Next Generation SONET/SDH

Chapter 3 - Asynchronous Data/Packet Networks

3.1   INTRODUCTION

SONET/SDH technology has demonstrated that if certain simplifications are made,
then both synchronous and asynchronous data can be transported with efficiency,
QoS, path protection, and bandwidth elasticity for service diversity, according to
service level agreements (SLAs).

On the other hand, local area networks (LANs) were specifically designed to
provide very inexpensive transport of asynchronous and bursty data. Data networks
can be accessed by many data terminals that execute specifically developed protocols.

Ethernet is a hierarchical LAN designed for high-speed data, simplicity, relatively
short distance transport, quick installation, easily maintainance, and low cost. It
was not developed to compete with telephony and, thus, error control, network protection
and security, real-time data delivery, and quality of service were secondary
considerations.

Any terminal or station on the Ethernet network could initiate a frame transfer
(according to the Ethernet 802.3 protocol) anytime. “Anytime” implies that there is
a finite probability that two or more stations could attempt a frame transfer at the
same time, a case known as collision. This was cleverly avoided with the protocol
intelligence that detected collisions and resolved them with “equal fairness to all
stations.”

Ethernet uses carrier sense multiple-access/collision detect (CSMA/CD), which
is based on a predefined collision window and on active listening to traffic on the
network by all stations. If the carrier is absent for at least twice the collision window,
a station could start transmitting. If two or more stations start transmitting,
they are able to detect the collision from “listening to the traffic” and back off. At a
random time thereafter, they start again. Transmission starts with a preamble signal
(a string of zeroes and ones). The purpose of the preamble is to listen and also stabilize
the clock of the receivers. The preamble code is followed by a start-of-frame
delimiter, the source and destination ID, and other information, including length of
data field, which is followed by data; this is concluded with a frame check sequence.

FDDI uses a Timed-Token Protocol (TTP), which is based on a bidding process.
It offers both synchronous and asynchronous service to other stations by sending
priority tokens (very short messages). If a FDDI station needs to transmit a packet
and if there is no traffic on the ring, it sends a token to cease the ring, and, if this is
successful, it sends the packet. If two stations attempt to send a token at the same
time, then they stop transmitting and retry.

IP is a data protocol that was designed for world-wide flexible data transport at
very low cost but low quality. The local area network (LAN) was a technology
specifically developed for more efficient data transport but it was not designed for
very high data rates.

ATM was designed to address real-time synchronous traffic, asynchronous data,
quality of service, and performance. Although, the cell size was designed to be
awkwardly short, ATM mapped very well in the SONET synchronous payload envelope
(SPE).

Other data protocols addressed several issues but they too fell short in efficiency,
performance, and data rate, such as Infiniband, Rapid I/O, and ESCON.

Thus, several new packet technologies evolved, such as the Fiber Channel (FC),
the Link Access Procedure SDH (LAPS), the Generic Multi-Protocol Label Switching
(GMPLS), the Link Capacity Adjustment Scheme (LCAS), the Generic Framing
Procedure (GFP), and the Optical Transport Network (OTN). Each one was developed
for increased efficiency and to meet specific data needs. The benefit of
these technologies is that recommendations (standards) were published that describe
them in detail and provide a platform for interoperability. Such standards are
the ITU-T X.85 for IP over LAPS, X.86 for Ethernet over LAPS, G.7041 for GFP,
G.7042 for LCAS, G.709 for OTN, and many others listed in the reference section.

In the following, we review concepts pertinent to data traffic and the data technologies
that participate in the next generation SONET/SDH.

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