Will AI spur revenue growth for the telcos?

Jürgen Hatheier.
  • A global AI survey sponsored by Ciena highlights industry optimism
  • The telcos have unique networking assets that can serve users of AI.
  • Much is still to play out and telcos have a history of missed opportunities.

The leading communications service providers have been on a decade-long journey to transform their networks and grow their revenues.

To the list of technologies the operators have been embracing can now be added artificial intelligence (AI).

AI is a powerful tool for improving their business efficiency. The technology is also a revenue opportunity and service providers are studying how AI traffic will impact their networks.

“This is the single biggest question that everyone in this industry is struggling with,” says Jürgen Hatheier. “How can the service providers exploit the technology to grow revenues?”

However, some question whether AI will be an telecom opportunity.

“The current hype around AI has very little to do with telcos and is focused on hyperscalers and specifically the intra-data centre traffic driven by AI model training,” says Sterling Perrin, senior principal analyst at HeavyReading. “There is a lot of speculation that, ultimately, this traffic will spread beyond the data centre to data centre interconnect (DCI) applications. But there are too many unknowns right now.”

 

AI survey

Hatheier is chief technology officer, international at Ciena. He oversees 30 staff, spanning Dublin to New Zealand, that work with the operators to understand their mid- to long-term goals.

Ciena recently undertook a global survey (see note 1, bottom) about AI, similar to one it conducted two years ago that looked at the Metaverse.

Conducting such surveys complements Ciena’s direct research with the service providers. However, there is only so much time a telco’s chief strategy officer (CSO) or chief technology officer (CTO) can spend with a vendor discussing strategy, vision, and industry trends.

“The survey helps confirm what we are hearing from a smaller set,” says Hatheier.

Surveys also uncover industry and regional nuances. Hatheier cites how sometimes it is the tier-two communications service providers are the trailblazers.

Lastly, telcos have their own pace. “It takes time to implement new services and change the underlying network architecture,” says Hatheier. “So it is good to plan.”

Sterling Perrin

Findings

The sectors expected to generate the most AI traffic are financial services (46 per cent of those surveyed), media and entertainment (43 per cent), and manufacturing (38 per cent). Hatheier says these industries have already been using the technology for a while, so AI is not new to them.

Sterling Perrin

For financial services, an everyday use of AI is for security, detecting fraudulent transactions and monitoring video streams to detect anomalous behavior at a site. The amount of traffic AI applications generate can vary greatly. This is common, says Hatheier; it is the use that matters here, not the industry.

“I would not break it down by the industries to say, okay, this industry is going to create more traffic than another,” says Hatheier. “For financial services, if it is transaction data, it’s a few lines of text, but if it is video for branch security, the data volumes are far more significant.”

AI is also set to change the media and entertainment sector, challenging the way content is consumed. Video streaming uses content delivery networks (CDNs) to store the most popular video content close to users. But AI promises to enable more personalised video, tailored for the end-user. Such content will make the traffic more dynamic.

Another example of personalised content is for marketing and advertising. Such personalisation tends to achieve better results, says Hatheier.

AI is also being applied in the manufacturing sector. Examples include automating supply-chain operations, predictive maintenance, and quality assurance.

Car manufacturers check a vehicle for any blemishes at the end of a production line. This usually takes several staff and lasts 10-15 minutes. Now with AI, the inspection can be completed as the cars passes by. “This is a potent application that could run on infrastructure within the manufacturing site but use a service provider’s compute assets and connectivity,” says Hatheier.

The example shows how AI produces productivity gains. However, AI also promises unique abilities that staff cannot match.

The 'Confident' category is 'Very confident' and 'Somewhat confident' combined. Source: Ciena.

Traffic trends

If the history of telecoms is anything to go by, applications that drove traffic in the network rarely lead to revenue growth for the service providers. Hatheier cites streaming video, gaming, and augmented reality as examples.

However, the operators have assets at network edge and the metro that can benefit AI usage. They also have central offices that can act is distributed data centres for the metro and network edge.

Hatheier says users have an advantage if they consume AI applications across a fibre-based broadband network. But certain countries, such as Saudi Arabia and India, mainly use wireless for connectivity.

“AI applications will need to adapt to what is available, and if people want to consume low-latency applications, there is 5G slicing,” says Hatheier. “At the end of the day, there is no way around fibre.”

Optical networking

Government policy regarding AI and regulations to ensure data does not cross borders also play a part.

“It’s an important decision criterion, as we saw in the survey response,” says Hatheier. “So private AI and local computing will be an important decision factor.”

Another critical decision influencing where data centres are built is power. “We see all the gold rush in the Nordics right now with their renewable power and cool climates,” says Hatheier. “You don’t need to cool your servers as much, and it requires a lot of connectivity.”

However, as well as these region-specific data centre builds, there will also be builds in metropolitan areas using smaller distributed data centres.

“Let’s say there are 20 sizable edge or metro compute centres for AI, and you would need three or four to run a big training job,” says Hatheier. “You will not create a permanent end-to-end connection between them because sometimes there will not be four that need to work together, but five, seven, and 11.”

Such a metro network would require reconfigurable optical add-drop multiplexer (ROADM) technology to connect wavelengths between those clusters based on demand to keep sites busy, to avoid expensive AI clusters being idle.

These are opportunities for the CSPs. And while much is still to happen, such discussions are taking place between systems vendors and the telcos.

For Heavy Reading’s Perrin, the more telling opportunity is the telcos’ own use of AI rather than the networking opportunity.

“As a vertical industry, telecom is not typically a leading-edge adopter of any new technology due to many factors, including culture, size, legacy infrastructure and processes, and government regulations,” he says. “I don’t believe AI will be any different.”

Hatheier points to the survey’s finding of general optimism that sees AI as an opportunity rather than a challenge or business risk.

“We have seen very little differences between countries,” says Hatheier. “That may have to do with the fact that emerging countries get as much attention of data centre investment than more developed ones.”


Adding an extra dimension to ROADM designs

U.K. start-up ROADMap Systems, a developer of wavelength-selective switch technology, has completed a second round of funding. The amount is undisclosed but the start-up is believed to have raised several million dollars to date.

Karl HeeksThe company will use the funding to develop a prototype of its two-dimensional (2D) optical beam-steering technique to integrate 24 wavelength-selective switches (WSSes) within a single platform.

The WSS is a key building block used within reconfigurable optical add-drop multiplexers (ROADMs).

The company’s WSS technology uses liquid crystal on silicon (LCOS) technology, the basis of existing WSS designs from the likes of Finisar and Lumentum. However, the start-up has developed a way to steer beams in 2D whereas current WSSes operate in a single dimension only.

The Cambridge-based company’s pre-production prototype will integrate 24,1x12 WSSes within a single package. The platform promises service providers ROADM designs that deliver space, power consumption and operational cost savings as well as systems advantages.

