Tutorial 2.fujitsu
Tutorial 2.fujitsu
Outline
1. Introduction 2. Basics of Optical Fiber Communication
Basic system configuration and key elements Optical fiber Semiconductor Lasers / Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs), and Photodiodes
694
WDM
1015
BL [ ( bit/s ) - km ]
1012
109
106
103 1
1850
1900
Year
1950
2000
APNOMS 2005
Frequency
Radio (FM) TV(BS)
Applied band
Radio (AM) TV (VHF) TV (UHF)
Loss of optical fiber
120 MHz
ch.1 ch.4 ch.12
20 THz
...
NHK
4
NTV
TV-Tokyo
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1300
695
10G 2.4G
6M
I
32M
1975
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005 (Year)
TELEPHONE, N-ISDN
TDM; Time Division Multiplexing, WDM; Wavelength Division Multiplexing SDH; Synchronous Digital Hierarchy, SONET; Synchronous Optical Network
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Introduction
Telecommunication: sending signals and messages over long distances Optical Communication: beginning from, signal fire in ancient days, flag signaling, series of lenses, and optical fiber
Information (Voice) Converter (Voice to Electric Signal) [Microphone] Transmitter (Converter, Electric to Optical) [LEDs, Laser Diodes] Optical fiber Information (Voice) Converter (Electric Signal to Voice) [Speaker] Receiver (Converter, Optical to Electrical) [ Photodiodes]
696
Transmitter
Transmitter uses Laser / LED as signal source
Optical fiber transmission widnow is in infra-red region - Longer wavelength (1500nm) than visible lights one (500-700nm) - You cannot see the light used in fiber optic transmission The transmitter wavelength must be very tightly tuned for Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM)
Backplane signals High speed Electrical driver Parallel To Serial Direct Modulation
LASER or LED
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Receiver
Receiver use a photodiode to convert photons back to electrons
PIN photodiodes - Simplest and fastest Avalanche photodiodes - High sensitivity (Signal is multiplied by avalanche breakdown)
Optical signal Electrical signal Electrical Amplifier Data Recovery Clock Recovery ( 3R function)
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Photodiode
Serial To Parallel
697
Signal Formats
Need to carry binary 1s and 0s Non-Return to Zero (NRZ)
A 1 is light for complete bit period A 0 is no light for complete bit period More tolerant to dispersion
1 1 0 1 0
Others
CS-RZ ASK, FSK, PSK, DPSK, RZ-DPSK
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The 3 Rs
Repeaters are defined as type 1R, 2R, or 3R 1R, Re-amplify 2R, Re-amplify and Re-shape 3R, Re-amplify, Re-shape, and Re-time
1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1
Original Signal Attenuated, noisy signal 1R, Amplification 2R, Best guess pulse reshaping 3R, Retiming to get back original pulse edges (very close)
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698
..
Time Add; electrically
WDM
Wavelength
4 3 2 1
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Time
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Time
9 261 columns
270
9 rows
12
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699
STS-1
VT1.5 VT1.5 VT1.5 VT1.5 VT1.5 VT1.5
VT1.5 VT1.5 VT1.5 VT1.5 VT1.5 VT1.5 VT1.5 VT1.5 VT1.5 VT1.5 VT1.5
STS-1
STS-1
OC-3
STS-1
Transmission Media
Twisted Pair
Coaxial Cable
-100 megabit/sec 1-10 kilometers
14
700
Input
Electric circuit Light source (LD, LED) Detector Electric circuit
Output
Optical fiber
- SiO2 glass - small radius - light weight - low loss - broad bandwidth
Features
- abundant resources - insulation, no electromagnetic
induction
Application
- Trunk line - Submarine transmission - Access NW - LAN
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Optical fiber cable: Attenuation; 0.3dB/km Attenuated by 7% /km Diameter; (Example) 2.5 mm, Weight; 6 kg/km Coaxial cable (RG-19/U): Attenuation; 22.6dB/km
(@100MHz)
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701
3dB/km
Reference: John Gowar, Optical communication systems, 2nd Ed. (Prentice Hall)
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f= = 800nm = 1700nm
C0
Optical Fiber Bandwidth: about 200THz! ( =375 -176THz ) at attenuation < 3dB/km
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702
Voice(required bandwidth): 4kHz = 4x103Hz per channel: 200x1012Hz / 4x103(Hz/ch) = 5x1010 channels
TV (required bandwidth) : 6MHz = 6x106Hz per channel: 200x1012Hz / 6x106 (Hz/ch) = 33x106 channels
