Cisco ONS 15454 Product Overview
Cisco ONS 15454 Product Overview
Cisco ONS 15454 Product Overview
Introduction
The Cisco ONS 15454 provides efficient bandwidth delivery and management in fiber-optic transport networks. It is a flexible, SONET add/drop multiplexer that offers service aggregation and high-bandwidth transport of voice and data traffic on a single platform. The ONS 15454 allows users to easily manage services and quickly increase capacity without disrupting service.
Figure 1 Cisco ONS 15454
The ONS 15454 is a NEBS-compliant shelf assembly that contains 17 card (module) slots, a backplane interface, a fan tray, a front panel with an LCD, and alarm indicators. The ONS 15454 carries traditional time-division multiplexing (TDM) and high-speed data traffica variety of card configurations offer incremental bandwidth increases as needed and support EC-1, DS-1, DS-3, OC-3, OC-12, OC-48, OC-192, and 10/100/1000 Ethernet speeds. Workstations can connect to the ONS 15454 using direct, network (LAN and WAN), or DCC connections. The ONS 15454 supports TL1 and Cisco Transport Controller (CTC). CTC, the ONS 15454 software interface, provides easy card, node, and network-level provisioning and troubleshooting. The ONS 15454 deploys a variety of network configurations, including linear add-drop multiplexers (ADMs), unidirectional path switched rings (UPSRs), two-fiber and four-fiber bidirectional line switched rings (BLSRs), subtending rings, and path-protected mesh networks (PPMNs). The ONS 15454 can be combined with the Cisco ONS 15327 in several network configurations.
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TCC+ Card
The TCC+ houses the central intelligence of the ONS 15454, including the ONS 15454 OAM&P software interface (CTC).
Figure 2
TCC+
FAIL
ACT/STBY
ACO
CRAFT
LAN
As the main processing center of the ONS 15454, the TCC+ combines timing, control, and switching functions:
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Diagnostics IP address detection and resolution Timing SONET data communications channel (DCC) termination System fault detection
The CRIT, MAJ, MIN, and REM alarm LEDs on the TCC+ faceplate indicate whether a Critical, Major, Minor, or Remote alarm is present anywhere on the ONS 15454 or on a remote node in the network.
Database Revert
The increased memory of the TCC+ allows it to store and revert to the previous conguration database. After a software upgrade, the TCC+ copies the current working database and saves it in a reserved location in the TCC+ ash memory. If you later need to revert to the original working software load, the saved database will activate automatically when you initiate the revert process. There is no need to restore the database manually.
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(circuit) information using CTC or TL1; the TCC+ then establishes the proper internal cross-connect information and relays the setup information to the cross-connect card.
Note
For protection purposes, Cisco recommends duplex operation. Duplex cross-connect cards must be the same type (e.g. two XCs, two XCVTs, or two XC10Gs).
XC Card
The XC card establishes connections and performs time division switching (TDS) at the STS-1 level between ONS 15454 trafc cards. The switch matrix on the XC card consists of 144 STS-1 bidirectional ports. Network operators can concentrate or groom low-speed trafc from line cards onto high-speed transport spans and to drop low-speed trafc from transport spans onto line cards.
XCVT Card
The XCVT card provides the same STS capability as a standard XC card but adds VT1.5 cross-connect capability. The switch matrix on the XCVT card consists of 144 STS-1 bidirectional ports and adds a VT matrix that can manage up to 336 bidirectional VT1.5s. The VT1.5-level signals can be cross connected, dropped, or rearranged.
XC10G Card
The XC10G card supports up to STS-192 signal rates. The switch matrix on the XC10G consists of 576 STS-1 bidirectional ports and its VT matrix can manage up to 336 bidirectional VT1.5s. The XC10G is required to operate the OC-192 card or the OC-48 any-slot cards.
Figure 3
XC10G
XC10G faceplate
FAIL
ACT/STBY
AIC Card
The optional Alarm Interface Controller (AIC) card provides user-provisionable alarm capability and supports local and express orderwire.
