central switch
on the Main card. All modules with TDM-functionality are connected to the cross-connect on the Main
card.
2-14
January 2005
C H A P T E R
Pre-Installation Procedures
This chapter provides pre-installation procedures for the Cisco ONS 15305. Chapter topics include
shipment verification, site preparation, and equipment unpacking.
Note
Cisco does not recommend shipping equipment that is mounted in racks. To ship equipment from one
site to another, pack the equipment in the original box.
Note
If you store the ONS 15305 before installing it, keep the ONS 15305 system equipment in the original
shipping containers. The storage period should not exceed 12 months. Store the packed equipment
indoors in a well-ventilated and static-safe environment.
3-1
Chapter 3
Pre-Installation Procedures
Figure 3-1
Bar Code
(3S) PKG ID:
Bar Code
(K) Cust PO:
Bar Code
(P) Cust P/N:
(1P) Prod. #:
Bar Code
(S) Serial #:
Bar Code
(Q) Qty.:
Bar Code
Notes:
60126
FC-Date:
Bar Code
Carton#:
Bar Code
Shipset:
Bar Code
S.O.#:
3-2
January 2005
Chapter 3
Pre-Installation Procedures
3.2 Site Preparation
Caution
1.
The site conforms to all environmental specifications in the Chapter 2, Product Overview.
2.
The floor or mounting area where you will install the equipment can support the equipment.
The installation site meets the power supply requirements of the ONS 15305 equipment. Table 3-1
lists these requirements.
Table 3-1
Equipment Type
48 V DC
40.5 to 60 V DC
4.
The installation site meets the power consumption requirements of the ONS 15305 equipment.
Table 3-2 lists these requirements.
Table 3-2
Equipment Type
ONS 15305
maximum 120 W
5.
The installation site meets the circuit breakers requirements of the ONS 15305 equipment. Table 3-3
lists these requirements.
Table 3-3
Equipment Type
ONS 15305
7 A (FAST)
6.
Minimum recommended clearance is provided for accessing bays from the front and back, opening
front covers, and clearing the top of the racks. Table 3-4 provides clearance requirements.
Table 3-4
Item
Recommended Clearance
7.
The installation site meets the ground requirements of the ONS 15305 equipment. Table 3-5 lists
these requirements.
3-3
Chapter 3
Pre-Installation Procedures
3.3 Unpacking
Table 3-5
Item
Recommended Capacity
Total weight
maximum 5 Kg
3.3 Unpacking
Use the following considerations when unpacking and storing ONS 15305 equipment:
Store packed equipment in the temperature and environmental conditions described in the
Chapter 2, Product Overview,.
After unpacking the equipment, save and store the packaging material in case the equipment must
be returned.
If the packaging is damaged and possible equipment damage is present, preserve as much of the
packaging as possible to allow Customer Service and the shipper to analyze the damage. To report
damage to shipped articles, contact the Cisco Technical Assistance Center (TAC) to open an RMA,
Chapter 3, Reporting Damage.
The following procedures contain specific instructions for unpacking ONS 15305-system equipment.
When opening the shipping container, use caution to avoid damaging the contents.
Caution
Static electricity can damage electro-optical equipment. While unpacking and handling optical and
electrical modules, wear a grounding wrist strap to discharge the static build-up. Before unpacking and
installing modules or making system interconnections, connect the grounding wrist strap. The grounding
wrist strap is designed to prevent equipment damage caused by static electricity.
Note
If any optical adapters are included in the container, remove them and save them for use while
installing the module front-panel optical fiber jumper cables.
Step 1
Step 2
Remove the ONS 15305 accessory kit and documentation CD out of the shipping container.
Step 3
Step 4
3-4
January 2005
Chapter 3
Pre-Installation Procedures
3.3 Unpacking
One accessory kit (15305-SHIPKIT-74-3106-01), which includes brackets and screws for 19" and
23" rack, disposable ESD wrist straps, one release rook for card extraction, one ONSCLI cable, one
blade terminal with screw and blade jack, a registration and warranty card, and Cisco ONS 15305
Quick Installation Guide.
3-5
Chapter 3
Pre-Installation Procedures
3.3 Unpacking
3-6
January 2005
C H A P T E R
Installation
This chapter provides instructions for installing the Cisco ONS 15305.
Note
The instructions in this section primarily address the installation of the ONS 15305, and modules
supplied by Cisco Systems. When installing racks, electrical wiring, raceways, and other equipment not
covered in this manual, you should follow all local, state, federal, or international (if applicable) codes
and regulations.
Caution
Static electricity can damage electronic equipment. While unpacking and handling electronic modules,
wear a grounding wrist strap to discharge the static build-up. Grounding wrist straps are designed to
prevent equipment damage caused by static electricity. Before making the necessary interconnections,
connect the grounding wrist strap.
Read and observe all safety cautions and warnings in Chapter 1, Safety Summary.
Step 2
Before inspecting the ONS 15305, first verify the ONS 15305 equipment according to the procedures in
Chapter 3, Pre-Installation Procedures. If there is a problem with the equipment, contact the Cisco
TAC. Log into http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/687/Directory/DirTAC.shtml to obtain a directory of
Cisco Technical Support toll-free numbers for your country.
Step 3
If you do not install the equipment immediately, store as specified in Chapter 3, Pre-Installation
Procedures.
Step 4
Unpack equipment only after preparing the site as described in Chapter 3, Pre-Installation Procedures.
Step 5
When installing equipment at a site, follow the procedures in this chapter in the order presented.
Step 6
4-1
Chapter 4
Installation
Note
You need 500 mm (19.7-in.) space of rear access for installation of the equipment.
Use the following considerations:
Note
Wire size and dimension requirements are based on cable length and local engineering standards and
practices.
Route the power cable from the power distribution panel (PDP) to the ONS 15305, along the edge
of the equipment rack.
Route the grounding cable from the station ground to the ONS 15305, proceeding down along the
edge of the equipment rack.
Route the electrical cables from the ONS 15305 along the edge of the rack to the overhead cable
transport tray.
Route the optical cables from the ONS 15305 along the edge of the rack to the overhead cable
transport tray.
The interfaces cables (especially E1 interfaces) must not run in the same pipes of the power cables.
Phillips screwdriver (PH3) to attach the ONS 15305 to the rack, and Phillips screwdriver (PH1) to
attach the brackets to the ONS 15305
Power cable (from fuse to power connector), #18 AWG (0.75 mm) up to #16 AWG (1.5 mm) with
four rigid wires
Yellow green flexible ground cable, #16 AWG (1.25 mm) up to #14 AWG (2.50 mm) (for the
external grounding)
Tie wraps
4-2
January 2005
Chapter 4
Installation
4.2 Installation Planning
Consider the effect of additional electronic equipment and its generated heat on the ONS 15305
system equipment.
Make sure the equipment rack is properly bolted to the ground, and if required, to the ceiling. Ensure
that the weight of the equipment does not make the rack unstable.
When mounting the equipment between two posts or rails, ensure that the minimum clearance
between the sides is 485 mm (19 in.).
Maintain a minimum clearance of 500 mm (19.7 in.) in front of the equipment and 500 mm (19.7
in.) at the back of the equipment.
Figure 4-1 shows the outer dimensions of the ONS 15305 system equipment.
Figure 4-1
445 (17.5)
240 (9.4)
REAR
FRONT
83496
485 (19.1)
96713
OV -48DC-48DC
4-3
Chapter 4
Installation
Note
Make sure that the ONS15305 brackets are mounted on unpainted rack area.
When not installed in a rack, the cabinet can be tied to an earth reference potential through the ground
connector of the power supply plug as shown in Figure 4-2 on page 4-3 or by mounting an extra
connector to one of the cabinet screws as in Figure 4-3.
Ground Connector Position on the ONS 15305
83795
Figure 4-3
Remove the phillips screw from the ONS 15305, Figure 4-3.
Step 2
Affix the flat connector with the washer and the socket screw on the ONS 15305, Figure 4-3.
Step 3
Insert the grounding cable in the flat cable plug and crimp the plug with a crimping tool, Figure 4-4.
Step 4
Verify that the ground cable is affix in the flat cable plug.
Step 5
Step 6
Route the ground cable securely to the local ground connector and connect it according to local site
practice.
4-4
January 2005
Chapter 4
Installation
4.3 Fiber Cleaning
83796
Figure 4-4
Note
Before powering the ONS 15305 clean and inspect the fiber, to prevent equipment damage. Dust
particles and damaged fiber connectors will affect the optical transmission. Replace damaged fiber
connectors immediately.
Warning
Invisible laser radiation may be emitted from the end of the unterminated fiber cable or connector. Do
not view directly with optical instruments. Viewing the laser output with certain optical instruments
(for example, eye loupes, magnifiers, and microscopes) within a distance of 100 mm may pose an eye
hazard.
Warning
Invisible laser radiation may be emitted from disconnected fibers or connectors. Do not stare into
beams or view directly with optical instruments.
Warning
4-5
Chapter 4
Installation
Step 2
Step 3
Insert the connector into the Cletop cleaning cassette slot, rotate one quarter turn, and gently swipe
downwards. Repeat the inspection and cleaning from the connectors, until satisfactory results are
achieved.
Step 4
Step 5
Step 2
Inspect the connector for damage or dirt with a proper inspection tool.
Step 3
Step 4
Inspect results and continue Step 3 until satisfactory results are achieved.
Step 5
Note
Make sure that the ONS15305 brackets are mounted on unpainted rack area.
Note
1 RU is 44.45 mm.
Caution
Static electricity can damage electronic equipment. While unpacking and handling electronic modules,
wear a grounding wrist strap to discharge the static build-up. Grounding wrist straps are designed to
prevent equipment damage caused by static electricity. Before making the necessary interconnections,
connect the grounding wrist strap.
4-6
January 2005
Chapter 4
Installation
4.4 ONS 15305 Installation
Remove the four phillips screws on the left and right side of the ONS 15305 and install the brackets with
the longer phillips screws that are provided.
Step 2
Move the ONS 15305 to the desired rack position, Figure 4-5.
Step 3
Affix the ONS 15305 to the rack with four M6 (#12-24 x3/4 pan head Phillips) screws and nuts.
The Connector Array in Front, in a 19-in. Rack
230V AC;
UNIT
A
L
A
R
M
PWR
CUST
TEST
0.1A 50Hz
SYNC
POWER
FAN
Figure 4-5
VT100
LAN
MNGT
USER CH
TRIB 6
TRIB 8
TRIB 10
OPER
-48VDC
GND 0V
-48VDC
TRIB 12
IN
TRIB 1
TRIB 2
TRIB 3
TRIB 4
CLASS 1
LASER
PRODUCT
TRIB 5
IN
STM-1
(1)
TRIB 7
TRIB 9
STM-1
TRIB 11
OUT
(2)
83947
OUT
Remove the four phillips screws on the left and right side of the ONS 15305 and install the brackets with
the longer phillips screws that are provided.
Step 2
Move the ONS 15305 to the desired rack position, Figure 4-5.
Step 3
Affix the ONS 15305 to the equipment rack with four M6 (#12-24x3/4 pan head Phillips) screws and
nuts.
4-7
Chapter 4
Installation
4.4.1.1 Definitions
Restricted Access Location
A restricted access location is a site location for equipment where both of the following paragraphs
apply:
Access can only be gained by service persons or by users who have been trained on the restrictions
and the precautions for this specific site.
Access is by means of at least one of the following, special tool, lock and key, or other means of
security.
SELV Circuits
Safety Extra-Low Voltage (SELV) circuits are ports that have maximum DC working voltage level less
than 60 V (42.4 VAC). In addition, the ports must not be connected to telecommunication networks as
defined in EN 60950 (see CEI/ IEC 60950-1 2001-10, standard clause 1.2.13.8).
In practice, the electrical cables must not exit the building. In addition, the electrical cables must be
connect to equipment that meets one of the following requirements:
Has a written consent (or in other evidence) that its connecting port towards the SELV circuit port
is not a telecommunication network.
Telecommunication Network
A telecommunication network is a metallically terminated transmission medium intended for
communication between equipment that might be located in separate buildings, excluding:
Main system for supply, transmission and distribution of electrical power, if used as a
telecommunication transmission medium
TNV Circuit
A TNV circuit in the equipment to which the accessible area of contact is limited. A TNV circuit is so
designed and protected that, under normal operating conditions and single fault conditions (see CEI/IEC
60950-1 2001-10, standard clause 1.4.14), the voltages do not exceed specified limit values.
4-8
January 2005
Chapter 4
Installation
4.4 ONS 15305 Installation
4.4.2.1 Connect the ONS 15305 A-side and B-side Power Connections to the PDP
Warning
Before performing any of the following procedures, ensure that power is removed from the DC circuit.
Warning
The plug-socket combination must be accessible at all times, because it serves as the main
disconnecting device.
Caution
Static electricity can damage electronic equipment. While unpacking and handling electronic modules,
wear a grounding wrist strap to discharge the static build-up. Grounding wrist straps are designed to
prevent equipment damage caused by static electricity. Before making the necessary interconnections,
connect the grounding wrist strap.
Table 4-1 displays the color of the wire with their function.
Table 4-1
Power Cable
Wire Carrying
Brown
OV
Blue
48 VDC
Black
48 VDC
Green/yellow
GND
Step 1
Remove the A- and B-side fuses from the power distribution panel (PDP).