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(a) ray AA is refracted according to Snells law: n1 sin = n2 sin (b) ray BB is the critical ray: n1 sin C = n2 (C) ray CC is totally reflected at the interface: r = r
Reference: John Gowar, Optical communication systems, 2nd Ed. (Prentice Hall)
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703
Each lane is a different speed so that a pulse of light gets distorted sooner than in SMF
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50m n l n1 n2 r
50m n n0 n2 l a b r
n n1 l n 2 a b r
a b
Reference: John Gowar, Optical communication systems, 2nd Ed. (Prentice Hall)
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704
Fiber Attenuation
Fiber has attenuation
1550 nm window has lowest attenuation
<0.2dB/km
imperfections
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Output pulse
Decreased intensity causing the decision error; either 1 or 0
705
Newly-Developed Fibers
Single Mode Fiber (SMF) Dispersion-Shifted Fiber (DSF) Non-Zero DSF (NZ-DSF)
Dispersion (ps/km/nm)
20 10 0 -10 -20
1200 1300 1400 1500 1600
D: - ## ps/km/nm
September 28, 2005
Step Index
Dispersion Shifted
Core and cladding are same material with slightly different index of refraction
Large-effective-area
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706
Loss (dB/km)
1460nm
S-band C-band
1550nm
L-band
1450
1500
1550
1600
Wavelength (nm)
C-band; Conventional wavelength band L-band; Long wavelength band S-band; Short wavelength band
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Photo-Detector
Electrons out of material Excited State Photon energy pumps electron to excited state.
Energy
Ground State
Ground State
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707
Optical semiconductor devices are basically pn junction diode structure. Light emitting diode +
Forward Biased Light Reverse Biased
Photodiode (detector)
+
p n
p i n
Photo-current
Light
Driving current
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(c)
Electric-field distribution
p
Light
n
0V (Earth)
(b)
Heterobarrier Energy
(a) Layer structure , (b) energy band, (c) refractive-index and electric-field Distributions. When a Voltage V approximately equal to the energy gap of the GaAs active layer is applied, electrons and holes are injected into the active layer.
p Ga1-xAlxAs
p GaAs
n Ga1-xAlxAs
Reference: K. Iga and S. Kinoshita, Process technology for semiconductor lasers, (Springer)
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30
708
0.8 m: GaxAl(1-x)As/ GaAs on GaAs substrate 1.55m: GaxIn(1-x)AsyP(1-y) / InP on InP substrate
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Refractive Index n
Mirror Output b
a 2n
Standing Wave L
z=L
Wavefront
709
Wavelength
Wavelength
Many modes have possibility to be activated due to periodic characteristic of Fabry-Perot etalon and wide semiconductor gain-bandwidth. Fabry-Perot modes ... gain ... Multi-mode operation causes waveform distortion due to fiber dispersion.
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Wavelength
Power (mW)
Reflection
Wavelength
710
Reference: John Gowar, Optical communication systems, 2nd Ed. (Prentice Hall)
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711
Required bandwidth: 20 GHz Improvement methods Thin absorption layer Small junction area Thin multiplication layer Waveguide structure
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Quantum efficiency: 75 %
37
(arbitrary)
Wavelength-division multiplexng (WDM) 1 2
Optical fiber
Capacity increase by increasing channel numbers
Optical fiber n t
38
Multiplexer
Demultiplexer
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712
Optical Power Levels An optical power budget is maintained throughout the network
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Regenerators To free from amplifiers noise accumulation, regeneration is required. Regenerators can clean up noise.
Optical Amplifiers; Re-amplify (1R function)
Regeneration
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713
Multiplexing
Repeater
Transmitter
Receiver
Repeater
Repeater Dmux
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WDM
Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM)
Multiplexing by using different wavelength/frequency of light for each signal
Each color of light carries a different signal. Time Division Multiplexing (TDM) uses different time slots for multiplexing.