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Figure 4
AIC
FAIL
ACT
INPUT 1 INPUT 2 INPUT 3 INPUT 4 OUTPUT 1 OUTPUT 2 OUTPUT 3 OUTPUT 4 CONTACT STATUS
RING
CALL
LOCAL OW
RING
CALL
EXPRESS OW
The AIC card provides input/output alarm contacts for user-dened alarms. You can dene up to four external alarms and four external controls. The physical connections are made using the backplane wire-wrap eld.
Electrical Cards
Slots 1 6 and 12 17 host any electrical card. Each card has faceplate LEDs, and you can obtain the status of all electrical card ports using the LCD screen on the ONS 15454 fan-tray assembly.
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Electrical cards (EC-1, DS-1, DS-3, DS3E, and DS3XM) require electrical interface assemblies (EIAs) to provide the cable connection points for the shelf assembly. In most cases, EIAs are ordered with the ONS 15454 and come pre-installed on the backplane.
Note
Optical cards and Ethernet cards have faceplate rather than backplane connections.
EC1-12 Card
The EC1-12 card provides 12 Telcordia-compliant, GR-253 STS-1 ports per card. Each port operates at 51.840 Mbps over a single 75 ohm 728A or equivalent coaxial span. The EC1-12 terminates the twelve selected working STS-1 signals from the backplane. The EC1-12 maps each of the twelve received EC1 signals into 12 STS-1s with visibility into the SONET path overhead.
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FAIL ACT SF
The DS3N-12E can operate as the protect card in a 1:N protection group. The DS3-12E card can only function as the protect card for one other DS3-12E card. If Software Release 3.0 or higher is used, the card uses all enhanced performance monitoring functions. With software prior to Release 3.0, the card operates with the same functions as the older DS-3 card.
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With Software R3.1 you can perform an in-service upgrade from the DS3-12/DS3N-12 card to the DS3-12E/DS3N-12E card to take advantage of enhanced PM functions without disrupting service.
DS3XM-6 Card
The DS3XM-6 card, commonly referred to as a transmux card, provides six Telcordia-compliant, GR-499-CORE M13 multiplexing functions. The DS3XM-6 converts six framed DS-3 network connections to 28x6 or 168 VT1.5s.
Optical Cards
The optical cards, with the exception of the original OC-48s and OC-192s, can reside in Slots 1 6 and 12 17. The OC-48 and OC-192 cards can reside in Slots 5, 6, 12, and 13. New to Release 3.1 are OC-48 Any Slot cards, which can reside in the same slots as all other optical cards. You can provision an optical card as a drop card or span card in a linear ADM (1+1), UPSR, or BLSR protection scheme. Each card faceplate has three card-level LED indicators. When illuminated, the red FAIL LED represents a hardware problem, the amber SF LED represents a signal failure or condition (for example, a loss of frame or a high bit error rate), and the green ACT LED indicates that the card is operational. ONS 15454 optical cards have SC ber connectors on the card faceplate.
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Nineteen of the cards operate in the blue band with spacing of 100 GHz on the ITU grid. The other eighteen cards operate in the red band with spacing of 100 GHz on the ITU grid.
FAIL ACT/STBY SF
0 1
TX 1 RX
TX
DANGER - INVISIBLE LASER RADIATION MAY BE EMITTED FROM THE END OF UNTERMINATED FIBER CABLE OR CONNECTOR. DO NOT STARE INTO BEAM OR VIEW DIRECTL WITH Y OPTICAL INSTRUMENTS.
RX
!
MAX INPUT POWER LEVEL - 10dBm
Class 1M (IEC) Class 1 (CDRH)
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Ethernet Cards
The Ethernet cards eliminate the need for external Ethernet aggregation equipment and provide efcient transport and co-existence of traditional TDM trafc with packet-switched data trafc. Multiple Ethernet cards installed in an ONS 15454 can act as a single switch (EtherSwitch) supporting a variety of SONET port congurations.