 

Wavelength-selective switch

A WSS takes wavelength-division multiplexed (WDM) channels from an input fibre and distributes them as required across an array of output fibres. Typical WSS configurations include a 1x9 - a one input fibre port and nine output ports - and a 1x20.

Current WSS designs comprise a diffraction grating, a cylindrical lens and an LCOS panel that is used to deflect the light channels to the required output fibres.

The diffraction grating separates the WDM channels while the cylindrical lens produces an elongated projection of the channels onto the LCOS device. The panel’s liquid crystals are oriented in such a way to direct the projected light channels to the appropriate output fibres. The orientation of the arrays of liquid crystals that perform the various steerings are holograms.

Commercial WSSes use the LCOS panel to steer in one dimension only: left or right. This means the output fibres are arranged in an array and the number of fibres is limited by the total deflection the LCOS can achieve. ROADMap Systems has developed a technique that produces holograms on the LCOS panel that steer light in two dimensions: left and right, up and down and diagonally.

Moreover, the holograms are confined to a small area of the panel, far fewer pixels than the elongated beams of a 1D WSS. Such confinement allows multiple light beams to be steered to the output fibre bundles.  

“You use a much smaller area of the LCOS to bend things in 2D,” says Karl Heeks, CEO at ROADMap Systems.

 

Platform demonstrator

ROADMap System’s key intellectual property is its know-how to create the steering pattern - the hologram - programmed onto the LCOS panel.

The 2D WSS system requires calibration to create the precision holograms. The calibration data is generated during the device’s manufacture and forms the input to an algorithm that creates the holograms needed for the LCOS to steer accurately the traffic to the output fibres.

 

You use a much smaller area of the LCOS to bend things in 2D

 

ROADMap Systems has demonstrated its 2D steering technology to service providers, system vendors and optical subsystem players.

Now, the company is working to build the 24, 1x12 WSSs on an optical bench which it expects to complete by the year-end. The start-up is also creating the calibration software used for 2D beam steering as well as a user interface to allow networking staff to set up their required connections.

The first pre-production packaged systems – each one comprising a 4K LCOS panel and 312 fibres - are expected for delivery for trialling in 2019. The start-up is reluctant to give a firm date as it is still exploring design options. For example, ROADMap Systems has an improved lower-loss, more compact fibre coupling design but it has yet to decide whether to incorporate it or its existing design for its platform.  

“We are not intending the prototype to go into a system within the network,” says Heeks. “It is more a vehicle to illustrate its capabilities.”  

 

System benefits

The main benefit of ROADMap Systems’ 2D beam-steering WSS architecture is not so much its optical performance; the start-up expects its design to match the optical performance of existing 1D WSSes. Rather, there are architectural benefits besides the obvious integration and cost benefits of putting 24 WSSes in one platform.

The first system advantage is the ability to use the many WSSes to implement ROADMs of several degrees including the ROADM’s add-drop architecture.  A two-degree ROADM handles east and west fibre pairs while a three-degree ROADM adds north-facing traffic as well.

 

A ROADM architecture using 1xN splitters as part of the multicast switch. Source: ROADMap Systems.

To add and drop light-paths, a multicast switch is used (shown in green in the diagram above). The multicast switch can be implemented using optical splitters, however, due to their loss, optical amplifiers are needed to boost the signals, adding to the overall cost and system complexity.

WSSes can be used instead of the splitters as part of the multicast switch architecture such that optical amplification is not needed; the optical loss the WSS stage adds being much lower than the splitters. Removing optical amplification impacts significantly the overall ROADM cost (see diagram below).

 

A ROADM architecture using 1xN WSSes as part of the multicast switch. Source: ROADMap Systems.

The integrated platform’s large number of WSSes will ease the implementation of the latest generation of ROADMs that are colourless, directionless and contentionless.

A colourless ROADM decouples the wavelength-dependency such that a light-path can be used on any of the network interface ports. Directionless refers to having full flexibility in the routeing of a light-path to any of the ports. Lastly, contentionless means non-blocking, where the same wavelength channel can be accommodated across all the degrees of the ROADM without contention.

And being LCOS-based, ROADMap’s WSSes also support a flexible grid enabling the ROADM to support channels such as coherent transmissions above 200 gigabit-per-second that do not conform to the rigid 50GHz-wide ITU grid spacings.

The second system advantage of the platform is that with its many WSSes, it can route and add-drop wavelengths across both the C and L-bands. However, the company is not planning to implement this feature in its preproduction prototype.

 

Next steps

ROADMap Systems says it is focussed on producing and testing its pre-production prototype. A further round of investment will be needed to turn the design into a commercial product.

“We believe that such a highly-integrated architecture will offer immediate performance and economic benefits to many teleccom applications,” says Heeks. “It is also well positioned for datacentre – DCI - applications where data needs to be routed between distributed datacentres linked by parallel fibres."


Ciena goes stackable with 8180 'white box' and 6500 RLS

Ciena has unveiled two products - the 8180 coherent networking platform and the 6500 reconfigurable line system - that target cable and cellular operators that are deploying fibre deep in their networks, closer to subscribers.

The 6500 line system is also aimed at the data centre interconnect market given how the webscale players are experiencing a near-doubling of traffic each year.

Source: Ciena

The cable industry is moving to a distributed access architecture (DAA) that brings fibre closer to the network’s edge and splits part of the functionality of the cable modem termination system (CMTS) - the remote PHY - closer to end users. The cable operators are deploying fibre to boost the data rates they can offer homes and businesses.

Both Ciena’s 8180 modular switch and the 6500 reconfigurable line system are suited to the cable network. The 8180 is used to link the master headend with primary and secondary hub sites where aggregated traffic is collected from the digital nodes (see network diagram). The 8180 platforms will use the modular 6500 line system to carry the dense wavelength-division multiplexed (DWDM) traffic. 

“The [cable] folks that are modernising the access network are not used to managing optical networking,” says Helen Xenos, senior director, portfolio marketing at Ciena (pictured). “They are looking for simple platforms, aggregating all the connections that are coming in from the access.”

The 8180 can play a similar role for wireless operators, using DWDM to carry aggregated traffic for 4G and 5G networks.

Ciena says the 6500 optical line system will also serve the data centre interconnect market, complementing the WaveServer Ai, Ciena’s second-generation 1RU modular platform that has 2.4 terabits of client-side interfaces and 2.4 terabits of coherent capacity.     

 

With the 8180, you are only using the capacity on the fibre that you have traffic for 

 

“They [the webscale players] are looking for as many efficiencies as they can get from the platforms they deploy,” says Xenos. “The 6500 reconfigurable line system gives them the flexibility they need - a colourless, directionless, contentionless [reconfigurable optical add-drop multiplexer] and a flexible grid that extends to the L-band.” 

A research note from analyst house, Jefferies, published after the recent OFC show where Ciena announced the platforms, noted that in many cable networks, 6-strand fibre is used: two fibre pairs allocated for business services and one for residential. Adding the L-band to the existing C-band effectively doubles the capacity of each fibre pair, it noted.