Variations
Dense WDM (DWDM) typically 100GHz or 50GHz WDM systems Coarse WDM (CWDM) typically greater than 400GHz WDM systems Tx (1) Tx (2) Tx (k) Rx (1) Dmux . Repeater (Amplifier)
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Mux
..
Tx (n)
42
..
714
WDM Filter
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ITU-T Grid
The International Telecommunications Union (ITU) defined a grid of wavelengths
ITU-T G.692 Based on absolute reference of 193.10THz/1552.52nm In steps of 50GHz/0.41nm from this reference All terrestrial WDM systems follow this standard
The industry has followed this standard which makes components cheaper for everyone 50GHz Frequency 193.10THz (1552.52nm)
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715
Relaxation
Relaxation
Energy
Energy
Spontaneous emission
Pump Signal
Stimulated emission
Signal flow
Signal/pump combiner
Optical isolator
Ps,o
Output port Ps,i: Signal input power Ps,o: Signal output power Gain (G) : Ps,o/ Ps,i
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716
Input
Output
Signal format independent, bit rate free Simultaneous amplification of WDM signal
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C-band
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717
Res. 0.1 nm
1525
1545
1565
Wavelength (nm)
1585
1605
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Feature of EDFAs Simple High gain: 20-30dB (100 to 1,000 times of input power) Wide bandwidth: Conventional EDFA has about 35nm (4 THz) gain-bandwidth. Bit-rate independent Modulation format independent Low noise
50
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718
40 working 39ch
1 Fiber cut
1ch
AGC control is needed to keep the gain of a channel constant (ideally) no matter what is going on on the other channels (adding, dropping, power variations etc.)
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Input monitor
Pump Laser
Output monitor
40ch
1ch
New technology
Input monitor
Pump Laser
Output monitor
0 -2 0 2 4 time(ms) 6 8
AGC Feedforward
C. Tian and S. Kinoshita, IEEE J. Lightwave Technol., vol. 21, no. 8, pp. 1728-1734, Aug. 2003.
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719
Output port
Backward pumping 1450nm pump LDs Pump power ( mW ) Raman gain (dB ) WDM bandwidth
Pump
Raman gain
100 nm
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Wavelength (nm)
720
<
s
Fiber
Approx.
p
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OR OR OR OR
Merits 1. All optical transparent to modulation & signal formats 2. Simultaneous amplification of dual-band signals 3. Component availability 4. Tilt compensation capability New Issues 1. Operation depends on - fiber type, additional loss and signal allocation 2. Supervising boundary 3. Safety for high-power pump
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721
OSNR improvement customers fiber data is required to assure the performance (Otherwise, best effort)
September 28, 2005
20
40 60 Distance (km)
80
100
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S band
C band
L band 1620
EDFA : Erbium-Doped Fiber Amplifier (1530 - 1565 nm) GS-EDFA : Gain-Shifted EDFA (1570 -1610 nm) EDTFA : Telluride-Based EDFA (1530 - 1610 nm) TDFA : Thulium-Doped Fluoride-Based Fiber Amplifier (1450 - 1490 nm) FRA : Fiber Raman Amplifier (1420 - 1620 nm or more)
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722
Out Ps,o
isolator
Anti-reflection coating Advantages; - Small size, - Functional (Wavelength conversion) Issues; - Noise Figure, - Waveform distortion (improving)
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Group velocity
1
Time
Wavelength
1
Time
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723
Dispersion Compensation
Transmission fiber
Transmitter out
61
1 Tx #1 2 Tx #2 40 Tx #40
Provisioning VDC
Rx #1 Rx #2 Rx #40
Collimating lens
Glass plate
724
Polarization-mode-dispersion (PMD)
1st-order PMD
simple estimation Differential group delay (DGD) between fast & slow propagation in fiber e.g. for 40 Gb/s transmission < 50 km Fiber PMD = 0.5 ps/ km
Higher-order PMD
- Wavelength dependence of optical waveform degradation due to random mode-coupling - Fluctuation in time due to temperature and stress change
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725
Current status
1.76T 3.5T 600 km 1500 km 3000 km 6000 km
10T 20T
Capacity-Distance product
Capacity
Target > 10-20 Pb/s km ? - 20T x 500 -1000km - 10T x 1000 -2000km - 3.5 T x 3000-6000 km
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Distance
65
Photonic Networks
3
Submarine Term.