E100T-12/E100T-G Card
The ONS 15454 uses E100T-12/ E100T-G cards for Ethernet (10 Mbps) and Fast Ethernet (100 Mbps). Each card provides twelve switched, IEEE 802.3-compliant, 10/100 Base-T Ethernet interfaces that can independently detect the speed of an attached device (auto-sense) and automatically connect at the appropriate speed. The ports auto-congure to operate at either half or full duplex and can determine whether to enable or disable ow control. You can also congure Ethernet ports manually. If the cross-connect card is the XC10G, the E100T-G is required for Ethernet/Fast Ethernet (the E100T-12 is incompatible).The E100T-G card can also operate with the XC and XCVT.
E1000-2/E1000-2-G Card
The ONS 15454 uses the E1000-2 cards for Gigabit Ethernet (1000 Mbps).The E1000-2 card provides two ports of IEEE-compliant, 1000 Mbps interfaces for high-capacity customer LAN interconnections. Each interface supports full-duplex operation. If the cross-connect card is the XC10G, the E1000-2-G is required for Gigabit Ethernet (the E1000-2 is incompatible).The E1000-2-G card can also operate with the XC and XCVT. The E1000-2 card uses gigabit interface converter (GBIC) modular receptacles for the optical interfaces. GBICs are hot-swappable input/output devices that plug into a Gigabit Ethernet port to link the port with the ber-optic network. Cisco provides two GBIC models: one for short reach applications and one for long-reach applications. The short reach model connects to multimode ber and the long reach model requires single-mode ber.
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Figure 7
Receiver
Transmitter
Card Protection
The ONS 15454 provides 1:1 and 1:N electrical protection and 1+1 optical protection methods. This section describes the protection options and explains protection switching in the ONS 15454. For a description of Ethernet protection, see the Spanning Tree Protocol section on page 31.
Figure 8 1:1 electrical card protection in the ONS 15454
1:1 Protection
Protect
Working Protect
Working Protect
Protect Working
Protect Working
TCC+
XC10G
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Protect
TCC+
Working
Working
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Electrical Protection
1:N protection allows a single card to protect several working cards. A DS1N-14 card provides protection for up to five DS1-14 cards, and a DS3N-12/DS3N-12E card protects up to five DS3-12/DS3-12E cards. The standard DS1-14 card and DS3-12 card provide 1:1 protection only. 1:N protection operates only at the DS-1 and DS-3 levels. The 1:N protect cards must match the levels of their working cards. For example, a DS1N-14 protects only DS1-14 or other DS1N-14 cards, and a DS3N-12 protects only DS3-12 or other DS3N-12 cards. 1:N cards have added circuitry to act as the protection card in a 1:N protection group. Otherwise, the card is identical to the standard card and can serve as a normal working card. 1:1 and 1:N protection in the ONS 15454 supports revertive and non-revertive switching.
Optical Protection
The ONS 15454 supports 1+1 protection to create redundancy for optical cards and spans. With 1+1 protection, one optical port can protect another optical port; therefore, in any two high-speed slots a single working card and a single dedicated protect card of the same type (for example, two OC-48 cards) can be paired for protection. If the working port fails, the protect port takes over. 1+1 span protection can be either revertive or non-revertive. Because the OC-3 card is a multiport card, port-to-port protection is available. The ports on the protect card support the corresponding ports on the working card.
Protection Switching
The ONS 15454 supports revertive and non-revertive, unidirectional or bidirectional switching for optical signals. 1:N electrical protection is always revertive and bidirectional; 1:1 electrical protection is also bidirectional but provides the revertive or non-revertive option. When a failure occurs and automatic protection switching (APS) switches the signal from the working card to the protect card, non-revertive switching does not revert the traffic to the working card automatically when the working card reverts
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to active status. When a failure is cleared, revertive switching automatically switches the signal back to the working card after the provisionable revertive time period has elapsed. When a failure occurs to a signal that is provisioned as bidirectional, both the transmit and receive signals are switched away from the point of failure (the port or card). A unidirectional signal switches only the failure direction, either transmit or receive.