 

The 8180

Ciena’s 8180 is a modular packet switch that includes coherent optics. The 8180 is similar in concept to the Voyager and Cassini white boxes developed by the Telecom Infra Project. However, the 8180 is a two-rack-unit (2RU) 6.4-terabit switch compared to the 1RU, 2-terabit Voyager and the 1.5RU 3.2-terabit Cassini. The 8180 also uses Ciena’s own 400-gigabit coherent DSP, the WaveLogic Ai, rather than merchant coherent DSP chips. 

The platform comprises 32 QSFP+/ QSFP28 client-side ports, a 6.4-terabit switch chip and four replaceable modules or ‘sleds’, each capable of accommodating 800 gigabits of capacity. The options include an initial 400-gigabit line-side coherent interface (a sled with two coherent WaveLogic Ai DSPs will follow), an 8x100-gigabit QSFP28 sled, a 2x400-gigabit sled and also the option for an 800-gigabit module once they become available.

 

Source: Ciena

Using all four sleds as client-side options, the 8180 becomes a 6.4-terabit Ethernet switch. Using only coherent sleds instead, the packet-optical platform has a 1.6-terabit line-side capacity. And because there is a powerful switch chip integrated, the input ports can be over-subscribed.“With the 8180, you are only using the capacity on the fibre that you have traffic for,” says Xenos.  

 

6500 line system 

The 6500 reconfigurable line system is also a modular design. Aimed at the cable, wireless, and data centre interconnect markets, only a subset of Ciena’s existing optical line systems features is used.

“The 6500 software has a lot of capabilities that the content providers are not using,” says Xenos. “They just want to use it as a photonic layer.”

There are three 6500 reconfigurable line system platform sizes: 1RU, 2RU and 4RU. The chassis can be stacked and managed as one unit. Card options that fit within the chassis include amplifiers and reconfigurable optical add-drop multiplexers (ROADMs).

The amplifier options area dual-line Erbium-doped fibre amplifiercard that includes an integrated bi-directional optical time-domain reflectometer (OTDR) used to characterise the fibre. There is also a half-line-width RAMAN amplifier card. The line system will support the C and L bands, as mentioned.

The reconfigurable line system also has ROADM cards: a 1x12 wavelength-selective switch (WSS) with integrated amplifier, a colourless 16-channel add-drop that support channels of any size (flexible grid), and a full-width card 1x32 WSS. “The 1x32 would be used for colourless, directionless and directionless [ROADM] configurations,” says Xenos.   

The 6500 reconfigurable line system also supports open application porgramming interfaces (APIs) for telemetry, with a user able to program the platform to define the data streamed.“The platform can also be provisioned via REST APIs; something a content provider will do,” she says. 

Ciena is a member of the OpenROADM multi-source agreement and was involved in last year’s AT&T OpenROADM trial with its 6500 Converged Packet Optical Transport (POTS) platform. 

Will the 6500 reconfigurable line system be OpenROADM-compliant? 

“This card [and chassis form factor] could be used for OpenROADM if AT&T preferred this platform to the other [6500 Converged POTS] one,” says Xenos. “You also have to design the hardware to meet the specifications for OpenROADM.”

Ciena expects both platforms to be available by year-end. The 6500 reconfigurable line system will be in customer trials at the end of this quarter while the 8180 will be trialed by the end of the third quarter.


The white box concept gets embraced at the optical layer

Lumentum has unveiled several optical white-box designs. To date the adoption of white boxes - pizza-box sized platforms used in large-scale data centres - has been at the electronic layer, for switching and routing applications.

 

Brandon Collings

White boxes have arisen to satisfy the data centre operators’ need for simple building-block functions in large number that they can direct themselves.  

“They [data centre operators] started using very simple white boxes - rather simple functionality, much simpler than the large router companies were providing - which they controlled themselves using software-defined networking orchestrators,” says Brandon Collings, CTO of Lumentum. 

Such platforms have since evolved to deliver high-performance switching, controlled by third-party SDN orchestrators, and optimised for the simple needs of the data centre, he says. Now this trend is moving to the optical layer where the same flexibility of function is desired. Operators would like to better pair the functionality that they are going to buy with the exact functionality they need for their network, says Collings.

“There is no plan to build networks with different architectures to what is built today,” he says. “It is really about how do we disaggregate conventional platforms to something more flexible to deploy, to control, and which you can integrate with control planes that also manage higher layers of the network, like OTN and the packet layer.” 

 

White box products

Lumentum has a background in integrating optical functions such as reconfigurable optical add/drop multiplexers (ROADMs) and amplifiers onto line cards, known as its TrueFlex products. “That same general element is now the element being demanded by these white box strategies, so we are putting them in pizza boxes,” says Collings. 

At OFC, Lumentum announced several white box designs for linking data centres and for metro applications. Such designs are for large-scale data centre operators that use data centre interconnect platforms. But several such operators also have more complex, metro-like optical networking requirements. Traditional telcos such as AT&T are also interested in pursuing the approach.

The first Lumentum white box products include terminal and line amplifiers, a dense WDM multiplexer/ demultiplexer and a ROADM. These hardware boxes come with open interfaces so that they can be controlled by an SDN orchestrator and are being made available to interested parties. 

OpenFlow, which is used for electrical switches in the data centre, could be use with such optical white boxes. Other more likely software are the Restconf and Netconf protocols. “They are just protocols that are being defined to interface the orchestrator with a collection of white boxes,” says Collings.

Lumentum’s mux-demux is defined as a white box even though it is passive and has no power or monitoring requirements. That is because the mux-demux is a distinct element that is not part of a platform.

AT&T is exploring the concept of a disaggregated ROADM. Collings says a disaggregated ROADM has two defining characteristics. One is that the hardware isn’t required to come with a full network control management system. “You can buy it and operate it without buying that same vendor’s control system,” he says. The second characteristic is that the ROADM is physically disaggregated - it comes in a pizza box rather than a custom, proprietary chassis.  


There remains a large amount of value between encompassing optical hardware in a pizza box to delivering an operating network

 

Lumentum: a systems vendor? 

The optical layer white box ecosystem continues to develop, says Collings, with many players having different approaches and different levels of ‘aggressiveness’ in pursuing the concept. There is also the issue of the orchestrators and who will provide them. Such a network control system could be written by the hyper-scale data centre operators or be developed by the classical network equipment manufacturers, says Collings.   

Collings says selling pizza boxes does not make Lumentum a systems vendor. “There is a lot of value-add that has to happen between us delivering a piece of hardware with simple open northbound control interfaces and a complete deployed, qualified, engineered system.”

Control software is needed as is network engineering; value that traditional system vendors have been adding. “That is not our expertise; we are not trying to step into that space,” says Collings. There remains a large amount of value between encompassing optical hardware in a pizza box to delivering an operating network, he says. 

This value and how it is going to be provided is also at the core of an ongoing industry debate. “Is it the network provider or the people that are very good at it: the network equipment makers, and how that plays out.”  