OXC
OXC
OXC
OADM WDM Term.
OADM
OADM OADM
Regional/Metro Nwk
Gb/10Gb Ether
Residential Nwk
GMPLS; Generalized Multi Protocol Label Switching OADM; Optical Add/Drop Multiplexing, OXC; Optical Cross-connect Cross66 APNOMS 2005 September 28, 2005
726
Core Nwk
Shortage in metro nwk capacity and in switching throughput is becoming a bottleneck Rapid deployment of FTTH is anticipated
E-Aggregation
SOHO
67
IDC
- Realtime, bi-directional, high definition image comm. service is feasible by eliminating bandwidth bottleneck. - Generation of new, flexible, multi-functional,WDM based service - Cost reduction by optical cut-through (eliminating O/E conv. and excessive aggregation)
OXC: Optical Cross-connect OADM: Optical Add/Drop Multiplexer
To Core Nwk
Metro-Core Nwk
Opt.ADM
FTTH
Metro-Access Nwk
SOHO
68
IDC
727
1 2 n Wavelength MUX/DEMUX
WDM Terminal
i j
Simultaneous amplification of WDM signal Signal Add/Drop Transmission capacity control Network restoration Network Management All optical regeneration Wavelength Conversion
September 28, 2005
i i i
APNOMS 2005
i j
Star Network
Tree Network
70
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728
TRM
OXC
OXC OXC
2005
2010
Reconfigurable
2x2 SW: Through or Add/Drop
Dynamic
Cross-connect switch fabric MUX
MUX
DEMUX
1 2
MUX DEMUX
R T
T R
n-1 n
n-1 n
R T
72
T R
T R
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R T
T R
September 28, 2005
R T
729
Input fiber
73
Output fibers
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xDSL / FTTH
Metro access
Enterprise network
IDC
LAN
IDC
Connection between IDCs (Internet Data Centers) Content delivery networks Enterprise networks Leasedwavelength service, -LAN/WAN and -VPN
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730
#3
Photonic Gateway #5
WDM signal 1, 2 n
Photonic Gateway #1
#2
Tunable Filter
AOTF
#4
i
#3
O/E
E/O
#5 #1
Optical broadcast / multicast
No latency at intermediate node (optical drop/continue)
#2
Rapid re-configuration of photonic network Leased wavelength service (changing by hour/day ) Broadband contents delivery networks using optical broadcast and multicast
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75
f3
1620 Wavelength (nm) 1600 1580 1560 1540 1520 165 170 175 180 Control RF signal (MHz)
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Advantages
Fast switching speed Wide tuning range (100 nm) Compact-size by integrated waveguide
100 nm
185
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731
Transponder (4 port) Network Management System (Path management, NE/system alarm management, etc)
Maintenance
SNMP
Alarm notification
Photonic Gateway
Max ring length Add drop WDM ch Spacing Network management Network Protection
Network configuration
G. Nakagawa et al., OECC2005, 5B2-4
This work was partly supported by the NICT (National Institute of Information and Communications Technology) of Japan.
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.
Coupler Coupler
Selective Regeneration
ECOC 2004, We4.P.148
732
(WB 2)
Hub1
(WB 5)
Domain 2 C
(WB 3)
Rx
Domain 1 Hub2
In In
Work
Tx
Protection
90km (20dB)
ECOC 2004, We4.P.148
Rx Tx
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Hub1
Node A
Hub2
Node B
733
Rx
(WB 4)
Rx
Tx Rx Tx Tx
In
AOTF Output
Idling Tuning
Fiber-cut
Traffic
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Internet
Fiber To The Building (1.55 m 155 / 622 Mb/s Continuous ) Cost effective FTTH / Cab / C / B Key Tech. Burst Mode Fiber To The Cabinet/Curb
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734
ONU#1
OLT PON-IF
Other band (OAM etc.) Shared band between multiple ONUs Pre-assigned band
September 28, 2005
ONU#n
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Waveguide
Low loss coupler
DFB Laser
Precise wavelength control Narrow chip spacing 32ch tuning spectrum
20 0 -20 -40 -60 1530 1540 1550 1560
SOA
High gain
1 ~ 4. .