Network viewprovides information about the ONS 15454 network and displays a graphic of the United States with ONS 15454 nodes represented by colored icons. The color of the icon represents the node status, and you can perform network management tasks or display any node. See the Customized Network View section on page 18 for information about changing the default network map and adding domains. Node viewprovides information about the node and displays a graphic of the ONS 15454 shelf. This is the default view displayed each time you log into CTC, and you perform node management tasks in this view. The cards are color-coded to show the status of the physical cards and ports. Card viewprovides information about individual ONS 15454 cards and displays a graphic of the selected card. You perform card and port-specific maintenance tasks in this view. The information that displays and the tasks you can perform depend on the card.
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Figure 9
Menu bar Tool bar Status area Graphic area
Top pane
Subtabs
The CTC GUI displays tabs and subtabs. From the tabs you can perform all the OAM&P tasks, such as provisioning cards, circuits, and rings; creating protection groups; setting timing parameters; viewing and clearing alarms; provisioning DCCs; backing up and restoring the database; and troubleshooting, including creating diagnostic les and performing loopbacks.
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Figure 10
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Figure 11
Auto Range
CTC also provides an auto-range feature that prevents you from needing to individually build circuits of the same type. Specify the number of circuits you need, create one circuit, and CTC automatically creates additional sequential circuits.
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Figure 12
Performance Monitoring
CTC displays section, line, and path performance monitoring for optical, electrical, and Ethernet statistics, as defined in GR-253-CORE and GR-820-CORE. For each statistic, you can display 31 previous 15-minute intervals and the current 15-minute interval, as well as the previous 24-hour and current 24-hour interval. The Cisco ONS 15454 Installation and Operations Guide, Release 3.1, provides detailed performance monitoring information for each card.
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Login Options
The ONS 15454 offers network management flexibility. You can choose to see the login node, nodes with DCC-connectivity to the login node, and nodes that are not DCC-connected to the node.
DCC Connectivity
The ONS 15454 uses SONET data communication channels (SDCCs) for CTC connectivity, automated circuit provisioning, and alarm reporting from remote nodes. Using a nodes SDCC, CTC automatically finds and recognizes other ONS 15454s. However, during login you can choose to exclude DCC-connected nodes from auto-discovery, which speeds up login time and reduces clutter on the network map.
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Figure 13
Node 2
Node 3
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To perform a span upgrade, the higher-rate optical card must replace the lower-rate card in the same slot. The protection configuration of the original lower-rate optical card (two-fiber BLSR, four-fiber BLSR, UPSR, and 1+1) is retained for the higher-rate optical card. The Span Upgrade Wizard automates all steps in the manual span upgrade procedure for all protection configurations.
TL1
The ONS 15454 supports up to twenty concurrent TL1 sessions that provide the full range of TL1 commands for provisioning and managing ONS 15454 nodes. The TL1 Command Guide, Release 3.1 provides a complete list of commands, including specific sections devoted to ring provisioning and alarms and errors.
TL1 Communication
You can enable TL1 in three ways:
Launch CTC and open a TL1 session to enter TL1 commands. Use port number 2361, 3082, or 3083 to access TL1 commands using a Telnet session. Use the backplane craft interface or the nine-pin RS-232 port on the TCC+ to open a VT100 emulation window and enter TL1 commands.
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Slot
Status
Port
MAJ
MIN
25
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CTC Display
Alarms are displayed in one of ve background colors to quickly communicate the alarm severity. You can control the display of current and cleared alarms generated on the node. The alarm and event screens include date, time, severity, reporting node, reporting object, service-affecting status, and a description.
Figure 15 Viewing alarms for the current session
CTC displays historical alarm data and shows events (non-alarmed occurrences) such as performance monitoring threshold crossings or protection switching events. CTC presents two alarm history views:
A Session subtab presents alarms and events for the current CTC session. When you log off, the alarm list generated during the CTC session disappears. A Node subtab shows the alarms and events that occurred at the node since the CTC software installation. The ONS 15454 can store up to 256 critical alarms, 256 major alarms, 256 minor alarms, and 256 events. When the limit is reached, the ONS 15454 discards the oldest alarms and events.
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Alarm Profiles
The ONS 15454 includes an alarm profile feature. This allows you to change the default alarm severities (for example, change an alarm severity from minor to major) and apply the new severities at the card, port or node level.