Step 2
Note
Be sure that the power cable is connected and verify the correct polarity. Check if is properly fused
(7-A recommended).
4-9
Chapter 4
Installation
Note
Note that the ONS 15305 power cannot be switched off with a separate power switch.
Step 3
Step 4
Connect the ONS 15305 power cable (with the ground) to the power connector of the connector array of
the ONS 15305 as shown in Figure 4-2.
Step 5
Connect the first ONS 15305 48 VDC power cable to the A-side of the PDP.
Step 6
Connect the first ONS 15305 0 VDC power cable to the A-side of the PDP
Step 7
Connect the second ONS 15305 48 VDC power cable to the B-side of the PDP.
Step 8
Connect the second O NS 15305 0 VDC power cable to the B-side of the PDP
Note
Make sure that positive pole of the power supply (0V pin) is connected to Central Office Ground
Note
Be sure the poles are correct when you connect the power cable.
Step 9
Step 10
Verify that the A- and B-side 48 VDC and 48 VDC return (0 VDC) of the ONS 15305 are connected
to the proper poles at the power source. The 48 VDC return must be connected to ground the PDP on
both the A and B sides.
Step 11
Verify that the incoming power is within the range of 40.5 VDC to 60 VDC before applying power.
Note
The power supply has been connected correctly when the green LED is lit.
220-240VAC
AC 230V Module
0,5A;50/60Hz
30003
-04AB
ED02
110999
Figure 4-6
Warning
Please follow the safety precautions below when installing or removing the AC- 230V module.
Warning
Before performing any of the following procedures, ensure that power is removed from the AC circuit.
4-10
January 2005
Chapter 4
Installation
4.4 ONS 15305 Installation
Warning
Caution
The plug-socket combination must be accessible at all times, because it serves as the main
disconnecting device.
Static electricity can damage electronic equipment. While unpacking and handling electronic modules,
wear a grounding wrist strap to discharge the static build-up. Grounding wrist straps are designed to
prevent equipment damage caused by static electricity. Before making the necessary interconnections,
connect the grounding wrist strap.
If the AC Power 230 module is not installed in ONS15305, do not connect the power cable to mains.
This will cause condensators inside the module to charge. Even if the power cable is removed from
an un-installed module, the discharge time will be long. Thus, touching the module will cause a
hazardous discharge.
4.4.3.2 Power On
Warning
Insert the AC 230V module into ONS15305 before connecting the power cable to mains.
Step 1
Step 2
Caution
Do not remove the AC 230V module when the module is connected to mains. Make sure that the power
cable is disconnected before removing the module.
To avoid hazardous discharge, please wait some minutes before removing the module.
Step 1
Step 2
Please wait some minutes before removing the module, to avoid hazardous discharge
Step 3
4-11
Chapter 4
Installation
Note
Due to a heat/power dissipation related to the S1.1-8-LC module, there will be a limitation of
only two modules per ONS 15305 chassis. This is only related to this module.
Insertion or withdrawal of new modules does not affect the other modules. No manual configuration is
needed, if a module is replaced with a module of the same type.
It is possible to protect a module by adding a redundant module in the chassis.
All modules store inventory data in non-volatile memory. The inventory data is accessible from the
system controller and the management system.
All modules contain a LED that indicates the status of the module. The LED is green when the module
is active. The LED is red if the module is failed. The LED is extinguished when the module is
deactivated.
All modules supports hot insertion and removal. When a module shall be replaced the switch must be
activated and the user must wait for the LED to extinguish before the module is removed. It is also
possible to deactivate the module from the Cisco EdgeCraft terminal. A special tool, the Card Extraction
Tool is needed to activate this switch.
The following Service modules are described in separate chapters:
4.5.1 LEDs
There is one status LED indicator on the front of a Service module, as shown in Figure 4-7.
4-12
January 2005
Chapter 4
Installation
4.5 Installation of Service Modules
LED Indications
Indication
Description
Red
Green
Module In-Service.
Extinguished
Figure 4-7
TRIB 2
MOD
FAIL
96598
TRIB 1
Note
Note
Flashing green LED after inserting a service module in Base Unit indicate that the module is receiving
a firmware to align the status for Network release level stored on the system controller. This will only
be triggered when the Update policy is enabled for the service module being inserted. An event will be
reported in this case.
4-13
Chapter 4
Installation
E100-8
SPEED
STATUS
LAN 2
LAN 4
LAN 6
LAN 8
LAN 1
LAN 3
LAN 5
LAN 7
MOD
FAIL
SPEED
MOD
DIS
STATUS
switch
96704
Figure 4-8
When the module is replaced the switch must be activated and then the MOD FAIL LED must be
extinguished before the module is removed.
Caution
When activating the switch, ensure that is not pressed to far in.
It is also possible to deactivate the module from the craft terminal, Cisco EdgeCraft.
When the switch is activated, the module is disabled in SW, and the MOD FAIL LED is switched off (for
modules carrying IP, the LED blinks during SW cleanup, and extinguishes afterwards). The module can
now be removed. Please see Figure 4-9 on page 4-14
Card Extraction Tool
S16.1-1-LC
Figure 4-9
CLASS 1
LASER
PRODUCT
MOD
FAIL
IN
S16.1-1-LC
OUT
MOD
DIS
CLASS 1
LASER
PRODUCT
MOD
FAIL
IN
MOD
DIS
96698
OUT
4-14
January 2005
Chapter 4
Installation
4.6 Interconnections and Cable Handling
Static electricity can damage electronic equipment. While unpacking and handling electronic modules,
wear a grounding wrist strap to discharge the static build-up. Grounding wrist straps are designed to
prevent equipment damage caused by static electricity. Before making the necessary interconnections,
connect the grounding wrist strap.
To install fiber-optic cables in the ONS 15305, connect a fiber cable with LC connector type to the
transmit- and receive ports of the transmission system. On an ONS 15305 module, the transmit and
receive ports are located at the connector array of the unit. The receive port is named IN and the transmit
port is named OUT.
Cisco recommends that you label the transmit- and receive fiber (before installation) to and from the
optical transmission system at each end of the fiber span to avoid confusion with cables that are similar
in appearance.
Warning
Invisible laser radiation may be emitted from the end of the unterminated fiber cable or connector. Do
not view directly with optical instruments. Viewing the laser output with certain optical instruments
(for example, eye loupes, magnifiers, and microscopes) within a distance of 100 mm may pose an eye
hazard.
Warning
Invisible laser radiation may be emitted from disconnected fibers or connectors. Do not stare into
beams or view directly with optical instruments.
Warning
Step 2
Step 3
Connect the LC module input and output to the fiber termination rack.
Step 4
Step 5
Guide the fiber through the cable ties mounted on the sides of the rack. The cable ties affix the fiber to
the side of the rack to reduce the risk of fiber pinching.
4-15
Chapter 4
Installation
Static electricity can damage electronic equipment. While unpacking and handling electronic modules,
wear a grounding wrist strap to discharge the static build-up. Grounding wrist straps are designed to
prevent equipment damage caused by static electricity. Before making the necessary interconnections,
connect the grounding wrist strap.
To install electrical connection cables in the ONS 15305, connect the electrical cable with the
corresponding ports of the transmission system. On the ONS 15305 module, the electrical ports are
located at the connector array of the system. All electrical cables are equipped with RJ-45 connectors.
The alarm cable is equipped with a DS-9 connector. Cisco recommends that you label the electrical cable
at each end before installation to avoid confusion with cables that are similar in appearance.
Caution
Follow all directions and warning labels when working with electrical cables.
Step 2
Step 3
Guide the cables through the cable ties mounted on the sides of the rack. The cable ties are used to hold
the cables to the side of the rack to reduce the risk of fiber pinching.
Tip
Also see the Commissioning Wizard and the MCN Wizard in Cisco EdgeCraft.
4-16
January 2005
C H A P T E R
5-1
Chapter 5
Figure 5-1
x1
STM-16
AUG-16
x4
x1
x1
STM-4
AUG-4-4c
AUG-4
VC-4-4c
C-4-4c
x4
x1
STM-1
AUG-1
x1
AU-4
VC-4
C-4-4c
x3
x1
TUG-3
TU-3
VC-3
C-3
VC-12
C-12
x7
Multiplexing
Aligning
TUG-2
x3
TU-12
91469
Mapping
The ONS 15305 complies with the multiplexing methods outlined in clause 7 in ITU-T G.707 and ETSI
EN 300 147 clause 5 for the supported multiplexing structures.
5-2
January 2005
Chapter 5
Figure 5-2
POH
8R
8R
RRC
5D
8R
200D
CCRRRRRR
8R
8D
200D
CCRR00RS
8D
200D
R
C
S
S
D
O
124565
125
s
Fixed stuff bit
Justification control bit
Justification control bit
Justification opportunity bit
Data bit
Overhead bit
5-3
Chapter 5
Figure 5-3
5-4
January 2005
Chapter 5
Figure 5-4
V5
R R R R R R R R
32 bytes
R R R R R R R R
J2
C
O O O O R R
32 bytes
R R R R R R R R
140
bytes
N2
C
O O O O R R
32 bytes
R R R R R R R R
C
S
K4
R R R S R
D D D D D D D
R R R R R R R R
D
R
O
C
S
124558
31 bytes
Data bit
Fixed stuff bit
Overhead bit
Justification opportunity bit
Justification control bit
5-5
Chapter 5
Figure 5-5
1
2
3
V5
33xPL
35
36
37
J2
34xPL
70
71
72
140
Bytes
bit7 = MSB
bit 0 = LSB
SEQ NO.
N2
34xPL
105
106
107
K4
V5:ITU-T G.707
7-6:BIP-2
7:BIP for odd number bits (1,3,5,7)
6:BIP for even number bits (0,2,4,6)
5:REI
4:RFI - unused, RFI=0b
3-1: Signal lable
Unequipped channel= 000b
Equipped channel= 001b
0:RDI
SEQ.NO.: PROPRIETARY
7-4:Time stamvp (0-15) in units of 2ms
3-0:Reserved
J2:ITU-T G.707
7.0:Path trace
Unequipped ch.J2 = 00h
Equipped ch.J2 given by SEMF
N2:ITU-T G.707
7.0:Tandem connection monitoring
34xPL
91467
140
The ONS 15305 implements the supported Physical layer functions in accordance to ITU-T G.783 clause
9.
5-6
January 2005
Chapter 5
9 bytes
A1
A1
A1
A2
B1
E1
F1
D2
D3
D1
A2
A2
J0
*
RSOH
9 rows
K2
D4
D5
D6
D7
D8
D9
D10
D11
D12
B2
B2
B2
S1
M1
MSOH
E2
T1523120-96
Note
91472
The ONS 15305 supports all the SOH bytes as described in ITU-T G.707 Clause 9.2, with the following
exceptions; Forward Error Correction bytes P1, Q1 are not supported for STM-16 connections.
5-7
Chapter 5
VC-4
VC-4-4c
VC-4-Xv
VC-3
VC-3-Xv
VC-12
VC-12-Xv
The support of the VC-4-4c contiguous concatenation and the support of the VC-12/3/4-Xv virtual
concatenation are described in 5.1.7 Concatenation Schemes, page 5-11.
The ONS 15305 implements the supported Path layer functions in accordance to ITU-T G.783 clause 12
for VC-n, where n=4-X, 4, 3-X, 3.
The ONS 15305 implements the supported Path layer functions in accordance to ITU-T G.783 clause 13
for VC-m, where m=12-X, 12.
Path user channels F2 and F3, Clause 9.3.1.5 are not supported
5-8
January 2005
Chapter 5
Figure 5-7
VC-4 POH
270 bytes
261 bytes
AU-4
3
SOH
1 byte 13 bytes
J1
VC-4
B3
AU-4 PTR
C2
G1
5
SOH
F2
H4
F3
K3
STM-1
VC-4
POH
20 blocks of 13 bytes
124563
PTR Pointer
N1
5-9
Chapter 5
Figure 5-8
VC-12 POH
V5
R R R R R R D R
24 bytes
J2
C
O O O O D R
24 bytes
140
bytes
N2
C
O O O O R R
24 bytes
K4
R R R S
24 bytes
124562
500 us
D
O
S
C
R
Data bit
Overhead bit
Justification control bit
Justification opportunity bit
Fixed stuff bit
The ONS 15305 supports all the VC-2/VC-1 POH bytes as described in ITU-T G.707 Clause 9.3.1, with
the following exceptions:
5.1.6 Cross-Connect
The ONS 15305 implements a full non-blocking 64x64 STM1 cross connect with VC12, VC-3 and VC-4
granularity.
The following cross connect types are supported:
5-10
January 2005
Chapter 5
IPPM support
All optical STM-16 modules, each port can support up to 4 VC-4-4c streams
All optical STM-4 modules, each port can support one VC-4-4C stream
VC-12-Xv
VC-3-Xv
VC-4-Xv
Number of members the VCAT bundles can include (1-7) is found in Table 5-1.
Table 5-1
VCx
E100-WAN-8 module
VC12
50
N/A
VC3
21
VC4
The ONS 15305 implements the supported VC-4-Xv and VC-3-Xv functionality in accordance to ITU-T
G.707 clause 11.2 and ETSI EN 300 147 Clause 9. The ONS 15305 implements the supported VC-12-Xv
functionality in accordance to ITU-T G.707 clause 11.4 and ETSI EN 300 147 Clause 9.