. 29 ~ 32
Power (dBm)
Wavelength (nm)
September 28, 2005
735
Optical Response(dB)
3 0 -3 -6 -9 -12 0 10 20 30 Frequency(GH) 40 50
10.0 ps/div.
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Optical 3R Regenerator
Principle
Reshaping Optical gate Clock recovery
Input signal
3R-regenerated signal
Optical 3R-regeneration (Reamplification, Reshaping and Retiming) is a key function containing most of the essential optical switching functionalities. Once an optical 3R-regenerator is realized, it can be applied to any kind of optical switching.
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736
2005 - 2010
5 Tb/s 500 40G/10G... (40G Ether?) 200 nm
(Elec./Opt. connect.)
2010 - 2020
10 Tb/s 1000 160G/40G/10.. 400 nm 100Gb/s (Opt. connect.) All-opt. router ( 40Tb/s) OTDM Q-PSK Opt. IC Cryptography Opt. nano-device Opt. Memory Lower loss fiber
10Gb/s
Ubiquitous router
Quantum computer Quantum optical communication
Technologies
Devices
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Richard Rabbat
Outline
Introduction MPLS and RSVP GMPLS architecture and components Link Management: LMP Signaling: RSVP-TE Routing: OSPF-TE Conclusion Upcoming topics
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737
MPLS adds a shim header (a few more bytes) to allow fast switching based on a (local) label MPLS makes use of a signaling protocol: Resource Reservation Protocol or RSVP One of the side effects of MPLS was the ability to pin the route, so routing changes wouldnt affect the Label Switched Paths Idea evolved to Traffic Engineering (TE) that permits more control over the data traffic
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MPLS Example
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738
RSVP Example
Path (2)
Resv (1)
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RSVP Example
Originally developed for individual flow reservations Uses a handshake mechanism to distribute flow information and reserve resources including QoS (Quality of Service)
Path (2) Resv (1)
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739
B
Without MPLS-TE, the LSP route will start flapping between the two
LSP C D E
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GMPLS
In 1999/2000, with the explosive growth in transport networks, organizations decided to generalize the concept of MPLS to extend beyond data networks to address legacy transport networks (SONET/SDH), Ethernet and WDM Without a control plane, the combination of EMS (Element Management System) and NMS (Network Management System) is responsible for path setup/teardown, link management and resource accounting EMS/NMS is tied to a specific vendor and can rarely manage other vendor equipment Carriers are eager to have the capability to setup paths across different vendor domains to be able to provide new services GMPLS was designed to allow control of transport networks including link management, OAM (Operations, Administration and Maintenance), signaling and routing using IP as transport protocol Work on GMPLS is done at the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) in the Common Control And Measurement Plane (CCAMP) working group
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740
GMPLS-Enabled Node
IP Network IP Network
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IP Network IP Network
GMPLS control plane GMPLS control plane
Data plane
Data plane
Data plane
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741
ROUTING: Open Shortest Path First-Traffic Engineering (OSPFTE) SIGNALING: Resource ReserVation Protocol-Traffic Engineering (RSVP-TE)
97
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742
Hello messages use Transmit and Receive sequence numbers to keep track of the sequence # they are sending and the received sequence # they are acknowledging
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743
LinkSummary includes the local and remote link ids, a list of all data links that comprise the TE link, and various link properties LinkSummary is sent by a node to its adjacent node One of LinkSummaryAck and LinkSummaryNack is sent as a response by the adjacent node
E.g. LinkSummaryNack is sent if local and remote TE link types are different
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2. BeginVerifyAck message 4. TestStatusSuccess message 5. TestStatusAck message 6. EndVerify message 7. EndVerifyAck message
Data plane
3. Test message
Data plane
This procedure is for a single link For multiple data links, only messages 3, 4 and 5 (Test, TestStatusSuccess and TestStatusAck) are repeated All LMP messages (except Test) are carried over UDP The Test message may or may not be carried over UDP
It is carried over the data-bearing channel and will be limited by the transport protocol limitation if any
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744
In SONET transport networks on the other hand, faults can be detected at many nodes and alarms generated and propagated accordingly LMP solves the problem of suppressing alarm propagation and localizing the fault