Figure 16 Creating alarm proles with the Alarm Proles tab
Every alarm has a default severity. To create a new prole, you clone the default in CTC, rename it, and choose the severity settings for the new prole.
Alarm Suppression
From the card view you can suppress alarms on specific ports. From the node view, you can suppress alarms on specific cards or the entire node.
Cisco ONS 15454 Product Overview November 2001
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If alarms are suppressed, they do not appear on the CTC Alarm screen. On the History screen a message states that the alarm or alarms are suppressed, and the Conditions tab shows alarm suppression conditions. The node sends out autonomous messages to clear any raised alarms. When alarm suppression is turned off, the node sends out autonomous messages to raise any suppressed alarms.
Alarm Cutoff
Visual and audible (user-defined) alarms are typically wired to trigger an alarm light or sound at a central alarm collection point when the corresponding contacts are closed. The alarm cutoff (ACO) function stops (turns off) the transmission of the alarm signal to the alarm collection point. To activate the ACO function, press the ACO button on the AIC card faceplate. The ACO button clears all audible alarm indications. The alarm is still active in CTC and needs to be cleared.
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Figure 17
Relay
Relay
= External control
Provisioning external alarms and controls provides a virtual wires option that you can use to route alarms and controls from different nodes to one or more alarm collection centers. For example, in Figure 18, smoke detectors are provisioned as external alarms at Nodes 1, 2, 3, and 4. The alarms are assigned to Virtual Wire 1, and Virtual Wire 1 is provisioned as the trigger (control) for an external bell at Node 1.
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= External alarm
Figure 18
Virtual Wire #1
Smoke detector
= External control
Ethernet
The ONS 15454 integrates Ethernet access into the same SONET platform that transports voice trafc. Ethernet over SONET lets service providers augment TDM services with Ethernet, and allows delivery of data trafc over existing facilities. The ONS 15454 supports layer 2 switching and the ability to classify Ethernet trafc as dened in the IEEE 802.1 Q-tag standard. You can switch tagged trafc onto separate
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Smoke detector
= External alarm
SONET STS channels to engineer bandwidth by trafc class. The ONS 15454 can also concentrate Ethernet ports into one or more STS-N circuits to use bandwidth more efciently.
Priority Queuing
Networks without priority queuing handle all packets on a first-in-first-out basis. Priority queuing, which is supported by the ONS 15454, reduces the impact of network congestion by mapping Ethernet traffic to different priority levels. The ONS 15454 takes the eight priorities specified in IEEE 802.1Q and maps them to two queues. Q-tags carry priority queuing information through the network.
VLAN Service
The ONS 15454 works with Ethernet devices that do and do not support IEEE 802.1Q tagging. The ONS 15454 supports virtual LANs that provide private network service across a SONET backbone. You can dene specic Ethernet ports and SONET STS channels as a VLAN group. VLAN groups isolate subscriber trafc from users outside the VLAN group and keep outside trafc from leaking into the virtual private network (VPN). Each IEEE 802.1Q VLAN represents a different logical network.
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When you provision multicard EtherSwitch, two or more Ethernet cards act as a single layer 2 switch. Multicard EtherSwitch supports one STS-6c shared packet ring, two STS-3c shared packet rings, or six STS-1 shared packet rings. The bandwidth of the single switch formed by the Ethernet cards matches the bandwidth of the provisioned Ethernet circuit up to STS-6c worth of bandwidth.
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Figure 20
Multicard EtherSwitch
ONS Node VLAN A Ethernet card #1 Ethernet card #2 Router ONS Node Shared packet ring ONS Node
Router
Router
Router
ONS Node
Ethernet Circuits
The ONS 15454 has three common methods for conguring Ethernet circuits between ONS nodes: a point-to-point circuit conguration, a shared packet ring conguration (Multicard EtherSwitch only), and a hub-and-spoke conguration. Two nodes usually connect with a point-to-point circuit conguration. More than two nodes usually connect with a shared packet ring or a hub and spoke conguration. You can also manually cross connect individual Ethernet circuits to an STS channel on the ONS 15454 optical interface.