Virtual concatenation is supported in conjunction with EOS mapping and is module dependent. The EOS
mapping is described in5.2 Ethernet over SDH mapping, page 5-17.
5.1.8 Protection
As shown in Figure 5-9, ONS 15305 offers the following different protection schemes:
5-11
Chapter 5
SNC protection
Figure 5-9
ONS 15305
MSP 1+1
protection
ONS 15305
I
SNC/1
protection
SDH
ONS 15305
91470
ONS 15305
Protection can only be enabled between two ports of the same STM-N type
Ports on module 1 and 2 can protect each other and ports on module 3 and 4 can protect each other.
The 1+1 MSP functionality is in accordance with ITU-T G.841, clause 7.1. The following parameters
are configurable on an MSP object:
Enabled/disabled
WTR time (Wait to restore time), configurable from 0-15 minutes, default 5 minutes
The protocol used for K1 and K2 (b1-b5) is defined in ITU-T G.841, clause 7.1.4.5.1. The protocol used
is 1+1 bi-directional switching compatible with 1:n bi-directional switching.
5-12
January 2005
Chapter 5
VC-12
VC-3
VC-4
VC-4-4c
The SNC P functionality is in accordance with ITU-T G.841 Clause 8. The following parameters are
configurable on an SNC object:
Enabled/disabled
WTR time (Wait to restore time), configurable from 0-15minutes, default 5 minutes
The Application architecture supported is 1+1 unidirectional switching, according to ITU-T G.841
clause 8.3.2. The switch initiation criteria are implemented as described in ITU-T G.841 clause 8.4.
The protection algorithm is implemented according to ITU-T G.841 clause 8.6.
Errored second (ES)A one second period with one or more errored blocks or at least one defect.
Severely errored second (SES)A one second period which contains >= 30% errored blocks or at least
one defect
Background block error (BBE)An errored block not occurring as a part of an SES
5-13
Chapter 5
Unavailable seconds (UAS)A period of unavailable time begins at the onset of ten consecutive SES
events. These ten seconds are considered to be part of unavailable time. A new period of available
time begins at the onset of 10 consecutive non-SES events. These ten seconds are considered to be
part of available time. UAS is the number of second of unavailable time.
ES
SES
BBE
UAS
For the regenerator section near end data are presented, for the multiplex section both near end and far
end data are presented.
The available time periods are:
15 minutes
24 hours
The system presents current data and historical data, the number of time periods are:
16x15 minute
1x24 hours
ONS 15305 calculates excessive error and degrade signal defects assuming Poisson distribution of
errors, according to ITU-T G.826.
The excessive error defect (dEXC) is detected if the equivalent BER exceeds a pre-set threshold of
10E-5, and be cleared if the equivalent BER is better than 10E-6, according to ITU-T G.806.
The degraded signal defect (dDEG) is detected if the equivalent BER exceeds a pre-set threshold of
10E-X, where x=6, 7, 8 or 9. The dDEG is cleared if the equivalent BER is better than 10E-(X+1),
according to ITU-T G.806.The threshold is individual configurable for the regenerator and multiplex
section, from 10E-6 to 10E-9.
VC-12
VC-3
VC-4
VC-4-4c
ES
5-14
January 2005
Chapter 5
SES
BBE
UAS
15 minutes
24 hours
The system presents current data and historical data, the number of time periods are:
16x15 minute
1x24 hours
ONS 15305 calculates excessive error and degrade signal defects assuming Poisson distribution of
errors, according to ITU-T G.826.
The excessive error defect (dEXC) is detected if the equivalent BER exceeds a pre-set threshold of
10E-5, and be cleared if the equivalent BER is better than 10E-6, according to ITU-T G.806.
The degraded signal defect (dDEG) is detected if the equivalent BER exceeds a pre-set threshold of
10E-X, where x=6, 7, 8 or 9. The dDEG is cleared if the equivalent BER is better than 10E-(X+1),
according to ITU-T G.806.The threshold is individual configurable for the different objects, from 10E-6
to 10E-9.
VC-12
VC-3
VC-4
VC-4-4c
The functionality is used to monitor relayed cross connects in the system, the functionality is specially
useful for debugging of errored paths, to determine which section that is causing the problem. The
functionality is also used to monitor paths crossing operator boarders.
The functionality is supported by use of the non-intrusive monitor points used by the SNCP process. A
probe is placed on the selected object, and the performance monitoring is then automatically turned on.
The following parameters are calculated:
ES
SES
BBE
UAS
Both near end and far end data are presented. The available time periods are:
15 minutes
24 hours
5-15
Chapter 5
The system presents current data and historical data, the number of time periods are:
16x15 minute
1x24 hours
ONS 15305 calculates excessive error and degrade signal defects assuming Poisson distribution of
errors, according to ITU-T G.826.
The excessive error defect (dEXC) is detected if the equivalent BER exceeds a pre-set threshold of
10E-5, and be cleared if the equivalent BER is better than 10E-6, according to ITU-T G.806.
The degraded signal defect (dDEG) is detected if the equivalent BER exceeds a pre-set threshold of
10E-X, where x=6, 7, 8 or 9. The dDEG is cleared if the equivalent BER is better than 10E-(X+1),
according to ITU-T G.806.The threshold is individual configurable for the different objects, from 10E-6
to 10E-9.
The number of simultaneously probes supported in the system are 63.
PSC (Protection Switching Count) is the total accumulated number of protection switching events
PSD (Protection Switching Duration) is the accumulated time that the Protection path has been
selected
Measured Time is the number of seconds since this protection instance was enabled.
PSC is incremented automatically each time a switch occurs. PSD and Measured Time are updated once
each second. PSD is only meaningful for revertive mode.
The parameters are cleared when the protection instance is disabled or if a ClearAllPmData command
is issued from the operator.
PSC (Protection Switching Count) is the total accumulated number of protection switching events
PSD (Protection Switching Duration) is the accumulated time that the Protection link has been
selected
Measured Time is the number of seconds since this protection instance was enabled.
PSC is incremented automatically each time a switch occurs. PSD and Measured Time are updated once
each second. PSD is only meaningful for revertive mode.
The parameters are cleared when the protection instance is disabled or if a ClearAllPmData command
is issued from the operator.
AU-4
AU-4-4c
5-16
January 2005
Chapter 5
PJE, both positive and negative justifications, are counted and measured over a 24 hour interval. Both
current and past 24hour interval counters are available.
In addition to the PJE counters an alarm is raised if the number of PJE's over a 15minute period is greater
than a configurable number, PJEL (Pointer Justification Event Limit). The PJEL is configurable from 1
to 1024 events.
5.1.10 Synchronization
ONS 15305 offers synchronization from a range of different interfaces.
In addition to the module interfaces it is possible to synchronize from a 2MHz synchronization input
source on the controller module. The interface is according to ITU-T G.703. The ONS 15305 also offers
a synchronization output port in the same connector, according to ITU-T G703.
The different interfaces allowed for synchronization are listed below.
Synchronization sources:
STM-16
STM-4
STM-1
Through the SETS (Synchronous Equipment Timing Source), the synchronization signals are distributed
to the equipment ports.
ONS 15305 offers a list of 5 possible synchronization sources for the T0, selection of the sync source is
based upon the quality level.
ONS 15305 supports SSM messaging on the STM-N interfaces, this is not supported on the E1 interface.
Proprietary mapping, 5.1.2.5 Proprietary mapping of HDLC encapsulated Ethernet frames, page
5-5, combined with inverse multiplexing at VC-12 level
2.
GFP-F mapping, see 5.1.2.4 Mapping of GFP frames, page 5-5, combined with VCAT, at VC-12,
VC-3 and VC-4 level, and LCAS
5-17
Chapter 5
5.2.2.1 GFP
ONS 15305 supports framed mapped GFP (GFP-F) according to ITU-T 7041.The GFP implementation
supports the following functions:
For control frames, the implementation only supports GFP idle frames insertion and processing,
other unspecified control frames are dropped
The implementation supports the optional data FCS insertion and checking via the PFI bit
The implementation supports frame sizes from 9 bytes up to 64k bytes (only sizes from 64 bytes to
9k bytes are applicable for this implementation)
The mapping of GFP frames in VC-x containers are described in 5.1.2.4 Mapping of GFP frames, page
5-5.
5-18
January 2005
Chapter 5
Number of bad GFP frames received, based upon payload CRC calculation
Number of bad GFP frames received, based upon payload CRC calculation, degFCS
The degrade alarms are handled in a similar way as the SDH degrade alarms.
5.2.2.2 Virtual Concatenation (VCAT) and Link Capacity Adjustment Scheme (LCAS)
ONS 15305 supports virtual concatenation according to ITU-T 707, the support of VCAT is dependent
on module type. The VCAT implementation supports the following functions:
5-19
Chapter 5
The VC-x level is individually configurable pr. mapper port, a mix of different VC-x levels in one VCG
group is not allowed.
A total differential delay of up to 62ms is supported for the different VCG groups.
ONS 15305 supports the LCAS protocol in conjunction with VCAT as defined in ITU-T 7042. The
LCAS protocol implemented covers the following functions:
Automatically insertion of a temporary removed VCAT member when the fault is repaired
2.
Default mode, unidirectional connections with the possibility of configuring symmetric capacity as
explained in mode 1. Same features as in mode 1 but without LCAS
SoftLCAS-bidirectional mode
If SoftLCAS-bidirectional mode is enabled, the cross connections are not uni-directional, but
bi-directional. In addition RDI signalling is enabled. A faulty container in a VCG group is removed
based upon the VC alarm condition or based upon RDI signalling (similar to proprietary mapping). This
will allow a VCG group to continue operation even if the VCG has a failed member. This configuration
mode is proprietary.
5-20
January 2005
Chapter 5
Table 5-2
Alarm
Description
LOM
SQM
LOA
GIDERR
LCASCRC
NONLCAS
PLCR
TLCR
PLCT
TLCT
FOPR
SQNC
Inconsistent SQ numbers
In addition to the default alarms in Table 5-2, the optional alarms shown in Table 5-3 are available if
enabled from the Cisco EdgeCraft.
Table 5-3
Alarm
Description
acMstTimeout
rsAckTimeout
eosMultiple
eosMissing
sqNonCont
sqMultiple
sqOor
mnd
ctrlOor
5-21
Chapter 5
5.3.1 E1 features
ONS 15305 supports a number of E1 interfaces that are mapped into SDH VC-12 containers. The SDH
mapping features is described 5.1 SDH Features, page 5-1.
Different E1 tributary modules are available supporting 8, 21 or 63 E1 interfaces.
The E1 interfaces provides a number of different services:
Downlink (DL)
Uplink (UL)
2Mbit/s
LINE SECTION
V3
LT
NT1
Digital Section
according to
ETS 300 233
TE/
NT
124559
V3
ET
ET - Exchange Terminal
LT - Line Terminal
NT1- Network Terminal
TE/NT2 - Terminal Equipment/Network Terminal 2 (users equipment)
T - Network Interface to user (ETS 300 011)
V3 - LT interface to ET (ETS 300 233).
5-22
January 2005
Chapter 5
The interfaces related to the transmission between LT and NT1 are not specified, nor the transmission
medium.
Transmission rate at V3 (V3`) and T is 2.048 kbps +/- 50 ppm with independent clocks for two
directions of transmission
Transmission format is according to G.704 and electrical interface according to G. 703 120 ohm
balanced T interface.
The ET is responsible for management of the PRA access section. This is embedded in the functional
specification of interface V3 comprising uplink reporting of failure conditions and detected bit errors,
and downlink provision of loop back commands.
The LT does not any function related to supervision of transmission quality. Note that no LT1
functionality is implemented in ONS 15305.
The NT1 performs the following functions related to supervision of transmission quality:
CRC-4 errors are detected and reported for the ET-NT1 CRC-4 segment using E-bits.
CRC-4 errors are detected and reported for the NT1-TE CRC-4 segment using Sa6 codes.
The NT1 is transparent to the following TS0 bits in both directions: A(RA1), Sa4, Sa7 and Sa8.
Bits Sa5 and Sa6 are utilized between NT1 and ET only, and is not interpreted by the TE
Loopback point 2 in the NT1 is specified towards the ET. Loopback commands are given from the ET
by codes in TS0 bit Sa6.
It is possible to configure the E3/T3 interfaces individually to support the different services.
5-23
Chapter 5
5.4 IP Features
5.3.3 Loopbacks
Two types of loopbacks are supported for the interface; Customer Loop (LL3) and Network loop (LL2).
A customer loop takes the incoming customer traffic and sends it back towards the customer. Note that
AIS is sent towards the network.
A network loop takes the incoming traffic from the network and sends it back towards the network. Note
that in this case AIS is sent towards the customer.
The loops can be activated from the Cisco EdgeCraft terminal. For E1 tributary configured in ISDN PRA
mode, loopbacks are set in-band.
5.4 IP Features
The ONS 15305 supports Ethernet L1, L2 bridging and L2 Provider Bridging Functionality.
The Ethernet L1 functionality is supported dependent on equipped module type(s) and the port
configuration. See individual module descriptions;
Octal LAN 10/100Base-TX Module with Mapper, E100-WAN-8, page 21-1 and
Octal LAN 10/100Base-TX Module with Mapper, E100-WAN-8, page 21-1.
