Next Generation SONET/SDH

Chapter 6 - Next Generation Optical Networks

6.1   INTRODUCTION

A mesh optical network consists of several cross-connecting nodes (Figure 6.1).
Some nodes are O-E-O and some all optical. Large nodes are capable of carrying
aggregate traffic at extremely high capacities, and also to add–drop and groom
traffic. Each interconnecting link consists of many dual fibers (one fiber per direction),
and they include signal conditioners (equalization and regeneration)
when the optical signal is transported over distances of hundreds of kilometers.
The mesh network has excellent protection strategies, as nodes may be reprovisioned
to reroute traffic away from the failure condition (fiber cut or failed node).
Faults are detected with power detectors and performance parameter thresholds.
Reconfiguration may be made autonomous by switching to protection to
SONET/SDH standards (switch to protection takes less than 50 ms). Reconfiguration
may also be accomplished via network management procedures. More sophisticated
management protocols perform reconfiguration to provide traffic balancing
and traffic grooming.

The Unidirectional Path Switched Ring (UPSR) is a popular and well-studied
network topology (Figure 6.2). It is most applicable to small and medium-size
LANs and metropolitan ring networks (metros). It consists of a dual-fiber counter-
rotating ring. Each ring passes the same traffic but in opposite directions (one ring
is for service and the other for protection).

  1. When a link fault occurs on the service ring, the UPSR is able to detect it
    (with power detectors and performance parameter thresholds) and reconfigure
    itself by switching to protection ring. Switch to protection typically complies
    with SONET standards (<50 ms).
  2. When a single fiber link is at fault, then the ring without faults is used.
  3. When both fibers on a span are at fault, then traffic is passed from one ring
    onto the other by looping back at the nodes adjacent to the fault. This is also
    known as span protection and the action is known as self-healing. The typical
    bandwidth on the ring is OC-48. In DWM rings, coarse wavelengths (20 with
    400 Ghz separation) are used.

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