Lumentum’s white box ROADM was part of an Open Networking Lab proof-of-concept demonstration at OFC.  


Finisar adds silicon photonics to its technology toolkit

  • Finisar revealed its in-house silicon photonics design capability at ECOC
  • The company also showed its latest ROADM technologies: a dual wavelength-selective switch and a high-resolution optical channel monitor.
  • Also shown was an optical amplifier that spans 400km fibre links 

 

These two complementary technologies [VCSELs and silicon photonics] work well together as we think about the next-generation Ethernet applications.

Rafik Ward

 

Finisar demonstrated at ECOC its first optical design implemented using silicon photonics. The photonic integrated circuit (PIC) uses a silicon photonics modulator and receiver and was shown operating at 50 Gigabit-per-second.

The light source used with the PIC was a continuous wave distributed feedback (DFB) laser. One Finisar ECOC demonstration showed the eye diagram of the 50 Gig transmitter using non-return-to-zero (NRZ) signalling. Separately, a 40 Gig link using this technology was shown operating error-free over 12km of single mode fibre.

"Finisar, and its fab partner STMicroelectronics, surprised the market with the 50 Gig silicon photonics demonstration,” says Daryl Inniss, practice leader of components at Ovum.

"This, to our knowledge, was the first public demonstration of silicon photonics running at such a high speed," says Rafik Ward, vice president of marketing at Finisar. However, the demonstrations were solely to show the technology's potential. "We are not announcing any new products," he says.

Potential applications for the PIC include the future 50 Gig IEEE Ethernet standard, as well as a possible 40 Gig serial Ethernet standard. "Also next-generation 400 Gig Ethernet and 100 Gig Ethernet using 50 Gig lanes," says Ward. "All these things are being discussed within the IEEE."

Jerry Rawls, co-founder and chairman of Finisar, said in an interview a year ago that the company had not developed any silicon photonics-based products as the technology had not shown any compelling advantage compared to its existing optical technologies.

Now Finisar has decided to reveal its in-house design capability as the technology is at a suitable stage of development to show to the industry. It is also timely, says Ward, given the many topics and applications being discussed in the standards work.

The company sees silicon photonics as part of its technology toolkit available to its engineers as they tackle next-generation module designs.

Finisar unveiled a vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser (VCSEL) operating at 40 Gig at the OFC show held in March. The 40 Gig VCSEL demonstration also used NRZ signalling. IBM has also published a technical paper that used Finisar's VCSEL technology operating at 50 Gbps. 

"What we are trying to do is come up with solutions where we can enable a common architecture between the short wave and the long wave optical modules," says Ward. "These two complementary technologies [VCSELs and silicon photonics] work well together as we think about the next-generation Ethernet applications."

Cisco Systems, also a silicon photonics proponent, was quoted in the accompanying Finisar ECOC press release as being 'excited' to see Finisar advancing the development of silicon photonics technology. "Cisco is our biggest customer," says Ward. "We see this as a significant endorsement from a very large user of optical modules." Cisco acquired silicon photonics start-up Lightwire for $271 million in March 2012.

 

ROADM technologies

Finisar also demonstrated two products for reconfigurable optical add/ drop multiplexers (ROADM): a dual configuration wavelength-selective switch (WSS) and an optical channel monitor (OCM).

The dual-configuration WSS is suited to route-and-select ROADM architectures.

Two architectures are used for ROADMs: broadcast-and-select and route-and-select. With broadcast-and-select, incoming channels are routed in the various directions using a passive splitter that in effect makes copies of the incoming signal. To route signals in the outgoing direction, a 1xN WSS is used. However, due to the optical losses of the splitters, such an architecture is used for low node-degree applications. For higher-degree nodes, the optical loss becomes a barrier, such that a WSS is also used for the incoming signals, resulting in the route-and-select architecture. A dual-configuration WSS thus benefits a route-and-select ROADM design.

Finisar's WSS module is sufficiently slim that it occupies a single-chassis slot, unlike existing designs that require two. "It enables system designers to free up slots for other applications such as transponder line cards inside their chassis," says Ward. 

The dual WSS modules support flexible grid and come in 2x1x20, 2x1x9 and 2x8x12 configurations. "There are some architectures being discussed for add/ drop that would utilise the WSS in that [2x8x12] configuration," says Ward.

The ECOC demonstrations included different traffic patterns passing through the WSS, as well as attenuation control and the management of super-channels. 

Finisar also showed an accompanying high-resolution OCM that also occupies a single-chassis slot. The OCM can resolve the spectral power of channels as narrow as 6.25GHz. The OCM, a single-channel device, can scan a fibre's C-band in 200ms.

A rule of thumb is that an OCM is used for each WSS. A customer often monitors channels on a single fibre, says Ward, and must pick which fibres to monitor. The OCM is typically connected to each fibre or to an optical switch to scan multiple fibres.

"People are looking to use the spectrum in a fibre in a much more optimised way," says Ward. The advent of flexible grid and super-channels requires a much tighter packing of channels. "So, being able to see and identify all of the key elements of these channels and manage them is going to become more and more difficult," he says, with the issue growing in importance as operators move to line speeds greater than 100 Gig.   

Finisar also used the ECOC show to demonstrate repeater-less transmission using an amplifier that can span 400km of fibre. Such an amplifier is used in harsh environments where it is difficult to build amplifier huts. The amplifier can also be used for certain submarine applications known as 'festooning' where the cable follows a coastline and returns to land each time amplification is required. Using such a long-span amplifier reduces the overall hops back to the coast.  


ECOC 2013 review - Part 2

The final part of some of the notable product announcements made at the recent European Conference on Optical Communication (ECOC) exhibition held in London.  

  • Oclaro's Raman and hybrid amplifier platform for new networks
  • MxN wavelength-selective switch from JDSU
  • 200 Gigabit multi-vendor coherent demonstration
  • Tunable SFP+ designs proliferate
  • Finisar extends 40 Gigabit QSFP+ to 40km
  • Oclaro’s tackles wireless backhaul with 2km SFP+ module

 

Finisar's 40km 40 Gig QSFP+ demo. Source: Finisar

Amplifier market heats up

Oclaro detailed its high performance Raman and hybrid Raman/ Erbium-doped fibre amplifier platform. "The need for this platform is the high-capacity, high channel rates being installed [by operators] and the desire to be scalable - to support 400 Gig and Terabit super-channels in future," says Per Hansen, vice president of product marketing, optical networks solutions at Oclaro.

"Amplifiers are 'hot' again," says Daryl Inniss, vice president and practice leader components at market research firm, Ovum. For the last decade, amplifier vendors have been tasked with reducing the cost of their amplifier designs. "Now there is a need for new solutions that are more expensive," says Inniss. "It is no longer just cost-cutting."