Any modules, which have Ethernet LAN- or WAN-ports, supports L2 bridging.
The bridging and routing functionality is described in the subsequent chapters.
The maximum number of bridging/routing ports supported in the system s 64, which means up to 16
ports pr module slot. The number of ports pr slot is dependent of the module type. The following ports
are supported:
The filtering rate of the bridge is able to operate with at full wire speed (Up to 1 Gbit/s). The forwarding
rate is only be limited by the forwarding interface speed.
5.4.1 Ethernet L1
The Ethernet L1 is Ethernet mapped over SDH, with the mapping types described in 5.2 Ethernet over
SDH mapping, page 5-17. The functionality supported on a LAN port configured to L1 mode is:
5-24
January 2005
Chapter 5
RMON counters
Tag insertion/removal for Q in Q/ VLAN tunnelling support with the following options:
Vid configuration
Priority configuration (Priority taken from inner tag/Configured port priority)
(pause frames), is transported transparently, including the following protocols: RSTP, MSTP,
STP, GVRP, GMRP, LACP and 802.1x
The Q in Q/VLAN tunnelling and Protocol tunnelling features are described in more detail in
5.4.3 L2 Provider Bridging functionality, page 5-26. The reason for offering such features on a Ethernet
L1 connections is related to the possibility of interconnection of Ethernet L1 and L2 connections, a
typically scenario would be grooming of several L1 connections in an ONS 15305 offering L2
functionality.
5.4.2 L2 Bridging
The bridge is a transparent multi-port remote Ethernet bridge as specified in IEEE 802.3. The ONS
15305 supports standard bridging functionality, in addition it also supports provider bridge functionality.
All modules/ports support standard bridging functionality, the following modules only support the
provider bridge functionality:
MAC switching
MAC Multicast
Transparent Bridging
5-25
Chapter 5
5.4 IP Features
IGMP snooping
Port Mirroring
The filtering rate of the bridge is able to operate at full wire speed. For FE modules the maximum pps is
148 kpps for 64 byte packet size. The forwarding rate on GE connections will be limited in case of just
small packets. For GE this pps is 70% of wirespeed on small packet sizes. I.e. 1015 k at 64 bytes packet
size wirespeed from 100 bytes packets 1008 kpps.
Note
Enabling the multicast configuration feature will also disable part of the VLAN ingress filtering
mechanisms. The consequence of this is that frames can be inserted into a neighboring VLAN by
spoofing the VLAN tag of the said frame. However, correctly tagged frames will NOT leak to the other
VLANs.
Tag insertion/removal for Q in Q/ VLAN tunnelling support with the following options:
Priority configuration (Priority taken from inner tag/ Configured port priority)
(pause frames), is transported transparently, including the following protocols: RSTP, MSTP,
STP, GVRP, GMRP, LACP and 802.1x
The offering of Q in Q/VLAN tunnelling and protocol tunnelling enables the user to offer transparent
Ethernet services in a L2 network with guaranteed security, also called L2 VPN's. The functionality is
enabled at the ingress and egress ports in the network, and therefore only supported on LAN ports in the
ONS 15305. The functionality is individually configurable on a pr. port basis.
The Ethertype used for the Tag insertion is the configured system Ethertype, default 0x8100.
5-26
January 2005
Chapter 5
When Tag insertion/removal is configured on a LAN port in L2 mode, only one VLAN can be configured
for each port.
5-27
Chapter 5
5.5.2.1 IP-Forwarding
The IP-Forwarding implies that the device can have multiple IP interfaces, i.e. it can be a multi-homed
IP host. In addition it is able to perform forwarding of IP datagrams between the interfaces, and the
routing protocols (RIP, OSPF) are available. IP-Forwarding is software based and low capacity and is
intended for management traffic only.
5-28
January 2005
Chapter 5
IP/Ethernet is supported. The ONS 15305 may also serve as a gateway from an External DCN to other
Cisco-nodes in the SDH network, i.e. the External DCN topology may be combined with other
topologies described in the next subsections.
The direct connection of a Cisco EdgeCraft terminal to the Management Port may be regarded as a
special case of the External DCN topology.
Example of the configuration is shown by Figure 5-11.
Figure 5-11 External DCN - Network Configuration
IP
Management
Station
96612
Management Port
ONS 15305
IP
Management
Station
ONS 15305
ONS 15305
96614
SDH
IP-In-band means that LAN and WAN ports are carrying management traffic together with customer
traffic. This is useful in topologies where (parts of) the SDH-network is owned by a different operator
that does not allow a third party to use the DCC capacity.
With IP-In-band it is possible to build tunnels between islands that have other DCN solutions. This
feature has different restrictions and options depending on whether the ports are in L1-or L2 mode:
5.5.2.3.1 L2 Mode:
A LAN- and WAN-port in L2 mode is connected to the switch. Such ports may carry in-band
management traffic if an IP-address is assigned to it, or to the VLAN it belongs to. This solution is
equivalent to the previous versions of ONS 15305. It is possible to split management traffic from user
traffic by assigning dedicated LAN/WAN ports to management traffic.
5-29
Chapter 5
5.5.2.3.2 L1 Mode:
In ONS 15305 R2.0 LAN- and WAN-ports can also be in L1-mode in order to support Ethernet L1
services. In this case the ports are not connected to the switch.
WAN-ports in L1-mode can carry in-band management traffic. The management traffic in such
WAN-ports is identified by means of a proprietary MAC-address and can only be used over
point-to-point links between Cisco nodes. This feature can be enabled or disabled per L1 WAN port.
From a system point of view this feature is similar to PPP/DCC case (See 5.5.2.4 PPP/DCC DCN (IP
over PPP), page 5-30).
5-30
January 2005
Chapter 5
Third party
IP
Third party
SDH
ring
ONS 15305
Third party
Management
Station
ONS 15305
Third party
ONS 15305
SDH
ring
ONS 15305
ONS 15305
ONS 15305
ONS 15305
ONS 15305
IP/PPP/DCC
96554
ONS 15305
IP/PPP/DCC
ONS 15302
5-31
Chapter 5
The broadcast solution cannot be used in a MSP protection configuration, which involves one, or
more radio hops.
IP
Management
Station
Management Port
ONS 15305
ONS 15305
96613
Read, Read/ Write access or Super access. With Super access rights you will be allowed to configure
Community Table
5-32
January 2005
Chapter 5
5-33
Chapter 5
ONS 15305
Some kind of
transparency:
- cxc overhead bytes
- HDLC transparency
- other solution
ONS 15305
124923
ONS 15305
5.6.0.1 Introduction
The following subsections (heading relate to the managed object type) present alarms and events listed
with Alarm ID, default severity and description
Note
All alarm IDs with higher severity than Warning, except info which is an event, are on-off alarms.
Also alarmInp (has default severity Warning) is an on-off alarm.
5-34
January 2005
Chapter 5
Table 5-4
Device Alarms
Alarm Id
Default Severity
Description
ufail
Critical
temp
Major
t0HoldOver
Major
T0 in holdover mode
t0Defect
Critical
T0 SETG defect
t0SyncSwitch
Warning
T0 sync switchover
t0QlFailed
Warning
t0QlDnu
Warning
t4Squelch
Critical
T4 output squelched
inletFail
Critical
inletBitError
Critical
info
Critical
rxOverflowHWFault
Warning
txOverflowHWFault
Warning
routeTableOverflow
Warning
resetRequired
Warning
Reset required
endTftp
Warning
abortTftp
Warning
startTftp
Warning
forwardingTabOverflow
Warning
errorsDuringInit
Warning
vlanDynPortAdded
Warning
vlanDynPortRemoved
Warning
rsIpZhrNotAllocVirtualIp
Warning
rsPingCompletion
Warning
rsDhcpAllocationFailure
Warning
rlIgmpTableOverflow
Warning
rlPimTableOverflow
Warning
rlIpFftStnOverflow
Warning
IP SFFT overflow
rlIpFftSubOverflow
Warning
IP NFFT overflow
rlIpxFftStnOverflow
Warning
rlIpxFftSubOverflow
Warning
rlIpmFftOverflow
Warning
rlPhysicalDescriptionChanged
Warning
rlPolicyDropPacketTrap
Warning
rlPolicyForwardPacketTrap
Warning
5-35
Chapter 5
SDH Alarms
Alarm Id
Default Severity
Description
Critical
Loss Of Signal
lof
Critical
Loss Of Frame
exc
Major
deg
Minor
tim
Critical
csf
Minor
exc
Major
deg
Minor
csf
Minor
ais
Minor
rdi
Minor
msp
Critical
switchToProt
Warning
switchToWork
Warning
mspComTimeOut
Warning
mspComOverruled
Warning
ais
Minor
lop
Critical
Loss Of Pointer
ais
Minor
lop
Critical
Loss Of Pointer
exc
Major
deg
Minor
tim
Critical
rdi
Minor
lom
Critical
Loss Of Multiframe
uneq
Critical
Un-equipped
plm
Critical
Payload Mismatch
SDH Port
los
RS
MS
AU4
AUG4c
VC4
TU3
5-36
January 2005
Chapter 5
Table 5-5
Alarm Id
Default Severity
Description
ais
Minor
lop
Critical
Loss Of Pointer
exc
Major
deg
Minor
tim
Critical
rdi
Minor
ssf
Minor
uneq
Critical
Unequipped
plm
Critical
Payload Mismatch
ais
Minor
lop
Critical
Loss Of Pointer
exc
Major
deg
Minor
tim
Critical
rdi
Minor
ssf
Minor
uneq
Critical
Un-equipped
plm
Critical
Payload Mismatch
VC3
TU12
VC12
Alarm Id
LAN/WAN Alarms
Default Severity
Description
lanOn
Warning
Link Up
lanOff
Warning
Link Down
lanOn
Warning
Link Up
lanOff
Warning
Link Down
wanDelay
Critical
seqFail
Critical
DCCM
DCCR
WAN
5-37
Chapter 5
Table 5-6
Alarm Id
Default Severity
Description
lanOn
Warning
Link Up
lanOff
Warning
Link Down
rldot1dStpPortStateForwarding
Warning
rldot1dStpPortStateNotForwarding Warning
TLC
Critical
TLCR
Critical
PLC
Major
PLCR
Major
lofRx
Major
lofTx
Major
aisRx
Minor
los
Critical
Loss Of Signal
loopClosed
Warning
Loop closed
loopOpened
Warning
Loop opened
aisRx
Minor
los
Critical
Loss Of Signal
lanOn
Warning
Link Up
lanOff
Warning
Link Down
rldot1dStpPortStateForwarding
Warning
rldot1dStpPortStateNotForwarding Warning
e1Port
e3T3Port
eth
osiEncap
lanOn
Warning
Link Up
lanOff
Warning
Link Down
5-38
January 2005
Chapter 5
Miscellaneous Alarms
Alarm Id
Default Severity
Description
lanOn
Warning
Link Up
lanOff
Warning
Link Down
modFail
Critical
module failure
diagFail
Critical
Diagnostic failure
inventoryFail
Major
Inventory failure
inletFail
Critical
inletBitError
Critical
cardIsolated
Critical
Card isolated
cardAnomaly
Critical
Card anomaly
hotSwapFailure
Critical
modOos
Warning
modOosMaint
Warning
modIns
Warning
Module IN Service
modMis
Critical
Module mismatch
modOut
Critical
Module removed
fan
Major
Fan failure
diagFail
Critical
Diagnostic failure
inventoryFail
Major
Inventory failure
pwrInA
Critical
pwrInB
Critical
pwrOut
Critical
pwrFail
Critical
diagFail
Critical
Diagnostic failure
inventoryFail
Major
Inventory failure
Warning
lofTx
Major
Loss Of Frame
los
Major
Loss Of Signal
MgmtPort
Module
Slot
Fan
Power
aiPort
alarmInp
auxIf
5-39
Chapter 5
Alarm Parameters
Parameter
Description
Timestamp
Alarm Object
Alarm Identifier
Alarm Description
Alarm Severity
Event Type
5-40
January 2005
Chapter 5
Table 5-9
AU-4-4-c
SPI RS MS AU-4
VC-4
TU-3
TU-12
VC-3
VC-12
PDH
(RX)
Suppression of
other alarms?
1)
LOS x
2)
LOF
3)
TIM
4)
CSF
No
5)
EXC
6)
DEG
No
7)
AIS
8)
CSF
No
9)
RDI
No
10) EXC
11) DEG
No
12) LOP
13) AIS
14) SSF
15) UNE
Q
16) TIM
17) EXC
18) DEG
No
19) RDI
No
20) PLM
21) LO
M
22) LOP
23) AIS
24) SSF
25) UNE
Q
26) TIM
27) EXC
28) DEG
No
29) RDI
No
30) PLM
5-41
Chapter 5
Table 5-9
Note
31) AIS
32) LFA
Alarm suppression (as stated in Table 5-9) is only performed for alarms confined to one side of the DXC.
Hence, alarm suppression is not provided across the DXC.
Alarm-Id
1)
LOS
Yes
2)
LFA
Persistency
category
1
Description
This category
contains alarms
associated with
higher order
levels.There are
few instances of
each type.
