DWDM

Chapter 4.6 - Equipment Sensing Strategy

4.6 EQUIPMENT SENSING STRATEGY

In a large communications system, unit auto-discovery is particularly important when units are "hot-inserted," that is, when the system is already powered-up and operational. In fact, "hot-insertion" is a requirement for many communications systems; units are inserted in the system either during system population or during unit replacement. Therefore, it is also required that as soon as a unit is inserted in the system, the system automatically identifies the unit; that is, it "reads" the type, model number, serial number, manufacturing date, etc. of this unit. This action is known as "auto-discovery," and the identification data of each unit is known as unit inventory.

The auto-discovery procedure starts as soon as the inserted unit comes in electrical contact with the system or as soon as it breaks contact with it. Upon unit contact or disconnect, the system controller is automatically notified (or interrupted).

There are several methods to achieve auto-discovery. The polling method requires that the system controller polls periodically all units in the system and discovers if one has been removed or newly inserted. The tone method requires that a newly inserted unit in the system transmit a synthesized tone to an equipment administration unit. The polling requires control resources, which in many cases are not affordable. The tome method requires additional hardware resources that add to the design complexity of the system.

A third and simpler method that has been extensively used is by electrical contact. According to this, a unit connector pin is allocated, which upon electrical contact with the system backplane it grounds a wire that is connected with an interrupt input of the processor. This wire corresponds to a set of coordinates of the system, known as slot identification, where each coordinate set (bay number, shelf number, group number and unit or slot number) has a representation in the processor equipment management registers. Upon interrupt, the processor locates the unit based on the coordinates of the grounded wire and it communicates with the unit over the controller interface using an Ethernet protocol as described previously; the unit contains all required information about it in a nonerasable memory. Similarly, when a unit is removed from the system, it disconnects the wire and it interrupts the controller. One of the drawbacks of this method is that backplane connector pins may be at a premium. However, manufacturers have addressed this issue and have developed solutions to minimize the number of required pins.

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