Amplifiers are used in the network backbone to boost the optical signal-to-noise ratio (OSNR). Raman amplification provides significant noise improvement but it is not power efficient so a Raman amplifier is nearly always matched with an Erbium one. "You can think of the Raman as often working as a pre-amp, and the Erbium-doped fibre as the booster stage of the hybrid amplifier," says Hansen. System houses have different amplifier approaches and how they connect them in the field, while others build them on one card, but Raman/ Erbium-doped fibre are almost always used in tandem, says Hansen.

Oclaro provides Raman units and hybrid units that combine Raman with Erbium-doped fibre. "We can deliver both as a super-module that vendors integrate on their line cards or we can build the whole line card for them" says Hansen.

 

The Raman amplifier market is way bigger than people have forecast 

 

Since Raman launches a lot of pump power into the fibre, it is vital to have low-loss connections that avoid attenuating the gain. "Raman is a little more sensitive to the quality of the connections and the fibre," says Hansen. Oclaro offers scan diagnostic features that characterise the fibre and determine whether it is safe to turn up the amplification.

"It can analyse the fibre and depending on how much customers want us to do, we can take this to the point that it [the design] can tell you what fibre it is and optimise the pump situation for the fibre," says Hansen. In other cases, the system vendors adopt their own amplifier control.

Oclaro says it is in discussion with customers about implementations. "We are shipping the first products based on this platform," says Hansen.

"[The] Raman [amplifier market] is way bigger than people have forecast," says Inniss. This is due to operators building long distance networks that are scalable to higher data rates. "Coherent transmission is the focal point here, as coherent provides the mechanism to go long distance at high data rates," says Ovum analyst, Inniss. 

 

Wavelength-selective switches

JDSU discussed its wavelength-selective switch (WSS) products at ECOC. The company has previously detailed its twin 1x20 port WSS, which has moved from development to volume production.

At ECOC, JDSU detailed its work on a twin MxN WSS design. "It is a WSS that instead of being a 1xN - 1x20 or a 1x9 - it is an MxN," says Brandon Collings, chief technology officer, communications and commercial optical products at JDSU. "So it has multiple input and output ports on both sides." Such a design is used for the add and drop multiplexer for colourless and directionless reconfigurable optical add/ drop multiplexers (ROADMs).

"People have been able to build colourless and directionless architectures using conventional 1xN WSSes," says Collings. The MxN serves the same functionality but in a single integrated unit, halving the volume and cost for colourless and directionless compared to the current approach.

JDSU says it is also completing the development of a twin multicast switch, the add and drop multiplexer suited to colourless, directionless and contentionless ROADM designs.

 

200 Gigabit coherent demonstration

ClariPhy Communications, working with NeoPhotonics, Fujitsu Optical Components, u2t Photonics and Inphi, showcased a reference-design demonstration of 200 Gig coherent optical transmission using 16 quadrature amplitude modulation (16-QAM).

For the demonstration, ClariPhy provided the coherent silicon: the digital-to-analogue converter for transmission and the receiver analogue-to digital and digital signal processing (DSP) used to counter channel transmission impairments. NeoPhotonics provided the lasers, for transmission and at the receiver, u2t Photonics supplied the integrated coherent receiver, Fujistu Optical Components the lithium niobate nested modulator while Inphi provided the quad-modulator driver IC.  

ClariPhy is developing a 28nm CMOS Lightspeed chip suited for metro and long-haul coherent transmission. The chip will support 100 and 200 Gigabit-per-second (Gbps) data rates and have an adjustable power consumption tailored to the application. The chip will also be suited for use within a coherent CFP module.    

"All the components that we are talking about for 100 Gig are either ready or will soon be ready for 200 and 400 Gig," says Ferris Lipscomb, vice president of marketing at NeoPhotonics. To achieve 400Gbps, two 16-QAM channels can be used.

 

The DWDM market for 10 Gig is now starting to plateau

 

Tunable SFPs

JDSU first released a 10Gbps SFP+ optical module tunable across the C-band in 2012, a design that dissipates up to 2W. The SFP+ MSA agreement, however, calls for no greater than a 1.5W power consumption. "Our customers had to deal with that higher power dissipation which, in a lot of cases, was doable," says JDSU Collings.

 

Robert Blum, Oclaro

JDSU's latest tunable SFP+ design now meets the 1.5W power specification. "This gets into the MSA standard's power dissipation envelop and can now go into every SFP+ socket that is deployed," says Collings. To achieve the power target involved a redesign of the tunable laser. The tunable SFP+ is now sampling and will be generally available one or two quarters hence.

Oclaro and Finisar also unveiled tunable SFP+ modules at ECOC 2013. "The design is using the integrated tunable laser and Mach-Zehnder modulator, all on the same chip," says Robert Blum, director of product marketing for Oclaro's photonic components. 

Neither Oclaro nor Finisar detailed their SFP+'s power consumption. "The 1.5W is the standard people are trying to achieve and we are quite close to that," says Blum.

Both Oclaro's and Finisar's tunable SFP+ designs are sampling now.

Reducing a 10Gbps tunable transceiver to a SFP+ in effect is the end destination on the module roadmap. "The DWDM market for 10 Gig is now starting to plateau," says Rafik Ward, vice president of marketing at Finisar. "From an industry perspective, you will see more and more effort on higher data rates in future."   

 

40G QSFP+ with a 40km reach

Finisar demonstrated a 40Gbps QSFP+ with a reach of 40km. "The QSFP has embedded itself as the form-factor of choice at 40 Gig," says Ward.

Until now there has been the 850nm 40GBASE-SR4 with a 100m reach and the 1310nm 40GBASE-LR4 at 10km. To achieve a 40km QSFP+, Finisar is using four uncooled distributed feedback (DFB) lasers and an avalanche photo-detector (APD) operating using coarse WDM (CWDM) wavelengths spaced around 1310nm. The QSFP+ is being used on client side cards for enterprise and telecom equipment, says Finisar.

 

Module for wireless backhaul

Oclaro announced an SFP+ that supports the wireless Common Public Radio Interface (CPRI) and Open Base Station Architecture Initiative (OBSAI) standards used to link equipment in a wireless cell's tower and the base station controller.

Until now, optical modules for CPRI have been the 10km 10GBASE-LR4 modules. "You have a relatively expensive device for the last mile which is the most cost sensitive [part of the network]," says Oclaro's Hansen.

Oclaro's 1W SFP+ reduces module cost by using a simpler Fabry-Perot laser but at the expense of a 2km reach only. However, this is sufficient for a majority of requirements, says Hansen. The SFP supports 2.5G, 3Gbps, 6Gbps and 10Gbps rates. "CPRI has been used mostly at 3 Gig and 6 Gig but there is interest in 10 Gig due to growing mobile data traffic and the adoption of LTE," says Hansen.

The SFP+ module is sampling and will be in volume production by year end.

 

For Part 1, click here


ROADMs and their evolving amplification needs

Technology briefing: ROADMs and amplifiers

Oclaro announced an add/drop routing platform at the recent OFC/NFOEC show. The company explains how the platform is driving new arrayed amplifier and pumping requirements.  