Associated
Probable Cause
LOS
SDHPort, E1, E3
LOF
RS
AIS
MS
EXC
RS, MS
DEG
RS, MS
TIM
RS
RDI
MS
CSF
RS, MS
5-42
January 2005
Chapter 5
Persistency
category
2
Associated
Probable Cause
This category
contains alarms
(normally) not
subject to
persistency
filtering.
LOP
LOM
VC-4
LFA
E1, E3
This category
contains the
remaining alarm
types. Most of
them have many
instances.
AIS
EXC
DEG
SSF
TIM
RDI
UNEQ
PLM
Description
5-43
Chapter 5
The period of time from the moment you have triggered a restart to the device is up and running is
dependent of equipped modules and software configuration of the device.
Note
To use this feature it is necessary to have an empty configuration file to trigger BootP requests.
A partial automated process is possible by initially assign an IP-address and Community string to be able
to connect with Cisco EdgeCraft.
A TFTP download session can be triggered from Cisco EdgeCraft.
5-44
January 2005
Chapter 5
1000
Slot-1
1 - 16
Slot-2
17 - 32
Slot-3
33 - 48
Slot-4
49 - 64
65 - 72
VLAN
100000 - 104000
1002 - 1017
Slot-2
1018 - 1033
Slot-3
1034 - 1049
Slot-4
1050 - 1065
5-45
Chapter 5
5-46
January 2005
C H A P T E R
Physical Interfaces
6.1 Power module, DC Power
Please see section 2.4 Power Module, DC Power, page 2-6.
6.2.1 Description
ONS15305 provides facilities to report a minimum of 4 auxiliary alarm inputs for associated equipment,
e.g. power unit failure battery condition, cabinet door etc. and 2 dedicated alarm outputs. The alarm
outputs are related to the unit alarm indicator and the traffic alarm indicator. The input alarms are
reported to the management system and are activated by a closed or open loop condition between a pair
of contacts. See Figure 6-1.
6-1
Chapter 6
Physical Interfaces
Figure 6-1
ONS 15305
External wiring
4K75
4K75
4K75
4K75
+5.2V
2
3
4
5
221R
Alarm input 1
Alarm input 2
Alarm input 3
Alarm input 4
Common 6
SETS
FPGA
Alarm output 1
Alarm output 2
91464
6.2.2 Connectors
The alarm interface connector is a 9 pin DSUB type connector, with the pin-out given in Table 6-1.
Table 6-1
Pin
Signal
GND
Alarm input 1
Alarm input 2
Alarm input 3
Alarm input 4
6-2
January 2005
Chapter 6
Physical Interfaces
6.3Auxiliary Interface
Table 6-1
Pin
Signal
Fuse
7A
-40,5 to -72V DC
Parameter
Value
5V
1 mA
0.5 kohm
10 kohm
Parameter
Value
+/-75V
50mA
+/-250V
50 ohm
6.3.1 Description
ONS 15305 offers a proprietary Auxiliary interface for termination of overhead bytes selected from the
different STM-N interfaces. The Auxiliary interface is located on the System controller module,
SYSCONT-SD128-RJ45.
6-3
Chapter 6
Physical Interfaces
Each STM-N interface can be configured to terminate one of the following overhead bytes: E1, F1 or
E2. The byte to be terminated is selected from the network management system together with a unique
time slot number n, where n equals 1-15 or 17-31. The Auxiliary interface is a framed E1 interface,
according to ITU-T G.704, where time slot 1-15 and 17-31 can carry one overhead byte each, according
to the configuration described above.
The interface is synchronous which means that the incoming STM-N need to be synchronized with the
T0 reference clock in the ONS 15305 and the incoming framed E1 need to be synchronized with the
outgoing framed E1. Bit slips will occur if one of the interfaces is free running.
6.3.2 Connector
The connector is a RJ-45 connector, with the pin-out described in Table 6-4.
Table 6-4
Pin
Signal
AUX_DO+
AUX_DO-
GND
AUX_DI+
AUX_DI-
AUX_SHIELD
NC
NC
Note
6.4.1 Description
ONS15305 offers a VT-100 interface for connection of a Cisco EdgeCraft Terminal/CLI interface. The
interface is running at a data rate of 19.200 baud and is located on the System controller module,
SYSCONT-SD128-RJ45.
The interface is in accordance with the specifications given in 6.4.2Connector.
6-4
January 2005
Chapter 6
Physical Interfaces
6.5 Synchronization Interface
6.4.2 Connector
The RS232 interface for ONS15305 is provided through a RJ-45 connector, with the pin-out described
inTable 6-5.
Table 6-5
Pin
Signal
GND
TxD
RxD
DB-TxD
GND
VT_CTS
DB_RxD
VT_RTS
Note
6.5.1 Description
The interface is a 120 ohm 2048 kHz synchronization input and output port, with specifications
according to ITU-T G.703, and is located on the System controller module, SYSCONT-SD128-RJ45.
6.5.2 Connectors
Both input and output is provided on 8 pin RJ-45 connector, with the pin-out described in Table 6-6.
Table 6-6
Pin
Signal
SYNC_OUT+
SYNC_OUT-
GND
SYNC_IN+
SYNC_IN-
SYNC_SCREEN
6-5
Chapter 6
Physical Interfaces
Table 6-6
Pin
Signal
NC
NC
Note
Pin 6 is always AC connected to ground. The outer screen is always direct connected to ground.
Note
Pin
Signal
TxD+ (In)
TxD-- (in)
RxD+ (out)
NC
NC
RxD--(out)
NC
NC
6-6
January 2005
Chapter 6
Physical Interfaces
6.7 Other Interfaces
6.6.3 Compliance
Management Port compliance is described in Table 6-8.
Table 6-8
Standard
Comment
ISO/IEC8877
6-7
Chapter 6
Physical Interfaces
6-8
January 2005
C H A P T E R
7.1.1 Chassis
The equipment is provided as a sub-rack suitable for mounting within a 19-inch equipment cabinet. The
height of the unit is 43.6 mm (1U =44.45mm).
It is possible to mount one single unit including power supply, cable terminating and fibre handling
facilities, within an enclosure with external dimensions less than described in Table 7-1.
Table 7-1
Chassis Dimensions
Width
445mm
Height
43.6mm
Length
280mm
The depth of the sub-rack is 240 mm. The total weight of the ONS 15305 fully equipped does not exceed
5Kg. Different mounting brackets are available for both 19" and ETSI cabinets/racks (as specified in
ETS 300 119, IEC 60917 and IEC 60297). The thermal design of the unit meets the requirements of
EN/IEC 60950.
Length
175mm
7-1
Chapter 7
Table 7-2
Height
41mm
Width
75mm
Table 7-3
Length
230mm
Height
19mm
Width
44mm
Length
175mm
Height
19mm
Width
95mm
Length
236mm
Height
41mm
Width
28mm
Based on experience, for all Telcordia standard values, a Correction Factor, CF=2 has been used to
improve the reliability figures.
For components where the manufacturer's reliability figures have been used, no further correction
has been applied.
7-2
January 2005
Chapter 7
MTBF Values
Item
MTBF [Years]
40oC ambient temperature Ground Benign
43,6
FAN-ALARM
74,8
DC Power
150,9
AC 230V
150,7
SYSCONT-SD128-RJ45
95,8
MAIN CARD
85,1
BACKPLANE
1375,4
S1.1-8-LC
50,1
S16.1-1-LC
127,3
GigE-2-LC
99,7
E100-8
157,2
E1-8
207,4
E1-63
88
S4.1-2-LC
125,9
6XE3/T3-1.0/2.3
125,2
S1.1-2-LC
136,6
S1.1-2-LC/E1-21
101,5
L4.2-2-LC
122
L16.2-1-LC
127,2
32xE1-LFH-RJ45 panel
913,2
32xE1-LFH-1.0/2.3 panel
713,5
GigE-WAN-2
79,4
E100-WAN-8
74,4
EN 55022
EN 55024
EN 61000-4-2
EN 61000-4-3
EN 61000-4-4
7-3
Chapter 7
EN 61000-4-5
EN 61000-4-6
EN 61000-3-2
EN 61000-3-3
EN-61000-4-11
The equipment operates under all environmental conditions detailed in ETS 300 019-2-3 Class 3.2.
7-4
January 2005
Chapter 7
G.783
Characteristics of synchronous digital hierarchy (SDH) equipment functional blocks
G.784
Synchronous digital hierarchy (SDH) management
G.810
Definition and terminology for synchronization networks
G.811
Timing characteristic of primary reference clocks
G.812
Timing characteristics of slave clocks suitable for use as a node clocks in synchronization networks
G.813
Timing characteristics of SDH equipment slave clocks (SEC)
G.823
The control of jitter and wander within digital networks which are based on the 2048 kbit/s hierarchy
G.825
The control of jitter and wander within digital networks which are based on the synchronous digital
hierarchy (SDH)
G.826
End-to-end error performance parameters and objectives for international, constant bit rate digital paths
and connections.
G.832
Transport of SDH elements on PDH networks - Frame and multiplexing structures
G.841
Types and characteristics of SDH network protection architectures
G.957
Optical interfaces for equipment and systems relating to the synchronous digital hierarchy
G.958
Digital line systems based on the synchronous digital hierarchy for use on optical fibre cables
X.150
Principles of maintenance Testing for Public Data Network using Data Terminal Equipment (DTE) and
Data Circuit-Terminating Equipment (DCE) test Loops
7-5
Chapter 7
7-6
January 2005
Chapter 7
7-7
Chapter 7
7-8
January 2005
C H A P T E R
OUT
IN
OUT
MOD
FAIL
OUT
IN
OUT
IN
OUT
IN
2
IN
6
OUT
IN
3
MOD
DIS
96700
E3T3-6
Figure 8-1
8.2.1 Connectors
The connector used is a 75 ohm coaxial connector type 1.0/2.3. The screen on the input and on the output
connector is always DC coupled to ground.
8-1
Chapter 8
8.2.2 Compliance
The E3 Interface Compliance is provided in Table 8-1.
Table 8-1
E3 Interface Compliance
Standard
Comment
ITU-T G.703
Cable attenuation
Input reflection loss
Input port immunity against reflection
Output pulse mask
ITU-T G.783
ITU-T G.823
8-2
January 2005
C H A P T E R
S16.1-1-LC
Figure 9-1
CLASS 1
LASER
PRODUCT
OUT
IN
MOD
DIS
96701
MOD
FAIL
9-1
Chapter 9
Parameter
Value
Wavelength range
1261 - 1360 nm
SLM
1nm
30dB
0dBm
-5 dBm
8.2 dB
0 - 12 dB
NA
24dB
-27dB
-18 dBm
Min. overload
0 dBm
1 db
Max. reflectance at R
-27dB
Rx direction
Loss of signal (LOS): Traffic Alarm. Optical power of input signal is below receiver sensitivity
level.
Loss of lock (LOL): Indicates clock recovery of deserializer is out of lock. Signal must be
9-2
January 2005
C H A P T E R
10
S4.1-2-LC
CLASS 1
LASER
PRODUCT
OUT
IN
1
OUT
IN
2
MOD
DIS
96702
MOD
FAIL
10-1
Chapter 10
10.2.2 Compliance
Optical Interfaces compliance is described in Table 10-1.
Table 10-1 Optical Interface Compliance
Standard
Comment
ITU-T G.652
ITU-T G.651
IEC 793-2
ITU-T G.707
ITU-T G.783
ITU-T G.813
ITU-T G.825
ITU-T G.957
Optical spectrum,
Optical output power,
Optical eye diagram,
Optical extinction ratio.
Parameter
Types of
fibre:
Short-Haul
ITU-T Rec.
G.652 SM
10/125
ITU-T Rec.
G.651 MM
50/125
IEC 739-2
MM
62.5/125
622 080
kbit/s
Wavelength range
1274 - 1356
nm
MLM
Spectral characteristics
(max. RMS width)
2.5
nm
dBm
dBm
dB
8.2
10-2
January 2005
Chapter 10
Parameter
Short-Haul
0 - 12
dB
200
NA
NA
dBm
Min. overload
-8
dBm
dB
Max. reflectance at R
NA
10-3
Chapter 10
10-4
January 2005
C H A P T E R
11
GigE-2-LC
STATUS
CLASS 1
LASER
PRODUCT
SPEED
OUT
IN
OUT
IN
STATUS
MOD
DIS
LAN 1
96703
MOD
FAIL
11.2.1 Connector
The physical connector is a LC connector, type LC SFF PTH.
11-1
Chapter 11
Note
The two RJ-45 connectors on the GigE-2-LC module must not be used.
11.2.2 Compliance
The 1000Base-LX Interface Compliance is described in Table 11-1.
Table 11-1
Standard
Comment
IEEE 802.3
IEC 60825-1
Laser safety
Parameter
DJ elec-xmit
TJ elec-xmt
1.
Min.
Max.
Unit
Notes
0.12
UI
0.25
UI
Deterministic jitter (DJ) and total jitter (TJ) values are measured according to the methods
defined in appendix A [1]. [1UI (Unit Interval) = 800ps at 1.25Gb/s, and 1 UI = 941ps at
1.0625Gb/s]. Listed values apply to 1.0625Gb/s, 1.25Gb/s transceivers accept TJ < 0.24 UI.
