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Chapter 5 - DWDM Networks
5DWDM NETWORKS5.1 INTRODUCTIONThe evolving optical network with the introduction of DWDM has whetted the appetite for bandwidth and offering new multiservices differentiating from traditional ones. As an example, a streaming MP3 channel requires 200 Kb/s, high-quality videoconferencing requires 3 Mb/s, and two-channel DVD-quality streaming video requires 10 to 14 Mb/s. As already presented in previous chapters, DWDM systems need careful design to offer in an optimum and reliable manner the required services of today and of tomorrow in a single optical network with multiple services. These systems are interconnected into a well-managed transparent network, which is remotely provisioned and quickly reconfigured, easily maintained, cost-effective, and quickly restored (<50 ms). This optical network will not consist of multiple devices each providing support for specific network functions such as IP routing, or layer 2 switching, and so on, as the current network does, but is more intelligent, more robust, and yet flexible and scalable, more resilient, and fault-tolerant and it delivers services in the most expedient manner possible with end-to-end service provisioning. The DWDM network offers the capability to support both already established traditional services and new differentiating services such as real-time multicast, streaming video, e-commerce, virtual and virtual private networks (VPNs). This is very attractive because it also means that overlay networks converge to a single and more potent optical network. However, an optical network that supports converged services demands that certain practices of the data network such as quality of service (QoS), and "best effort" transport be revised. This revision requires:
As the number of wavelengths per fiber increases, as the bit rate per wavelength increases, and as new services requiring more bandwidth are offered, core services come closer to the edge. This also brings fiber closer to the edge and closer to the home or office. As a consequence, the number of network layers becomes smaller, and the edge network elements must be able to support a large variety of protocols and bit rates, be scalable with a finer granularity of bandwidth traffic, be easily provisioned, reliable, available, fault-tolerant, restored and it must be intelligent as well. This will enable provision of reliable services not only on the wavelength level but also on a smaller granularity ranging from DS1/E1 to GbE over optical virtual private networks (OVPN). The OVPN will operate across multiple managed wavelengths and networks as one network that can be dynamically configured and support numerous applications, appearing to the end-customer as a VPN completely protocol - and bit rate-independent. This network will also enable bandwidth trading and reselling (bandwidth on demand), multiservices, and service transparency with various service level agreements (SLA). We have discussed SLA in previous chapters and we will discuss it again. In particular, SLA metrics pertain to:
To ensure that these SLA metrics are met, both the system and the network are responsible for continuously monitoring the optical signal(s), network traffic, and continuous continuously perform tests on the network. Although new fiber networks are currently in deployment and planned to meet the projected exploding traffic needs, DWDM networks require additional efficiency requirements that are related to demographics, communications customs, peoples' habits and trends, economic profiles, and embedded network technology that influence the future network. |
PREFACE
TABLE OF CONTENTS