Network Management
The ONS 15454 is compatible with several network management protocols, such as Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP), Proxy Address Resolution Protocol (ARP), and Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) protocol. If OSPF is not available, static routes can also connect to ONS 15454s through routers. DCC tunneling is provided for interoperability with other vendors equipment.
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Ethernet card #3
Ethernet card #4
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Proxy ARP
Proxy ARP enables a LAN-connected gateway ONS 15454 to automatically handle ARP requests for remote non-LAN ONS 15454s connected by a DCC to the gateway ONS 15454. Proxy ARP requires no manual configuration in CTC. Proxy ARP has a single LAN-connected ONS 15454 stand in (proxy) for remote ONS 15454s. If a device on the LAN sends an ARP request intended for one of the DCC-connected ONS 15454s, the gateway ONS 15454 returns its own MAC address to the LAN device. The LAN device then sends the datagram intended for the remote ONS 15454 to the MAC address of the proxy ONS 15454. The proxy ONS 15454 forwards this data to the remote 15454 using its own ARP table.
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Figure 21
SONET RING
ONS 15454 #2 IP Address 192.168.1.20 ubnet Mask 255.255.255.0 Default Router = N/A Static Routes = N/A
ONS 15454 #3 IP Address 192.168.1.30 Subnet Mask 255.255.255.0 Default Router = N/A Static Routes = N/A
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and puts them together to create a topology of the entire network or area. From this database, the router calculates a routing table by constructing a shortest path tree. Routes are continuously recalculated to capture ongoing topology changes. You can enable OSPF on the ONS 15454s so that the ONS 15454 topology is sent to OSPF routers on a LAN. Advertising the ONS 15454 network topology to LAN routers eliminates the need to manually provision static routes for ONS 15454 subnetworks.
DCC Tunneling
You can tunnel third-party SONET equipment DCCs across ONS 15454 networks. A DCC tunnel is a series of connection points that map a third-party equipment DCC to ONS 15454 DCCs. A DCC tunnel end point is dened by Slot, Port, and DCC type. To create a DCC tunnel, you connect the tunnel end points from one ONS 15454 optical port to another. DCC trafc is forwarded transparently, byte-for-byte, across the ONS 15454 network.
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Network Configuration
The ONS 15454 supports unidirectional path switched rings (UPSRs), bidirectional line switched rings (BLSRs), subtending rings, linear add-drop multiplexer (ADM) supporting 1+1 protection, and mixed configurations. You can also create path-protected mesh networks (PPMNs).
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Figure 22 shows a basic UPSR conguration. If Node ID 0 sends a signal to Node ID 2, the working signal travels on the working trafc path through Node ID 1. The same signal is also sent on the protect trafc path through Node ID 3. If a ber break occurs, Node ID 2 switches its active receiver to the protect signal coming through Node ID 3.
Figure 22 Unidirectional path switched ring
= Fiber 1 = Fiber 2
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trafc travels in one direction on STSs 1 24 on one ber, and on STSs 1 24 in the opposite direction on the second ber. You can create OC-12, OC-48, and OC-192 two-ber BLSRs.
Figure 23 Four-ber bidirectional line switched ring
Node 0
Span 1
Node 3
OC-48 Ring
Node 1
Span 6 Span 3
Four-fiber BLSRs double the bandwidth of two-fiber BLSRs by dedicating a second optical card for protection rather than reserving half of the active card for protection. If one fiber is cut, the ring does not switch because the other fiber carries the traffic for the broken span. A ring switch occurs if both the working and protect fibers fail. You can create OC-48 and OC-192 four-fiber BLRS.
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Subtending Rings
UPSRs and BLSRs can be subtended from one another using one shared node; the node can terminate and groom any one of the following ring combinations:
Subtending rings from a ONS 15454 reduces the number of nodes and cards required, and reduces external shelf-to-shelf cabling. Figure 24 shows an ONS 15454 with multiple subtending rings.