Table 11-3 gives the input jitter as specified in the datasheet for the optical transceiver.
Table 11-3
Parameter
DJ elec-rcv
TJ elec-rcv
1.
Min.
Max.
Unit
Notes
0.36
UI
0.61
UI
Deterministic jitter (DJ) and total jitter (TJ) values are measured according to the methods
defined in appendix A [1]. Jitter values assume worst case input jitter. [1UI (Unit Interval) =
800ps at 1.25Gb/s, and 1UI = 941ps at 1.0625Gb/s]. Listed values apply to 1.0625Gb/s,
1.25Gb/s transceivers have TJ < 0.749 UI.
11-2
January 2005
Chapter 11
11.2.3 References
IEC/IEEE
IEC 60825-1: Laser safety.
IEEE 802.3, 1998 Edition: Part 3: Carrier sense multiple access with collision detection
ANSI
procedure.
ANSI X3.230-1994 [B19] (FC-PH), Annex A, A.4.2, Active output interface eye opening
measurement.
ANSI X3.230-1994 [B19] (FC-PH), Annex A, A.4.3,DJ Measurement.
ANSI/EIA/TIA-526-14A [B14].
11-3
Chapter 11
11-4
January 2005
C H A P T E R
12
LAN 4
LAN 6
LAN 8
LAN 1
LAN 3
LAN 5
LAN 7
MOD
FAIL
SPEED
MOD
DIS
STATUS
96704
E100-8
SPEED
LAN 2
12-1
Chapter 12
12.2.1 Pinout
The connectors are RJ-45 connectors, with the pin-out as described in Table 12-1.
:
Pin
Signal
TxD+
TxD--
RxD+
NC
NC
RxD--
7
8
NC
NC
12.2.2 Compliance
10/100BASE-T Interface Compliance is described in Table 12-2.
Table 12-2 10/100BASE-T Interface Compliance
Standard
Comment
ISO/IEC8877
IEEE 802.3
ANSI X3.263:1995
Spare pins: 8x 4
LAN1 to LAN8 are numbered from upper left corner. Traffic and link status are indicated in a LED (light
pipe) which is formed as an arrow, pointing on the actual port. The Fast Ethernet Port Pin out is described
in Table 12-3.
12-2
January 2005
Chapter 12
Table 12-3
Signal name
Pin
I/O
Signal Description
RJ_TX1+
Transmit+ LAN 1
RJ_TX1-
Transmit- LAN 1
RJ_RX1+
Receive+ LAN 1
RJ_RX1-
Receive- LAN 1
RJ_TX2+
Transmit+ LAN 2
RJ_TX2-
Transmit- LAN 2
RJ_RX2+
Receive+ LAN 2
RJ_RX2-
Receive- LAN 2
RJ_TX3+
Transmit+ LAN 3
RJ_TX3-
Transmit- LAN 3
RJ_RX3+
Receive+ LAN 3
RJ_RX3-
Receive- LAN 3
RJ_TX4+
Transmit+ LAN 4
RJ_TX4-
Transmit- LAN 4
RJ_RX4+
Receive+ LAN 4
RJ_RX4-
Receive- LAN 4
RJ_TX5+
Transmit+ LAN 5
RJ_TX5-
Transmit- LAN 5
RJ_RX5+
Receive+ LAN 5
RJ_RX5-
Receive- LAN 5
RJ_TX6+
Transmit+ LAN 6
RJ_TX6-
Transmit- LAN 6
RJ_RX6+
Receive+ LAN 6
RJ_RX6-
Receive- LAN 6
RJ_TX7+
Transmit+ LAN 7
RJ_TX7-
Transmit- LAN 7
RJ_RX7+
Receive+ LAN 7
RJ_RX7-
Receive- LAN 7
LAN 1
LAN 2
LAN 3
LAN 4
LAN 5
LAN 6
LAN 7
LAN 8
12-3
Chapter 12
Table 12-3
Signal name
Pin
I/O
Signal Description
RJ_TX8+
Transmit+ LAN 8
RJ_TX8-
Transmit- LAN 8
RJ_RX8+
Receive+ LAN 8
RJ_RX8-
Receive- LAN 8
12.2.4 References
This section lists referenced documents related to this module.
12-4
January 2005
C H A P T E R
13
TRIB 2
TRIB 4
TRIB 6
TRIB 8
TRIB 1
TRIB 3
TRIB 5
TRIB 7
MOD
FAIL
MOD
DIS
96705
E1-8
13-1
Chapter 13
13.2.1 Connectors
The connector is a RJ-45 connector, with the pin-out described in Table 13-1:
Table 13-1 E1 Interface Pinouts
Note
Pin
Signal
P120 OUT
N120 OUT
GND
P120 IN
N120 IN
SHIELD
NC
NC
Pin 6 is always AC connected to ground. The outer screen is always direct connected to ground.
13.2.2 Pinout
Pinout-8xRJ45 2Mb is given in Table 13-2.
Table 13-2
Signal name
Pinout-8xRJ45 2Mb
Pin
I/O
Signal Description
RJ_TX1+
A1
Transmit+ Port1
RJ_TX1-
A2
Transmit- Port1
RJ_RX1+
A4
Receive+ Port1
RJ_RX1-
A5
Receive- Port1
PORT 1
PORT 2
RJ_TX2+
B1
Transmit+ Port 2
RJ_TX2-
B2
Transmit- Port 2
RJ_RX2+
B4
Receive+ Port 2
RJ_RX2-
B5
Receive- Port 2
PORT 3
RJ_TX3+
C1
Transmit+ Port 3
RJ_TX3-
C2
Transmit- Port3
RJ_RX3+
C4
Receive+ Port3
RJ_RX3-
C5
Receive- Port 3
PORT 4
RJ_TX4+
D1
Transmit+ Port 4
RJ_TX4-
D2
Transmit- Port 4
RJ_RX4+
D4
Receive+ Port4
13-2
January 2005
Chapter 13
Table 13-2
Signal name
Pin
I/O
Signal Description
RJ_RX4-
D5
Receive- Port 4
PORT5
RJ_TX5+
E1
Transmit+ Port 5
RJ_TX5-
E2
Transmit- Port5
RJ_RX5+
E4
Receive+ Port 5
RJ_RX5-
E5
Receive- Port 5
PORT 6
RJ_TX6+
F1
Transmit+ Port 6
RJ_TX6-
F2
Transmit- Port 6
RJ_RX6+
F4
Receive+ Port6
RJ_RX6-
F5
Receive- Port 6
PORT 7
RJ_TX7+
G1
Transmit+ Port 7
RJ_TX7-
G2
Transmit- Port7
RJ_RX7+
G4
Receive+ Port7
RJ_RX7-
G5
Receive- Port 7
RJ_TX8+
H1
Transmit+ Port 8
RJ_TX8-
H2
Transmit- Port8
RJ_RX8+
H4
Receive+ Port8
RJ_RX8-
H5
Receive- Port 8
PORT 8
13.2.3 Compliance
E1 Interface Compliance is given in Table 13-3.
Table 13-3
E1 Interface Compliance
Standard
Comment
Connector
Connector
ITU-T G.703
Cable attenuation
Input reflection loss
Input port immunity against reflection
Output pulse mask
ITU-T G.783
ITU-T G823
13-3
Chapter 13
13-4
January 2005
C H A P T E R
14
E1-63
TRIB 33 TO TRIB 63
MOD
DIS
TRIB 1 TO TRIB 32
96706
MOD
FAIL
14.1.2 Connectors
The connector is a high density LFH connector with pin-out as described in Table 14-1 and Table 14-2.
Table 14-1 Multi-interface Lower connector - Pinout
Pin
Signal
Pin
Signal
Pin
Signal
Pin
Signal
RxD29-
41
RxD2-
81
RxD31-
121
RxD4-
RxD29+
42
RxD2+
82
RxD31+
122
RxD4+
GND
43
GND
83
GND
123
GND
14-1
Chapter 14
Pin
Signal
Pin
Signal
Pin
Signal
Pin
Signal
TxD29-
44
TxD2-
84
TxD31-
124
TxD4-
TxD29+
45
TxD2+
85
TxD31+
125
TxD4+
TxD25-
46
TxD6-
86
TxD27-
126
TxD8-
TxD25+
47
TxD6+
87
TxD27+
127
TxD8+
GND
48
GND
88
GND
128
GND
RxD25-
49
RxD6-
89
RxD27-
129
RxD8-
10
RxD25+
50
RxD6+
90
RxD27+
130
RxD8+
11
RxD21-
51
RxD10-
91
RxD23-
131
RxD12-
12
RxD21+
52
RxD10+
92
RxD23+
132
RxD12+
13
GND
53
GND
93
GND
133
GND
14
TxD21-
54
TxD10-
94
TxD23-
134
TxD12-
15
TxD21+
55
TxD10+
95
TxD23+
135
TxD12+
16
TxD17-
56
TxD14-
96
TxD19-
136
TxD16-
17
TxD17+
57
TxD14+
97
TxD19+
137
TxD16+
18
GND
58
GND
98
GND
138
GND
19
RxD17-
59
RxD14-
99
RxD19-
139
RxD16-
20
RxD17+
60
RxD14+
100
RxD19+
140
RxD16+
21
RxD13-
61
RxD18-
101
RxD15-
141
RxD20-
22
RxD13+
62
RxD18+
102
RxD15+
142
RxD20+
23
GND
63
GND
103
GND
143
GND
24
TxD13-
64
TxD18-
104
TxD15-
144
TxD20-
25
TxD13+
65
TxD18+
105
TxD15+
145
TxD20+
26
TxD9-
66
TxD22-
106
TxD11-
146
TxD24-
27
TxD9+
67
TxD22+
107
TxD11+
147
TxD24+
28
GND
68
GND
108
GND
148
GND
29
RxD9-
69
RxD22-
109
RxD11-
149
RxD24-
30
RxD9+
70
RxD22+
110
RxD11+
150
RxD24+
31
RxD5-
71
RxD26-
111
RxD7-
151
RxD28-
32
RxD5+
72
RxD26+
112
RxD7+
152
RxD28+
33
GND
73
GND
113
GND
153
GND
34
TxD5-
74
TxD26-
114
TxD7-
154
TxD28-
35
TxD5+
75
TxD26+
115
TxD7+
155
TxD28+
36
TxD1-
76
TxD30-
116
TxD3-
156
TxD32-
37
TxD1+
77
TxD30+
117
TxD3+
157
TxD32+
38
GND
78
GND
118
GND
158
GND
14-2
January 2005
Chapter 14
Pin
Signal
Pin
Signal
Pin
Signal
Pin
Signal
39
RxD1-
79
RxD30-
119
RxD3-
159
RxD32-
40
RxD1+
80
RxD30+
120
RxD3+
160
RxD32+
Pin
Signal
Pin
Signal
Pin
Signal
Pin
Signal
RxD61-
41
RxD34-
81
RxD63-
121
RxD36-
RxD61+
42
RxD34+
82
RxD63+
122
RxD36+
GND
43
GND
83
GND
123
GND
TxD61-
44
TxD34-
84
TxD63-
124
TxD36-
TxD61+
45
TxD34+
85
TxD63+
125
TxD36+
TxD57-
46
TxD38-
86
TxD59-
126
TxD40-
TxD57+
47
TxD38+
87
TxD59+
127
TxD40+
GND
48
GND
88
GND
128
GND
RxD57-
49
RxD38-
89
RxD59-
129
RxD40-
10
RxD57+
50
RxD38+
90
RxD59+
130
RxD40+
11
RxD53-
51
RxD42-
91
RxD55-
131
RxD44-
12
RxD53+
52
RxD42+
92
RxD55+
132
RxD44+
13
GND
53
GND
93
GND
133
GND
14
TxD53-
54
TxD42-
94
TxD55-
134
TxD44-
15
TxD53+
55
TxD42+
95
TxD55+
135
TxD44+
16
TxD49-
56
TxD46-
96
TxD51-
136
TxD48-
17
TxD49+
57
TxD46+
97
TxD51+
137
TxD48+
18
GND
58
GND
98
GND
138
GND
19
RxD49-
59
RxD46-
99
RxD51-
139
RxD48-
20
RxD49+
60
RxD46+
100
RxD51+
140
RxD48+
21
RxD45-
61
RxD50-
101
RxD47-
141
RxD52-
22
RxD45+
62
RxD50+
102
RxD47+
142
RxD52+
23
GND
63
GND
103
GND
143
GND
24
TxD45-
64
TxD50-
104
TxD47-
144
TxD52-
25
TxD45+
65
TxD50+
105
TxD47+
145
TxD52+
26
TxD41-
66
TxD54-
106
TxD43-
146
TxD56-
27
TxD41+
67
TxD54+
107
TxD43+
147
TxD56+
28
GND
68
GND
108
GND
148
GND
29
RxD41-
69
RxD54-
109
RxD43-
149
RxD56-
30
RxD41+
70
RxD54+
110
RxD43+
150
RxD56+
31
RxD37-
71
RxD58-
111
RxD39-
151
RxD60-
14-3
Chapter 14
Pin
Signal
Pin
Signal
Pin
Signal
Pin
Signal
32
RxD37+
72
RxD58+
112
RxD39+
152
RxD60+
33
GND
73
GND
113
GND
153
GND
34
TxD37-
74
TxD58-
114
TxD39-
154
TxD60-
35
TxD37+
75
TxD58+
115
TxD39+
155
TxD60+
36
TxD33-
76
TxD62-
116
TxD35-
156
37
TxD33+
77
TxD62+
117
TxD35+
157
38
GND
78
GND
118
GND
158
39
RxD33-
79
RxD62-
119
RxD35-
159
40
RxD33+
80
RxD62+
120
RxD35+
160
GND
14.1.3 Compliance
Multi-Interface E1 Compliance is given in Table 14-3.