A ROADM comprising amplification, line-interfaces, add/ drop routing and transponders. Source: Oclaro

Agile optical networking is at least a decade-old aspiration of the telcos. Such networks promise operational flexibility and must be scalable to accommodate the relentless annual growth in network traffic. Now, technologies such as coherent optical transmission and reconfigurable optical add/drop multiplexers (ROADMs) have reached a maturity to enable the agile, mesh vision.    

Coherent optical transmission at 100 Gigabit-per-second (Gbps) has become the base currency for long-haul networks and is moving to the metro. Meanwhile, ROADMs now have such attributes as colourless, directionless and contentionless (CDC). ROADMs are also being future-proofed to support flexible grid, where wavelengths of varying bandwidths are placed across the fibre's spectrum without adhering to a rigid grid.

Colourless and directionless refer to the ROADM's ability to transmit or drop any light path from any direction or degree at any network interface port. Contentionless adds further flexibility by supporting same-colour light paths at an add or a drop.

"You can't add and drop in existing architectures the same colour [light paths at the same wavelength] in different directions, or add the same colour from a given transponder bank," says Bimal Nayar, director, product marketing at Oclaro's optical network solutions business unit. "This is prompting interest in contentionless functionality."

The challenge for optical component makers is to develop cost-effective coherent and CDC-flexgrid ROADM technologies for agile networks. Operators want a core infrastructure with components and functionality that provide an upgrade path beyond 100 Gigabit coherent yet are sufficiently compact and low-power to minimise their operational expenditure.

 

ROADM architectures

ROADMs sit at the nodes of a mesh network. Four-degree nodes - the node's degree defined as the number of connections or fibre pairs it supports - are common while eight-degree is considered large. 

The ROADM passes through light paths destined for other nodes - known as optical bypass - as well as adds or drops wavelengths at the node. Such add/drops can be rerouted traffic or provisioned new services. 

Several components make up a ROADM: amplification, line-interfaces, add/drop routing and transponders (see diagram, above). 

"With the move to high bit-rate systems, there is a need for low-noise amplification," says Nayar. "This is driving interest in Raman and Raman-EDFA (Erbium-doped fibre amplifier) hybrid amplification." 

The line interface cards are used for incoming and outgoing signals in the different directions. Two architectures can be used: broadcast-and-select and route-and select.

With broadcast-and-select, incoming channels are routed in the various directions using a passive splitter that in effect makes copies the incoming signal. To route signals in the outgoing direction, a 1xN wavelength-selective switch (WSS) is used. "This configuration works best for low node-degree applications, when you have fewer connections, because the splitter losses are manageable," says Nayar.

For higher-degree node applications, the optical loss using splitters is a barrier. As a result, a WSS is also used for the incoming signals, resulting in the route-and-select architecture.

Signals from the line interface cards connect to the routing platform for the add/drop operations. "Because you have signals from any direction, you need not a 1xN WSS but an LxM one," says Nayar. "But these are complex to design because you need more than one switching plane." Such large LxM WSSes are in development but remain at the R&D stage.

Instead, a multicast switch can be used. These typically are sized 8x12 or 8x16 and are constructed using splitters and switches, either spliced or planar lightwave circuit (PLC) based .

"Because the multicast switch is using splitters, it has high loss," says Nayar. "That loss drives the need for amplification."

 

 

Add/drop platform

With an 8-degree-node CDC ROADM design, signals enter and exit from eight different directions. Some of these signals pass through the ROADM in transit to other nodes while others have channels added or dropped.

In the Oclaro design, an 8x16 multicast switch is used. "Using this [multicast switch] approach you are sharing the transponder bank [between the directions]," says Nayar.

The 8-degree node showing the add/drop with two 8x16 multicast switches and the 16-transponder bank. Source: Oclaro

A particular channel is dropped at one of the switch's eight input ports and is amplified before being broadcast to all 16, 1x8 switches interfaced to the 16 transponders.

It is the 16, 1x8 switches that enable contentionless operation where the same 'coloured' channel is dropped to more than one coherent transponder. "In a traditional architecture there would only be one 'red' channel for example dropped as otherwise there would be [wavelength] contention," says Nayar.

The issue, says Oclaro, is that as more and more directions are supported, greater amplification is needed. "This is a concern for some, as amplifiers are associated with extra cost," says Nayar.

The amplifiers for the add/drop thus need to be compact and ideally uncooled. By not needing a thermo-electrical cooler, for example, the design is cheaper and consumes less power.  

The design also needs to be future-proofed. The 8x16 add/ drop architecture supports 16 channels. If a 50GHz grid is used, the amplifier needs to deliver the pump power for a 16x50GHz or 800GHz bandwidth. But the adoption of flexible grid and super-channels, the channel bandwidths will be wider. "The amplifier pumps should be scalable," says Nayar. "As you move to super-channels, you want pumps that are able to deliver the pump power you need to amplify, say, 16 super-channels."

This has resulted in an industry debate among vendors as to the best amplifier pumping scheme for add/drop designs that support CDC and flexible grid. 

 

EDFA pump approaches

Two schemes are being considered. One option is to use one high-power pump coupled to variable pump splitters that provides the required pumping to all the amplifiers. The other proposal is to use discrete, multiple pumps with a pump used for each EDFA. 

 

Source: Oclaro

In the first arrangement, the high-powered pump is followed by a variable ratio pump splitter module. The need to set different power levels at each amplifier is due to the different possible drop scenarios; one drop port may include all the channels that are fed to the 16 transponders, or each of the eight amplifiers may have two only. In the first case, all the pump power needs to go to the one amplifier; in the second the power is divided equally across all eight.

Oclaro says that while the high-power pump/ pump-splitter architecture looks more elegant, it has drawbacks. One is the pump splitter introduces an insertion loss of 2-3dB, resulting in the pump having to have twice the power solely to overcome the insertion loss.

The pump splitter is also controlled using a complex algorithm to set the required individual amp power levels. The splitter, being PLC-based, has a relatively slow switching time - some 1 millisecond. Yet transients that need to be suppressed can have durations of around 50 to 100 microseconds. This requires the addition of fast variable optical attenuators (VOAs) to the design that introduce their own insertion losses.

"This means that you need pumps in excess of 500mW, maybe even 750mW," says Nayar. "And these high-power pumps need to be temperature controlled." The PLC switches of the pump splitter are also temperature controlled.

The individual pump-per-amp approach, in contrast, in the form of arrayed amplifiers, is more appealing to implement and is the approach Oclaro is pursuing. These can be eight discrete pumps or four uncooled dual-chip pumps, for the 8-degree 8x16 multicast add/drop example, with each power level individually controlled.

 

Source: Oclaro

Oclaro says that the economics favour the pump-per-amp architecture. Pumps are coming down in price due to the dramatic price erosion associated with growing volumes. In contrast, the pump split module is a specialist, lower volume device.