Figure 24 An ONS 15454 with multiple subtending rings
UPSR
UPSR
UPSR
UPSR or BLSR
UPSR or BLSR
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Figure 25 shows a UPSR subtending from a BLSR. In this example, Node 3 is the only node serving both the BLSR and UPSR. Optical cards in Slots 5 and 12 serve the BLSR, and optical cards in Slots 6 and 13 serve the UPSR.
Figure 25 UPSR subtending from a BLSR
UPSR
UPSR
UPSR
UPSR or BLSR
UPSR or BLSR
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Figure 26
Node 1
The ONS 15454 supports a full range of line rates as well as TDM and Ethernet/IP access tributary interfaces at every node in ADM configuration. The cross-connect helps to maximize bandwidth allocation by making it possible to map any tributary STS channel to any eastbound or westbound SONET span or to any other access tributary interface.
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Figure 27
Node 1
Node 10
Node 8 Node 6
king Wor
If you check the protected circuit box in CTC, PPMN establishes a second unique route between Nodes 3 and 9 and automatically creates cross-connections at nodes 3, 2, 1, 11, and 9, shown by the dashed line. If a signal failure occurs on the primary path, traffic switches to the second, protected circuit path. In this example, Node 9 switches from the traffic coming in from Node 7 to the traffic coming in from Node 11 and service resumes. The switch occurs within 50 milliseconds. PPMN also allows spans of different SONET line rates to be mixed together in virtual rings. Figure 28 shows Nodes 1, 2, 3, and 4 in a standard OC-48 ring. Nodes 5, 6, 7, and 8 link to the backbone ring through OC-12 ber. The virtual ring formed by Nodes 5, 6, 7, 8 uses both OC-48 and OC-12.
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Destination Node
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Figure 28
ONS 15454 Node 5
OC-12
OC-48 UPSR
OC-12
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Figure 29
ONS 15454
UPSR or BLSR ONS 15327 OC-12 or OC-48 ONS 15454 ONS 15454
UPSR
o rO C-
48
1 C-
ONS 15454
50807
ONS 15327
Timing
The TCC+ card performs all system-timing functions for each ONS 15454. The TCC+ card selects a recovered clock, a BITS, or an internal Stratum 3 reference as the system-timing reference. You can provision any of the clock inputs as a primary or secondary timing source. If you identify two timing references, the secondary reference provides protection. A slow-reference tracking loop allows the TCC+ to synchronize to the recovered clock, which provides holdover if the reference is lost.
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Timing Parameters
You must set the SONET timing parameters for each ONS 15454. ONS 15454 timing is set to one of three modes: external, line, or mixed. An externally-timed node derives its timing from a BITS source wired to the BITS inputs on the backplane. The BITS source, in turn, derives its timing from a Primary Reference Source (PRS) such as a Stratum 1 clock or GPS signal. A line-timed node derives its timing for an incoming optical signal on one of the OC-N cards. Figure 30 shows an example of an ONS 15454 network-timing setup. Node 1 is set to external timing. Two references are set to BITS, and the third reference is set to internal. The BITS output pin on the backplane of Node 3 provides timing to outside equipment, such as a digital access line access multiplexer.
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Figure 30
Node 4 Timing Line Ref 1: Slot 6 Ref 2: Slot 5 Ref 3: Internal (ST3)
Slot 6
Slot 5
Node 2 Timing Line Ref 1: Slot 5 Ref 2: Slot 6 Ref 3: Internal (ST3)
Slot 5
Slot 6
Slot 6
Slot 5 Node 3 Timing Line Ref 1: Slot 5 Ref 2: Slot 6 Ref 3: Internal (ST3)
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Hardware
You can mount the ONS 15454 in a 19- or 23-inch rack. The shelf assembly weighs approximately 55 pounds with no cards installed and features a front door for added security, a fan tray module for cooling, and extensive ber-management space. Cisco offers an ONS 15454 Bay Assembly (OPT-BIC) that provides pre-installed ONS 15454 shelf assemblies in a seven-foot rack. The Bay Assembly is available in a three- or four-shelf configuration.