Table 14-3 Multi-Interface E1 Compliance
Standard
Comment
ITU-T G.703
Cable attenuation
Input reflection loss
Input port immunity against reflection
Output pulse mask
ITU-T G.783
ITU-T G.823
14-4
January 2005
Chapter 14
Warning
This interface is considered SELV circuit. Avoid connecting this interface to TNV circuits. The cables
must not run with power cables, Network cables, or any other cables which are not connected to SELV
circuits. The electrical cables must not exit the building. If cables are connected to an equipment
which contains not SELV circuits, proper insulation between the ONS15305 E1 cables interface and
the other equipment interfaces must be provided.
3M
10 M
25 M.
120#
41#
40#
1#
81#
80#
80#
81#
1#
Warning
41#
120#
160#
40#
121#
96556
121#
To protect the cable jacket, avoid sharp edges and excessive bending. Always fasten the cable
connectors with both fixing screws. If the connector is fixed with one screw only, this screw is likely
to break if the cable is pulled by accident.
14-5
Chapter 14
90886
The RJ45 patch panel shown in Figure 14-3 provide an interface with impedance 120 ohm.
14.2.2.1 Pinout
RJ-45 Connector - Pinout is described in Table 14-4.
Table 14-4 RJ-45 Connector - Pinout
Pin
Signal
P120 OUT
N120 OUT
GND
P120 IN
N120 IN
SHIELD
NC
NC
OUT
OUT
OUT
IN
IN
IN
IN
102182
CISCO SYSTEMS
32xE1-LFH-1.0/2.3 Panel
14-6
January 2005
C H A P T E R
15
S16.1-2-LC
Figure
CLASS 1
LASER
PRODUCT
OUT
IN
1
OUT
IN
MOD
DIS
96699
MOD
FAIL
15-1
Chapter 15
Parameter
Value
Wavelength range
1261 - 1360 nm
MLM
7.7 nm
-8 dBm
-15 dBm
8.2 dB
0 - 12 dB
96 ps/nm
NA
NA
-28 dBm
Min. overload
-8 dBm
1 db
Max. reflectance at R
NA
15.2.3 Compliance
Optical S-1.1 Interface Compliance is listed in Table 15-2.
Table 15-2 Optical S-1.1 Interface Compliance
Standard
Comment
ITU-T G.652
ITU-T G.707
ITU-T G.783
ITU-T G.813
ITU-T G.825
15-2
January 2005
Chapter 15
Standard
Comment
ITU-T G.957
Optical spectrum
Optical output power
Optical eye diagram
Optical extinction ratio
ITU-T G.958
15-3
Chapter 15
15-4
January 2005
C H A P T E R
16
CLASS 1
LASER
PRODUCT
OUT
IN
OUT
IN
OUT
IN
OUT
IN
8
MOD
FAIL
OUT
IN
1
OUT
IN
2
OUT
IN
3
OUT
IN
4
MOD
DIS
90891
S1.1-8-LC
8xS-1.1-LC
16-1
Chapter 16
Parameter
Value
Wavelength range
1261 - 1360 nm
MLM
7.7 nm
-8 dBm
-15 dBm
8.2 dB
0 - 12 dB
96 ps/nm
NA
NA
-28 dBm
Min. overload
-8 dBm
16-2
January 2005
Chapter 16
Table 16-1
Parameter
Value
1 db
Max. reflectance at R
NA
16-3
Chapter 16
16.2.3 Compliance
The Optical S-1.1InterfaceCompliance is given in Table 16-2.
Table 16-2
Standard
Comment
ITU-T G.652
ITU-T G.707
ITU-T G.783
ITU-T G.813
ITU-T G.825
ITU-T G.957
Optical spectrum
Optical output power
Optical eye diagram
Optical extinction ratio
ITU-T G.958
16-4
January 2005
C H A P T E R
17
STM-16 L16.2-1-LC
MOD
FAIL
CLASS 1
LASER
PRODUCT
OUT
IN
MOD
DIS
102180
Figure 17-2
17-1
Chapter 17
Parameter
Value
10/125
2 488 320
kbit/s
Wavelength range
1500 - 1580
nm
SLM
nm
+3
dBm
-2
dBm
8.2
dB
Attenuation range
10 - 24
dB
1600
ps/nm
24
dB
dB
-28
dBm
Min. overload
-9
dBm
dB
Max. reflectance at R
-27
dB
17.2.3 Compliance
L16.2-1-LC Interface compliance is given in Table 17-2.
Table 17-2
Standard
Comment
ITU-T G.652
ITU-T G.707
ITU-T G.813
ITU-T G.825
ITU-T G.957
17-2
January 2005
Chapter 17
0.3 dB/km
Cable Dispersion:
Maximum Chromatic Dispersion Coefficient
Table 17-4
20 ps/nm*km
Dispersion
Limited Span
80 km
80 km
80 km
17-3
Chapter 17
17-4
January 2005
C H A P T E R
18
18-1
Chapter 18
STM-4 L4.2-2-LC
MOD
FAIL
OUT
IN
OUT
IN
MOD
DIS
102181
CLASS 1
LASER
PRODUCT
Parameter
Value
10/125
622 080
kbit/s
Wavelength range
1480 - 1580
nm
SLM
nm
+3
dBm
-2
dBm
10
dB
Attenuation range
10 - 24
dB
3000
ps/nm
24
dB
-27
dB
-28
dBm
Min. overload
-8
dBm
dB
Max. reflectance at R
-27
dB
18-2
January 2005
Chapter 18
18.2.3 Compliance
L4.2-2-LC Interface compliance is described in Table 18-2.
Table 18-2
Standard
Comment
ITU-T G.652
ITU-T G.707
ITU-T G.813
ITU-T G.825
ITU-T G.957
0.3 dB/km
Cable Dispersion:
Maximum Chromatic Dispersion Coefficient
Table 18-4
20 ps/nm*km
Dispersion
Limited Span
80 km
150 km
80 km
18-3
Chapter 18
18-4
January 2005
C H A P T E R
19
CLASS 1
LASER
PRODUCT
MOD
FAIL
OUT
IN
1
OUT
IN
MOD
DIS
102183
STM-1 S1.1-2-LC/E1-21
Figure 19-1
19-1
Chapter 19
Parameter
Value
10/125 m
Wavelength range
1261 - 1360 nm
MLM
7.7 nm
-8 dBm
-15 dBm
8.2 dB
0 - 12 dB
96 ps/nm
NA
NA
Note
-28 dBm
Min. overload
-8 dBm
1 dB
Max. reflectance at R
NA
The module can also be used for transmission on Multi Mode fiber, see 19.4 Example of Cable Planning,
STM-1 S-1.1 interface, page 19-6.
19-2
January 2005
Chapter 19
19.2.3 Compliance
The Optical S-1.1 Interface Compliance is listed in Table 19-2.
Table 19-2 Optical S-1.1 Interface Compliance
Standard
Comment
ITU-T G.652
ITU-T G.707
ITU-T G.783
ITU-T G.813
ITU-T G.825
ITU-T G.957
Optical spectrum
Optical output power
Optical eye diagram
Optical extinction ratio
ITU-T G.958
ITU-T G.651
IEC/EN
60793-2-10
19-3
Chapter 19
19.3.1 Connectors
The connector is a high density LFH connector. See 14.2.1 32XE1 LFH - LFH Cable, page 14-5 for
details.
19.3.2 Pinout
The high density LFH connector pin-out is given in Table 19-3.
Table 19-3 Pin-out high density LFH connector
Pin
Pin
Signal
Pin
Pin
Signal
41
RxD2-
81
121
RxD4-
42
RxD2+
82
122
RxD4+
43
GND
83
123
GND
44
TxD2-
84
124
TxD4-
45
TxD2+
85
125
TxD4+
46
TxD6-
86
126
TxD8-
47
TxD6+
87
127
TxD8+
48
GND
88
128
GND
49
RxD6-
89
129
RxD8-
10
50
RxD6+
90
130
RxD8+
Signal
GND
GND
Signal
GND
GND
11
RxD21-
51
RxD10-
91
131
RxD12-
12
RxD21+
52
RxD10+
92
132
RxD12+
13
GND
53
GND
93
133
GND
14
TxD21-
54
TxD10-
94
134
TxD12-
15
TxD21+
55
TxD10+
95
135
TxD12+
16
TxD17-
56
TxD14-
96
TxD19-
136
TxD16-
17
TxD17+
57
TxD14+
97
TxD19+
137
TxD16+
18
GND
58
GND
98
GND
138
GND
19
RxD17-
59
RxD14-
99
RxD19-
139
RxD16-
20
RxD17+
60
RxD14+
100
RxD19+
140
RxD16+
21
RxD13-
61
RxD18-
101
RxD15-
141
RxD20-
22
RxD13+
62
RxD18+
102
RxD15+
142
RxD20+
23
GND
63
GND
103
GND
143
GND
24
TxD13-
64
TxD18-
104
RxD15-
144
TxD20-
GND
19-4
January 2005
Chapter 19
25
TxD13+
65
26
TxD9-
27
TxD18+
105
RxD15+
145
66
106
TxD11-
146
TxD9+
67
107
TxD11+
147
28
GND
68
108
GND
148
29
RxD9-
69
109
RxD11-
149
30
RxD9+
70
110
RxD11+
150
31
RxD5-
71
111
RxD7-
151
32
RxD5+
72
112
RxD7+
152
33
GND
73
113
GND
153
34
TxD5-
74
114
RxD7-
154
35
TxD5+
75
115
RxD7+
155
36
TxD1-
76
116
TxD3-
156
37
TxD1+
77
117
TxD3+
157
38
GND
78
118
GND
158
39
RxD1-
79
119
RxD3-
159
40
RxD1+
80
120
RxD3+
160
GND
GND
GND
TxD20+
GND
GND
GND
Note
When the LFH connector/Patch panels are used together with the STM-1 S1.1-2-LC/E1-21 module, only
the first 21 ports are used.
Warning
This interface is considered SELV circuit. Avoid connecting this interface to TNV circuits. The cables
must not run with power cables, Network cables, or any other cables which are not connected to SELV
circuits. The electrical cables must not exit the building. If cables are connected to an equipment
which contains not SELV circuits, proper insulation between the ONS15305 E1 cables interface and
the other equipment interfaces must be provided.
19.3.4 Compliance
The Multi-Interface E1 compliance is given in Table 19-4.
19-5
Chapter 19
Standard
Comment
ITU-T G.703
Cable attenuation
Input reflection loss
Input port immunity against reflection
Output pulse mask
ITU-T G.783
ITU-T G.823
0.5 dB/km
1.0 dB/km
1.0 dB/km
3 dB
3 dB
1 dB
1 dB
Cable Dispersion:
Maximum Chromatic Dispersion
Coefficient
5.5 ps/nm*km
6 ps/nm*km
6 ps/nm*km
Modal bandwidth
800 MHz*km 1
500 MHz*km 2
Overall bandwidth
80 MHz
80 MHz
19-6
January 2005
Chapter 19
Table 19-6
Loss Limited
Span
Dispersion Limited
Span
SM
24 km
47 km
24 km
MM 50 m
13 km
10 km
10 km
1 2
MM 62.5
m
13 km
6 km
6 km
Type of fiber
Two-fiber
1. Offset launch with mode-conditioning patchcord according to IEEE Std. 802.3 1998 edition.
2. By using a MM fiber like GIGAlite II, dispersion limited spans can be extended to 15km (50/125mm) and 9 km (62.5/125
mm) without the need of a mode-conditioning patchcord.
3. See 1 and 2 above.
Center launch with SM patch cord connected directly to the MM fiber gives potentially much higher
bandwidths than the OFL bandwidths (several GHz/km) as only a few central modes are launched.
However, MM fibres can contain central index distortions, which can give rise to bandwidth collapse
with small offsets from center. Both center launch and offset launch with FP laser creates underfilled
excitation of the MM fiber. Offset launch is less vulnerable to mode coupling distortions due to the
higher number of modes being exited. Underfilled excitations generally gives higher bandwidths than
OFL.
Recommendation
Center launch i.e. SM patchcord from 2xS-1.1-LC, is likely to achieve transmission distances at least as
given in the table for most MM Fiber cables. Use of mode conducting cord for offset launch, is preferred
when quality of MM fiber plant is unknown.
19-7
Chapter 19
19-8
January 2005
C H A P T E R
20
Ethernet features
SDH features
LED indicators
Inventory EEPROM
GigE-WAN-2
Figure 20-1 Dual Optical LAN 1000Base-LX Module with Mapper, GigE-WAN-2
CLASS 1
LASER
PRODUCT
1
OUT
IN
OUT
IN
MOD
DIS
124561
STATUS
MOD
FAIL
20-1
Chapter 20
Q in Q tunneling of data
L2 protocol tunneling
RMON counters
Flow control
Strict priority
The module includes two Ethernet switches and both are connected to the policer. The mappers and
physical interfaces are also connected to the policer.