"We have been looking at the cost, the reliability and the form factor and have come to the conclusion that a discrete pumping solution is the better approach," says Nayar. "We have looked at some line card examples and we find that we can do, depending on a customer’s requirements, an amplified multicast switch that could be in a single slot."


Cisco Systems' intelligent light

Network optimisation continues to exercise operators and content service providers as their requirements evolve with the growth of services such as cloud computing. Cisco Systems' announced elastic core architecture aims to tackle  networking efficiency and address particular service provider requirements.

 

“The core [network] needs to be more robust, agile and programmable”

Sultan Dawood, Cisco

 

 

 

 

 

“The core [network] needs to be more robust, agile and programmable – especially with the advent of  cloud,” says Sultan Dawood, senior manager, service provider marketing at Cisco. “As service providers look at next-generation infrastructure, convergence of IP and optical is going to have a big play.”

Cisco's elastic core architecture combines several developments. One is the integration of Cisco's 100 Gigabit-per-second (Gbps) dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM) coherent transponder, first introduced on its ROADM platform, onto its router to enable IP-over-DWDM. 

This is part of what Cisco calls nLight – intelligent light - which itself has three components: its 100Gbps coherent ASIC hardware, the nLight control plane and nLight colourless and contentionless ROADMs. “As packet and optical networks converge, intelligence between the layers is needed,” says Dawood. “Today how the ROADM and the router communicate is limited."

There is the GMPLS [Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching] layer working at the IP layer, and WSON [Wavelength Switched Optical Layer] working at the optical layer. These two protocols are doing control plane functions at each of their respective layers. "What nLight is doing is communicating between these two layers [using existing parameters] and providing the interaction," says Dawood.

Ron Kline, principal analyst for network infrastructure at Ovum, describes nLight more generally as Cisco’s strategy for software-defined networking:  "Interworking control planes to share info across platforms and add the dynamic capabilities."

The second component of Cisco's announcement is an upgrade of its carrier-grade services engine, from 20Gbps to 80Gbps, that fits within Cisco's CSR-3 core router and will be available from May 2013. The services engine enables such services as IPv6 and 'cloud routing' - network positioning which determines the most suitable resource for a customer’s request based on the content’s location and the data centre's loading.

Cisco has also added anti distributed denial of service (anti-DDoS) software to counter cyber threats. “We have licensed software that we have put into our CRS-3 so that with our VPN services we can provide threat mitigation and scrub any traffic liable to hurt our customers,” says Dawood.

 

nLight

According to Cisco, several issues need to be addressed between the IP and optical layers. For example, how the router and the optical infrastructure exchange information like circuit ID, path identifiers and real-time information in order to avoid the manual intervention used currently.

“With this intelligent data that is extracted due to these layers communicating, I can now make better, faster decisions that result in rapid service provisioning and service delivery,” says Dawood.

Cisco cites as an example a financial customer requesting a low-latency path.  In this case, the optical network comes back through this nLight extraction process and highlights the most appropriate path. That path has a circuit ID that is assigned to the customer. If the customer then comes back to request a second identical circuit, the network can make use of the existing intelligence to deliver a similar-specification circuit.

Such a framework avoids lengthy, manual interactions between the IP and transport departments of an operator required when setting up an IP VPN, for example. By exchanging data between layers, service providers can understand and improve their network topology in real-time, and be more dynamic in how they shift resources and do capacity planning in their network.

Service providers can also improve their protection and restoration schemes and also how they configure and provision services. Such capabilities will enable operators to be more efficient in the introduction and delivery of cloud and mobile services.

 

Total cost of ownership

Market research firm ACG Research has done a total cost of ownership (TCO) analysis of Cisco's elastic core architecture. It claims using nLight achieves up to a halving of the TCO of the optical and packet core networks in designs using protected wavelengths. It also avoids a 10% overestimation of required capacity.

Meanwhile, ACG claims an 18-month payback and 156% return on investment from a CRS CGSE service module with its anti‐DDoS service, and a 24% TCO savings from demand engineering with the improved placement of routes and cloud service workload location.

Cisco says its designed framework architecture is being promoted in the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). The company is also liaising with the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) and the Optical Internetworking Forum (OIF) where relevant. 


A FOX-C approach to flexible optical switching

Flexible switching of high-capacity traffic carried over ’super-channel' dense-wavelength division multiplexing wavelengths is the goal of the European Commission Seventh Framework Programme (FP7) research project.

The €3.6M FOX-C (Flexible optical cross-connect nodes) will develop a flexible spectrum reconfigurable optical add/drop multiplexer (ROADM) for 400Gbps and one Terabit optical transmission. The ROADM will be designed not only to switch super-channels but also the carrier constituent components.

Companies involved in the project include operator France Telecom and optical component player Finisar. However, no major European system vendor is taking part in the FOX-C project although W-Onesys, a small system vendor from Spain, is participating.

 

“We want to transfer to the optical layer the switching capability”

Erwan Pincemin, FT-Orange

 

 

 

 

“It is becoming more difficult to increase the spectral efficiency of such networks,” says Erwan Pincemin, senior expert in fibre optic transmission at France Telecom-Orange. “We want to increase the advantages of the network by adding flexibility in the management of the wavelengths in order to adapt the network as services evolve.”

FOX-C will increase the data rate carried by each wavelength to achieve a moderate increase in spectral efficiency. Pincemin says such modulation schemes as orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) and Nyquist WDM will be explored. But the main goal is to develop flexible switching based on an energy efficient and cost effective ROADM design.

The ROADM’s filtering will be able to add and drop 10 and 100 Gigabit sub-channels or 400 Gigabit and 1 Terabit super-channels. By using the developed filter to switch optically at speeds as low as 10 Gigabit, the aim is to avoid having to do the switching electrically with its associated cost and power consumption overhead. “We want to transfer to the optical layer the switching capability,” says Pincemin. 

While the ROADM design is part of the project’s goals, what is already envisaged is a two-stage pass-through-and-select architecture. The first stage, for coarse switching, will process the super-channels and will be followed by finer filtering to extract (drop) and insert (add) individual lower-rate tributaries.

The project started in Oct 2012 and will span three years. The resulting system testing will take place at France-Telecom Orange's Lab in Lannion, France.

 

Project players

The project’s technical leader is the Athens Institute of Technology (AIT), headed by Prof. Ioannis Tomkos, while the administrator leader is the Greek company Optronics Technologies.

Finisar will provide the two-stage optical switch while France Telecom-Orange will test the resulting ROADM and will build the multi-band OFDM transmitter and receiver to evaluate the design.

Athens Institute of Technology will work with Finisar on the technical aspects and in particular a flexible networking architecture study. The Hebrew University is working with Finisar on the design and the building of the ultra-selective adaptive optical filter, and has expertise is free-space optical systems. The Spanish firm, W-Onesys, is a system integration specialist and will also work with Finisar to integrate its wavelength-selective switch for the ROADM. Other project players include Aston University, Tyndall National Institute and the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology.

