Sonet SDH Lecture
Sonet SDH Lecture
Sonet SDH Lecture
Greatly simplifies multiplexing in network backbone OA&M support to facilitate network management Protection & restoration
Remove tributary
Insert tributary
SONET Add-Drop Multiplexing: Allows taking individual channels in and out without full demultiplexing
MUX ADM Remove tributary Insert tributary DEMUX
Multiplexing, Regeneration performed in electrical domain STS Synchronous Transport Signals defined Very short range (e.g., within a switch) Transmission carried out in optical domain Optical transmitter & receiver OC Optical Carrier
Optical
SONET Electrical Signal STS-1 STS-3 STS-9 STS-12 STS-18 STS-24 STS-36 STS-48 STS-192
STS: Synchronous Transport Signal
Optical Signal OC-1 OC-3 OC-9 OC-12 OC-18 OC-24 OC-36 OC-48 OC-192
OC: Optical Channel
Bit Rate (Mbps) 51.84 155.52 466.56 622.08 933.12 1244.16 1866.24 2488.32 9953.28
SDH Electrical Signal N/A STM-1 STM-3 STM-4 STM-6 STM-8 STM-12 STM-16 STM-64
STM: Synchronous Transfer Module
Low-speed mapping function Medium speed mapping function Highspeed mapping function Highspeed mapping function
OC-n
E/O
E4 139.264
STS-3c
ATM or POS
By Functionality
ADMs: dropping & inserting tributaries Regenerators: digital signal regeneration Cross-Connects: interconnecting SONET streams Section Terminating Equipment (STE): span of fiber between adjacent devices, e.g. regenerators Line Terminating Equipment (LTE): span between adjacent multiplexers, encompasses multiple sections Path Terminating Equipment (PTE): span between SONET terminals at end of network, encompasses multiple lines
PTE LTE SONET terminal STE MUX Reg STE Reg STE Reg
Section
Section
Section
Section
STE = Section Terminating Equipment, e.g., a repeater/regenerator LTE = Line Terminating Equipment, e.g., a STS-1 to STS-3 multiplexer PTE = Path Terminating Equipment, e.g., an STS-1 multiplexer
Often, PTE and LTE equipment are the same Difference is based on function and location PTE is at the ends, e.g., STS-1 multiplexer. LTE in the middle, e.g., STS-3 to STS-1 multiplexer.
Path Line Section Optical Section Optical Section Optical Section Optical Line Section Optical Line Section Optical
Optical, section, line, path Each layer is concerned with the integrity of its own signals SONET provides signaling channels for elements within a layer
inserted & removed at the ends Synchronous Payload Envelope (SPE) consisting of Data + POH traverses network as a single unit processed at every SONET node TOH occupies a portion of each SONET frame TOH carries management & link integrity information
Mbps 810 Octets per frame @ 8000 frames/sec 90 columns A1 A2 J0 1 Order of 2 transmission 9 rows J1
810x64kbps=51.84
Special OH octets: A1, A2 Frame Synch B1 Parity on Previous Frame (BER monitoring) J0 Section trace (Connection Alive?) H1, H2, H3 Pointer Action K1, K2 Automatic Protection Switching
3 Columns of Transport OH
Frame k
Pointer
9 Rows
Last octet
Pointer indicates where SPE begins within a frame Pointer enables add/drop capability
Consider system with different clocks (faster out than in) Use buffer (e.g., 8 bit FIFO) to manage difference Buffer empties eventually One solution: send stuff Problem: Need to signal stuff to receiver
FIFO
1,000,000 bps 1,000,001 bps
Frame k
Frame k
Frame k+1
Stuff byte Pointer First octet of SPE (a) Negative byte stuffing Input faster than output Send extra byte in H3 to catch up
Frame k+1
Stuff byte Pointer First octet of SPE (b) Positive byte stuffing Input is slower than output Stuff byte to fill gap
All STS-1s are synched to local clock so bytes can be interleaved to produce STS-n