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Upstream node send ChannelStatusAck back Upstream node correlates that failure with any failure detected locally If node localizes fault, upstream node then sends ChannelStatus message to downstream node to indicate if the channel is failed or OK Span or LSP restoration may then be started
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OSPF-TE: Introduction
OSPF-TE defines traffic engineering extensions to the OSPF routing protocol OSPF originally developed to distribute link information about data networks OSPF-TE extends OSPF to allow the distribution of link information relating to the control channel as well as the information about the TE links in the transport network Reminder: the topology of the control channel is different from that of the transport network OSPF-TE also sends information about the TE links and their switching capability (in the case of SONET for example)
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OSPF-TE: TE Links
Opaque LSA: type 10
Link local part of the TE link identifier sub-TLV [GMPLS-OSPF] Link remote part of the TE link identifier sub-TLV [GMPLS-OSPF] Technology specific part of the Interface Switching Capability Descriptor sub-TLV [GMPLS-OSPF] Switching Capability field part of the Interface Switching Capability Descriptor sub-TLV [GMPLS-OSPF] TE metric sub-TLV [RFC3630] Administrative Group sub-TLV [RFC3630] Unreserved bandwidth sub-TLV [RFC3630]
Max LSP Bandwidth part of the Interface Switching Capability Descriptor sub-TLV [GMPLS-OSPF]
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746
Once OSPF-TE receives from CSPF a route, it can indicate to RSVP that information to be used in the signaling message An Explicit Route Object (ERO) can be strict or loose
A strict ERO must be followed by the signaling message A loose ERO is a combination of at least one loose hop and 0 or more strict hops
To reach a next loose hop, a node can request a new CSPF calculation
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Priority
200 1 1 1 1 1 0
State
FULL/DR_OTHER 2WAY/DR_OTHER 2WAY/DR_OTHER 2WAY/DR_OTHER 2WAY/DR_OTHER FULL/DR_OTHER 2WAY/DR_OTHER
Dead time
30 32 37 30 32 40 35
Address
15.0.1.11 15.0.1.61 15.0.1.81 15.0.1.91 15.0.1.101 15.0.1.141 15.0.1.151
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RSVP-TE
Signaling protocol extended from RSVP Messages are sent over control channel to set up LSP (Label Switched Paths) in the transport/data layer Paths are set up for a long period of time Refresh is used to keep the circuit state information synchronized and updated between nodes Transport requirements
Paths have to survive control channel failure RSVP messages are not traveling in the same plane
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RSVP-TE Example
Data plane
Data plane
Data plane
LSP setup
September 28, 2005
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Recovery path is set up to protect against failures of working path and can be shared between working paths to increase network efficiency
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750
Ethernet Traffic
SONET without VCAT payload mapping STS-3c: 155 Mbps Efficiency: 64% STS-48: 2.5 Gbps Efficiency: 40%
SONET with VCAT payload mapping STS-1-2v: 103.5 Mbps Efficiency: 96% STS-1-21v or STS-3-7v Efficiency: 92%
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SONET cloud NE
STS-1-2v routed over SONET
NE
Mapped to STS-1-2v
Another advantage of VCAT is the ability to do diverse routing and make better use of network resources
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751
Tear down the currently leased circuit then set up a new one with the appropriate bandwidth
This creates a downtime that may breach Service Level Agreement (SLA)
LCAS is a procedure developed to allow hitless adding/removing members to/from the VCG (Virtual Concatenation Group: group of circuits that are concatenated) LCAS provides bandwidth-on-demand capability at the transport layer
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IP RPR SONET
IP Ethernet SONET
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Conclusion
GMPLS delivers dynamic control of a range of data and transport networks in a unified model Carriers are starting to embrace this technology because it will be able to increase their revenue and decrease their costs The building blocks of GMPLS (LMP, OSPF-TE and RSVP-TE) work in tandem to deliver control capabilities that cross domains and areas and work across a range of vendors and carriers The GMPLS control plane architecture will deliver capabilities that allow fast and simple connectivity setup and release across the data and transport layers GMPLS is being extended to support new transport architecture such as ASON (developed at ITU) and allow inter-area and inter-AS path setup/teardown Some ongoing work as well on GMPLS control of Ethernet networks as well as support for VCAT/LCAS
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