No major European system vendor is taking part in the FOX-C project.  According to Pincemin this is regrettable although he points out that the equipment players are involved in other EC FP7 projects addressing flexible networking.

He believes that their priorities are elsewhere and that the FOX-C project may be deemed as too forward looking and risky. “They want to have a clear return on investment on their research,” says Pincemin.


Transmode's evolving packet optical technology mix

  • Transmode adds MPLS-TP, Carrier Ethernet 2.0 and OTN 
  • The three protocols make packet transport more mesh-like and service-aware
  • The 'native' in Native Packet Optical 2.0 refers to native Ethernet  

Transmode has enhanced its metro and regional network equipment to address the operators' need for more efficient and cost-effective packet transport.

 

“Native Packet Optical 2.0 extends what the infrastructure can do, with operators having the option to use MPLS-TP, Carrier Ethernet 2.0 and OTN, making the network much more service-aware”

Jon Baldry, Transmode

Three new technologies have been added to create what Transmode calls Native Packet Optical 2.0 (NPO2.0). Multiprotocol Label Switching - Transport Profile (MPLS-TP) was launched in June 2012 to which has now been added the Metro Ethernet Forum's (MEF) latest Carrier Ethernet 2.0 (CE2.0) standard. The company will also have line cards that support Optical Transport Network (OTN) functionality from April 2013. 

Until several years ago operators had distinct layer 2 and layer 1 networks. “The first stage of the evolution was to collapse those two layers together,” says Jon Baldry, technical marketing director at Transmode. “NPO2.0 extends what the infrastructure can do, with operators having the option to use MPLS-TP, CE2.0 and OTN, making the network much more service-aware.”

By adopting the enhanced capabilities of NPO2.0, operators can use the same network for multiple services. “A ROADM based optical layer with native packet optical at the wavelength layer,” says Baldry. “That could be a switched video distribution network or a mobile backhaul network; doing many different things but all based on the same stuff.”

Transmode uses native Ethernet in the metro and OTN for efficient traffic aggregation. “We are using native Ethernet frames as the payload in the metro,” says Baldry. “A 10 Gig LAN PHY frame that is moved from node to node, once it is aggregated from Gigabit Ethernet to 10 Gig Ethernet; we are not doing Ethernet over SONET/SDH or Ethernet over OTN.”

 

Shown are the options as to how layer 2 services can be transported and interfaced to multiple core networks. The Ethernet muxponder supports MPLS-TP, native Ethernet and the option for OTN, all over a ROADM-based optical layer. “It is not just a case of interfacing to three core network types, we can be aware of what is going on in these networks and switch traffic between types,” says Transmode's Jon Baldry. Note: EXMP is the Ethernet muxponder. Source: Transmode.

 

Once the operator no longer needs to touch the Ethernet traffic, it is then wrapped in an OTN frame for aggregation and transport. This, says Baldry, means that unnecessary wrapping and unwrapping of OTN frames is avoided, with OTN being used only where needed.

There are economical advantages in adopting NPO2.0 for an operator delivering layer 2 services. There are also considerable operational advantages in terms of the way the network can be run using MPLS-TP, the service types offered with CE2.0, and how the metro network interworks with the core network, says Baldry.

 

MPLS-TP and Carrier Ethernet 2.0

Introducing MPLS-TP and the latest CE2.0 standard benefits transport and services in several ways, says Baldry.

MPLS-TP provides better traffic engineering as well as working practices similar to SONET/SDH that operators are familiar with. “MPLS-TP creates a transport-like way of dealing with Ethernet which is good for operators having to move from a layer-1-only world to a packet world,” says Baldry. MPLS-TP is also claimed to have a lower total cost of ownership compared to IP/MPLS when used in the metro.

The protocol is also more suited to the underlying infrastructure. “Quite a lot of the networks we are deploying have MPLS-TP running on top of a ROADM network, which is naturally mesh-like,” says Baldry.

In contrast Ethernet provides mainly point-to-point and ring-based network protection mechanisms; there is no support for mesh-based restoration. This resiliency option is supported by MPLS-TP with its support of mesh-styled ‘tunnelling’. A MPLS-TP tunnel creates a service layer path over which traffic is sent.

“You can build tunnels and restoration paths through a network in a way that is more suited to the underlying [ROADM-based] infrastructure, thereby adding resiliency when a fibre cut occurs,” says Baldry.

MPLS-TP also benefits service scalability. It is much easier to create a tunnel and its protection scheme and define the services at the end points than to create many individual circuits across the network, each time defining the route and the protection scheme.

“Because MPLS-TP is software-based, we can mix and match MPLS-TP and Ethernet on any port,” says Baldry. “You can use MPLS-TP as much or as little as you like over particular parts of the network.”

The second new technology, the MEF’s Carrier Ethernet 2.0, benefits services. The MEF has extended the range of services available, from three to eight with CE2.0, while improving class-of-service handling and management features.

Transmode says its equipment is CE2.0 compliant and suggests its systems will become CE2.0-certified in the new year.

 

Hardware

The packet-optical products of Transmode comprise the TM-Series transport platforms and Ethernet demarcation units.

The company's single and double slot cards - Ethernet muxponders – fit into the TM-Series transport platforms. The single-slot Ethernet muxponder has ten, 1 Gigabit Ethernet (GbE) and 2x10GbE interfaces while the double-slot card supports 22, 1GbE and 2x10GbE interfaces. Transmode also offers 10GbE only cards: the single slot is 4x10GbE and the double-slot has 8x10GbE interfaces. These cards are software upgradable to support MPLS-TP and the MEF’s CE2.0.

“In early 2013, we are introducing a couple of new cards – enhanced Ethernet muxponders – with more gutsy processors and optional hardware support for OTN on 10 Gigabit lines,” says Baldry.

The Ethernet demarcation unit, also known as a network interface device (NID), is a relatively small unit that resides for example at a cell site. The unit undertakes such tasks as defining an Ethernet service and performance monitoring. The box or rack mounted units have Gigabit Ethernet uplinks and interface to Transmode’s platforms.

Baldry cites the UK mobile operator, Virgin Media, which is using its platforms for mobile backhaul. Here, the Ethernet demarcation units reside at the cell sites, and at the first aggregation point the10- or 22-port GbE card is used. These Ethernet muxponder cards then feed 10GbE pipes to the 4- or 8-port 10GbE cards. 

“For the first few thousand cell sites there are hundreds of these aggregation points,” says Baldry. “And those aggregation points go back to Virgin Media’s 50-odd main sites and it is at those points we put the 8x 10GbE cards.”  Thus the traffic is backhauled from the edge of the network and aggregated before being handed over as a 10GbE circuit to Virgin Media’s various radio network controller (RNC) sites.

Transmode says that half of it customers use its existing native packet optical cards in their networks. Since MPLS-TP and CE2.0 are software options, these customers can embrace these features once they are required.

However, operators will only likely start deploying CE2.0-based services once Transmode’s offering becomes certified. 

 

Further reading:

Detailed NPO2.0 application note, click here


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