LCD
The ONS 15454 LCD screen provides slot and port-level information for all ONS 15454 card slots, including the number of Critical, Major, and Minor alarms. You can use the LCD screen to set the IP address, subnet mask, and default router for the node. This allows you to accomplish these basic operations without a computer. In CTC you can lock out the LCD to other users by choosing to prevent LCD IP conguration. Users can still view information on the LCD, but cannot perform any provisioning.
Figure 31 ONS 15454 LCD
Slot
Status
Port
MAJ
MIN
Backplane
The backplane provides access to alarm contacts, external interface contacts, power terminals, LAN connections, the BITS clock, and cable connectors.
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Fan-Tray Assembly
The fan-tray assembly is located at the bottom of the ONS 15454 front compartment. The fan-tray is a removable drawer that holds fans and fan control circuitry for the ONS 15454. After the fan tray is installed, it only needs to be accessed if a fan failure occurs or to replace or clean the fan-tray air lter.
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Figure 32
FAN
FAIL CR IT MA J MIN
Bandwidth
Total bandwidth: 240 Gbps Data plane bandwidth: 160 Gbps SONET plane bandwidth: 80 Gbps
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November 2001
Slot Assignments
Total card slots: 17 OC-48 AS cards: any slot Any traffic card excluding OC-48 (non-AS) and OC-192: Slots 1 4, 14 17 Any traffic card including OC-48 (non-AS) and OC-192: Slots 5, 6, 12, 13 TCC+ (Timing Communication and Control): Slots 7, 11 XC/XCVT/XC10-G (Cross-Connect): Slots 8, 10 AIC (Alarm Interface Card): Slot 9
Cards
TCC+ XC XCVT XC10G AIC EC1-12 DS1-14 DS1N-14 DS3-12 DS3N-12 DS3-12E DS3N-12E DS3XM-6 OC3 IR 4 1310 OC12 IR 1310 OC12 LR 1310 OC12 LR 1550 OC48 IR 1310
Cisco ONS 15454 Product Overview
November 2001
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OC48 IR/STM16 SH AS 1310 OC48 LR 1550 OC48 LR/SM16 LH AS 1550 OC48 ELR 200 GHz DWDM Cards OC48 ELR/STM16 EH 100 GHz DWDM Cards OC192 LR/ STM64 LH 1550 E100T-12/E100-12-G E1000-2/E1000-2-G
Configurations
Terminal mode Add-drop multiplexer Two-fiber BLSR Four-fiber BLSR Two-fiber UPSR PPMN
10 Base-T TCC+ access: RJ-45 connector Backplane access: LAN pin field
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November 2001
Speed: 9600 bps TCC+ access: RS-232 DB-9 type connector Backplane access: CRAFT pin field
Alarm Interface
Visual: Critical, Major, Minor, Remote Audible: Critical, Major, Minor, Remote Alarm contacts: 0.045mm, -48V, 50 mA Backplane access: Alarm pin fields
EIA Interface
SMB: AMP #415504-3 75 Ohm 4 leg connectors BNC: Trompeter #UCBJ224 75 Ohm 4 leg connector AMP Champ: AMP#552246-1 with #552562-2 bail locks
Nonvolatile Memory
BITS Interface
2 DS-1 BITS inputs 2 derived DS-1 outputs Backplane access: BITS pin field
System Timing
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Holdover Stability: 3.7 x10-7/day, including temperature (< 255 slips in first 24 hours) Reference: External BITS, line, internal
Power Specifications
Input Power: -42 to -57 VDC Power Consumption: 58W, FTA2; 95W, FTA3; 1060W (maximum draw with cards) Power Requirements: -42 to -57 VDC Power terminals: #6 Lug
Environmental Specifications
Operating Temperature: 0 to +55 degrees Celsius Operating Humidity: 5 - 95% non-condensing I- Temp: -40 to 65 C
Dimensions
Height: 18.5 inches (40.7 cm) Width: 19 or 23 inches (41.8 or 50.6 cm) with mounting ears attached Depth: 12 inches (26.4 cm) (5 inch projection from rack) Weight: 55 lbs. (empty)
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November 2001