The following options are available in the policer:
A physical interface can be connected to the mapper, via the policer, for a L1 service
A physical interface can be connected to the Ethernet switch, via the policer, for a L2 service
The Ethernet switch can be connected to the mapper, via the policer for a L2 service
Support of Virtual Concatenation with VC-3-nV, where n=1.3 or VC-4-nV, where n=1
Alarm processing
Performance counters
In-band management
20-2
January 2005
Chapter 20
The interfaces are based on the SFP multi source agreement (MSA) and it is possible to add the modules
in the field. The modules supports hot insertion. The following interfaces are supported in the first
release:
1000Base-SX
1000Base-LX
20.2 Configuration
In addition to the two GE interfaces the module contains two single port Ethernet switches, and two
single port mapper circuits.
All Ethernet switches in the ONS 15305 are inter-connected via the main card.
The module is configurable in two main operation modes:
20-3
Chapter 20
20.3.1 Description
The module contains two Gigabit Ethernet (GE) LAN interfaces that meets the specification in IEEE
802.3.
The interfaces use Small Form Pluggable (SFP) optics with the following optics offered:
1000Base-SX, multimode
20.3.2 1000Base-SX
The interface offered is a Gigabit Ethernet (GE) interface that meets the 1000Base-SX specifications in
IEEE 802.3. This interface is an optical short haul interface based on multi-mode fibre. Operating range
and Transmitter characteristic for 1000Base-SX are found in Table 20-1 and Table 20-2. Receiver
characteristic is found in Table 20-3.
Table 20-1 Operating range for 1000Base-SX over each optical fiber type
Fiber type
Minimum range
(meters)
62.5 m MMF
160
2 to 220
62.5 m MMF
200
2 to 275
50 m MMF
400
2 to 500
50 m MMF
500
2 to 550
10 m SMF
N/A
Not supported
Description
62.5 m MMF
50 m MMF
Transmitter type
Shortwave Laser
Wavelength (range)
Unit
GBd
770 to 860
nm
0.26
ns
0.21
ns
0.85
See footnote
dBm
-30
dBm
-117
3
dBm
-11.5
9
RIN (max)
Coupled Power Ratio (CPR)
nm
1
9 < CPR
dB
dB/Hz
dB
20-4
January 2005
Chapter 20
1. The 1000BASE-SX launch power shall be the lesser of the class 1 safety limit as defined by 802.3 38.7.2 or
the average receive power (max) defined by 802.3 Table 38-4.
2. Examples of an OFF transmitter are: no power supplied to the PMD, laser shutdown for safety conditions, activation of a
transmit disable or other optional module laser shut down conditions. During all conditions when the PMA is powered,
the ac signal (data) into the transmit port will be valid encoded 8B/10B patterns (this is a requirement of the PCS layers)
except for short durations during system power-on-reset or diagnostics when the PMA is placed in a loopback mode.
3. Radial overfilled launches as described in 802.3 38A.2, while they may meet CPR ranges, should be avoided.
Description
62.5 m
50 m
Unit
Wavelength (range)
770 to 860
GBd
nm
dBm
Receive sensitivity
-17
dBm
12
dB
-12.5
-13.5
dBm
2.60
2.20
dB
1500
MHz
20.3.3 1000Base-LX
The interface offered is a Gigabit Ethernet (GE) interface that meets the 1000Base-LX specification in
IEEE 802.3. This interface is an optical long haul interface based on single-mode fibre.
Table 20-4 Operating range for 1000Base-LX over each optical fiber type
Fiber type
Minimum range
(meters)
2 to 550
50 m MMF
400
2 to 550
50 m MMF
500
2 to 550
10 m SMF
N/A
2 to 5000
Operating range and transmitter characteristic for 1000Base-LX are found in Table 20-4 and Table 20-5.
The receiver characteristic is found in Table 20-6.
Table 20-5 Transmitter characteristic for 1000Base-LX
Description
62.5 m MMF
50 m MMF
Transmitter type
Longwave Laser
Wavelength (range)
Trise/Tfall
(max, 20-80% response time)
10 m SMF
Unit
GBd
1270 to 1355
nm
0.26
ns
20-5
Chapter 20
Description
62.5 m MMF
50 m MMF
10 m SMF
Unit
nm
-3
dBm
-11.5
-11.5
dBm
-30
dBm
RIN (max)
Coupled Power Ratio (CPR)
-11.0
dB
-120
1
28 < CPR< 40
dB/Hz
N/A
dB
1. Due to the dual media (single-mode and multimode) support of the LX transmitter, fulfillment of this specification requires
a single-mode fiber offset-launch mode-conditioning patch cord described in 802.3 chapter 38.11.4 for MMF operation. This
patch cord is not used for single-mode operation.
Description
Value
Unit
GBd
Wavelength (range)
1270 to 1355
nm
-3
dBm
Receive sensitivity
-19
dBm
12
dB
-14.4
dBm
2.60
dB
1500
MHz
20-6
January 2005
Chapter 20
Warning
If using other SFP modules than delivered from Cisco, Cisco disclaim responsibility of possible
damage or malfunction that might occur to involved equipment
For details on installation of SFP modules, please see the documents listed below:
Installing GBIC, SFP and XFP Optics Modules in Cisco ONS 15454, 15327, 15600, and 15310
Platforms:
http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/ong/15400/454spint/gbicsfp.htm
and Cisco Small Form-Factor Pluggable Modules Installation Notes:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/hw/modules/ps5000/products_installation_guide_chapter09186
a008011c581.html#81099
20-7
Chapter 20
20-8
January 2005
C H A P T E R
21
Ethernet features
SDH features
Optical interfaces
Electrical interfaces
LED indicators
Inventory EEPROM
LAN 2
SP
LAN 4
ST
SP
ST
SP
LAN 6
ST
SP
ST
SP
LAN 8
ST
SP
ST
SP
ST
MOD
FAIL
SP
LAN 1
LAN 3
LAN 5
ST
LAN 7
MOD
DIS
124560
E100-WAN-8
21-1
Chapter 21
Q in Q tunnelling of data
Internal connection between the physical interfaces, mapper and Ethernet switch
The module includes two Ethernet switches of which one is directly connected to the mapper. This
switch and mapper provides eight mappers that can be used in a L2 solution.
The other Ethernet switch is connected to the policer. The mapper and physical interfaces are also
connected to the policer.
The following options are available in the policer:
A physical interface can be connected to the mapper, via the policer, for a L1 service
A physical interface can be connected to the Ethernet switch, via the policer, for a L2 service
The port of the Ethernet switch can be connected to the mapper, via the policer, for an additional
mapper.
Sixteen mappers are available if none of the physical interfaces are used.
Support of Virtual Concatenation with VC-12-nV, where n=1.50, VC-4-nV, where n=1 and
VC-3-nV, where n=1.3
Alarm processing
21-2
January 2005
Chapter 21
21.2 Configuration
In addition to the physical interfaces the module contains two 8 port Ethernet switches, connected
together via the internal G-link interface towards the crossbar, and two 8 port mapper circuits. The
module is configurable into two main operation modes:
Grooming mode
Normal mode
Note
21-3
Chapter 21
21.4.1 Description
The interface is a 10Base-T and 100Base-TX Ethernet interface according to the IEEE 802.3
specification.
Spare pins:
8x 4
LAN1 to LAN8 are numbered from lower left corner. Traffic and link status are indicated in a LED (light
pipe) which is formed as an arrow, pointing on the actual port.
21.4.3 Compliance
10/100Base-T interface compliance is described in Table 21-1.
Table 21-1 Compliance 10/100Base-T interface
Standard
Comment
ISO/IEC8877
IEEE 802.3
ANSI X3.263:1995
21-4
January 2005
C H A P T E R
22
Step 2
22-1
Chapter 22
22.1.1.3 Exit
The Exit command is used to terminate an ONSCLI session. The ONSCLI session will be automatically
terminated after a period of 30 minutes of inactivity. ONSCLI does not accept simultaneous sessions.
An authorized ONSCLI user obtains full access rights to the available management information.
Key
Description
Some commands (in particular Show) may potentially produce many lines of output. After a
predetermined number of lines of output in response to a single command, the user is prompted to enter
y(es) or n(o) to continue the output.
22-2
January 2005
Chapter 22
Syntax
Description
<spaces>
<integer>
<choice>
<IP address>
22-3
Chapter 22
Syntax
Description
<string>
<MAC address>
<time>
<date>
<KLM>
<port>
A decimal integer.
<area address>
A hexadecimal string.
<system id>
A hexadecimal string.
<selector>
A hexadecimal string.
Overview of the ONSCLI command hierarchy is following subsections. A detailed overview of all
commands is found in 22.2 Command Reference, page 22-7.
Optional parameters are enclosed in square brackets. For clarity, parameter command keywords are
written in capital letters, for example [IP-ADDRESS=<IP address>].
The order of parameters (keyword/value pairs) is not significant. The help command ? will display all
available commands at the current level, each with a short description.
22-4
January 2005
Chapter 22
Step 1
ONSCLI>?
*** current menu path:
<root>
*** valid commands:
IP-Configuration (Management-Port):
Show-Current-Alarms:
Change-Passwords:
Erase-CDB:
Reset-Device:
Community-Handler:
Management-Modes:
Running-Config:
Exit:
ONSCLI - available commands:
Step 2
IP-ADDRESS:
192.168.2.2
SUBNET-MASK:
255.255.255.252
DEFAULT-GATEWAY: 192.168.2.1
MANAGEMENT-MODE: ip
ADMIN-STATUS:
STATUS:
Note
up
down
22-5
Chapter 22
22.1.2.2.3 Show-Current-Alarms
By this command all active alarms are displayed.
22.1.2.2.4 Change-Passwords
By this command, TELNET and ONSCLI passwords can be changed. Both passwords can be changed
in the same command or they can be changed one by one.
22.1.2.2.5 Erase-CDB
By this command the complete configuration file is erased. The device is also automatically restarted.
22.1.2.2.6 Reset-Device
By this command the device is restarted.
22.1.2.2.7 Running-Config
Shows all relevant configuration data. Running config contains 9 sections that correspond with the
configuration blocks in the device. Each section can be started separately or all at once.
22.1.2.2.8 Community-handler:
These set of commands are used to add, change, remove or display community entries.
Example of adding a new community entry:
Step 1
ONSCLI>Community-handler\add?
Usage:
Add
MANAGER=<IP address>
COMMUNITY=<string[1:20]>
ACCESS=<readOnly|readWrite|super>
TRAPS=<enable|disable>
Step 2
0.0.0.0
COMMUNITY: test
ACCESS:
TRAPS:
readOnly
disable
22-6
January 2005
Chapter 22
22.1.2.2.9 Management-Modes:
Commands used to set system mode, management-port mode and DDC-channels modes. These
commands are useful in installation phase.
Tip
The following illustrations are hyperlinked with the command table in the end of this section. If you view
the PDF version, you can click on desired command in Figure 22-1, Figure 22-2,Figure 22-3 and
Figure 22-4 to view corresponding parameters. Use Previous View button in the PDF browser to return
to the illustrations.
Root commands
Community handling
Management modes
An overview of available commands within these groups, is found in Figure 22-2,Figure 22-3 and
Figure 22-4. SeeTable 22-3ONSCLI Command Parameters, page 22-10 for descriptions on all
commands mentioned in this section.
22-7
Chapter 22
Root commands
IP-Configuration
Show-Current-Alarms
Change-Passwords
Erase-CDB
Reset-Device
Display-Event-Log
Clear-Event-Log
Running-Config
22-8
January 2005
Chapter 22
Community-Handler
Community-Table
Show
Add
Edit
Remove
22-9
Chapter 22
Management-Modes
System Mode
IPUN
IP
IPUN and IP
Display-DCC-mode
Management-Port-Mode
Management-Port-Mode
Update-DCC-Mode
Update-DCC-Mode
Gateway
Command
Parameters
System-Mode
[SYSTEM-MODE=<ip|ipunnumbered>]
IP-Configuration
[IP-ADDRESS=<IP address>]
[SUBNET-MASK=<IP address>]
[DEFAULT-GATEWAY=<IP address>]
Management-Port-Mode
[MANAGEMENT-MODE=<notUsed|ip>]
[ADMIN-STATUS=<on|off>]
22-10
January 2005
Chapter 22
Command
Parameters
Update-DCC-Mode
Show
[MANAGER=<IP address>]
Add
MANAGER=<IP address>
COMMUNITY=<string[1:20]>
ACCESS=<readOnly|readWrite|super>
TRAPS=<enable|disable>
Edit
MANAGER=<IP address>
COMMUNITY=<string[1:20]>
[ACCESS=<readOnly|readWrite|super>]
[TRAPS=<enable|disable>]
Remove
Running-Config
Change-Passwords
[ONSCLI-PASSWORD=<string[6:12]>]
[TELNET-PASSWORD=<string[6:12]>]
Display-DCC-Mode
Gateway
[GATEWAY-ENABLED=<true|false>]
Show-Current-Alarms
None
Erase-CDB
None
Reset-Device
None
Display -Event-Log
None
Clear-Event-Log
None
22-11
Chapter 22
22-12
January 2005