STS-1 STS-1 STS-1 STS-1 STS-1 STS-1 Incoming STS-1 frames Map Map Map STS-1 STS-1 STS-1 STS-1 STS-1 STS-1 Byte STS-3 Interleave
Order of transmission
1 2 A1 A2 J0 J1
J0 A1 A2 J1 B1 E1 F1 B3 J0 A1 A2 J1 B3 B1 E1 F1 D1 D2 D3 C2 B3 B1 E1 F1 D1H1 D2 D3 C2 H2 H3 G1 D1H1 D2 D3 C2 H2 H3 G1 B2 K1 K2 F2 H1 H2 H3 G1 B2 K1 K2 F2 D6 D4 D5 H4 B2 K1 K2 F2 D6 D4 D5 H4 D9 Z3 D7 D8 D6 H4 D4 D5 D9 Z3 D7 D8 D10 D11 D12 Z4 D9 Z3 D7 D8 D10 D11 D12 Z4 N1 S1 M0/1 E2 D10 D11 D12 Z4 N1 S1 M0/1 E2 N1 S1 M0/1 E2
x 87 columns
J1 B3 C2 G1 F2 H4 Z3 Z4 N1
Needed if payloads of interleaved frames are locked into a bigger unit Data systems send big blocks of information grouped together, e.g., a router operating at 622 Mbps H1,H2,H3 tell us if there is concatenation STS-3c has more payload than 3 STS-1s STS-Nc payload = Nx780 bytes OC-3c = 149.760 Mb/s OC-12c = 599.040 Mb/s OC-48c = 2.3961 Gb/s OC-192c = 9.5846 Gb/s
SONET/SDH needs to handle these as a single unit
Backbone of modern networks Provide high-speed connections: Typically STS-1 up to OC-192 Clients: large routers, telephone switches, regional networks Very high reliability required because of consequences of failure
1 STS-1 = 783 voice calls; 1 OC-48 = 32000 voice calls;
Telephone Switch Router Router
Transport Network
MUX
DEMUX
SONET ADMs: the heart of existing transport networks ADMs interconnected in linear and ring topologies SONET signaling enables fast restoration (within 50 ms) of transport connections
ADMs connected in linear fashion Tributaries inserted and dropped to connect clients
Tributaries traverse ADMs transparently Connections create a logical topology seen by clients Tributaries from right to left are not shown
2 1 3
T = Transmitter = Receiver
T Bridge
R Selector
Simultaneous transmission over diverse routes Monitoring of signal quality Fast switching in response to signal degradation 100% redundant bandwidth
APS signaling
Transmission on working fiber Signal for switch to protection route in response to signal degradation Can carry extra (preemptible traffic) on protection line
T T
W1 W
R R
R R
T T
Wn P
APS signaling
Transmission on diverse routes; protect for 1 fault Reverts to original working channel after repair More bandwidth efficient
ADMs can be connected in ring topology Clients see logical topology created by tributaries
(b)
(a)
a
OC-3n OC-3n
b b c
Logical fully connected topology
2 vs. 4 Fiber Ring Network Unidirectional vs. bidirectional transmission Path vs. Link protection
P W = Working Paths
No
P = Protection Paths 3
Low complexity Fast path protection 2 TX, 2 RX No spatial re-use; ok for hub traffic pattern Suitable for lower-speed access networks Different delay between W and P path
Working traffic & protection traffic use same route in working pair 1:N like Restoring a failed span Switching the line around the ring
1 Equal delay W
P 2
Spatial Reuse 3
1 W Equal delay
P 4
Span
1 W Equal delay
P 4
Line
High complexity: signalling required Fast line protection for restricted distance (1200 km) and number of nodes (16) 4 TX, 4 RX Spatial re-use; higher bandwidth efficiency Good for uniform traffic pattern Suitable for high-speed backbone networks Multiple simultaneous faults can be handled
Regional ring
Metro ring
Interoffice rings
UPSR OC-12
Managing bandwidth can be complex Increasing transmission rate in one span affects all equipment in the ring Introducing WDM means stacking SONET ADMs to build parallel rings Distance limitations on ring size implies many rings need to be traversed in long distance End-to-end protection requires ringinterconnection mechanisms Managing 1 ring is simple; Managing many rings is very complex