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Equipments
1. Introduction……………………………………………………………..3
2. SDH Technology………………………………………………………..4
2.1 Diagram for STM-1 frame structure……………………...……….6
2.2 Diagram for Synchronous Network Components………………....7
2.3 SDH/SONET BIT RATES………………………………………...8
2.4 Network Design……………………………………………………9
2.5 Introduction strategy for SDH…………………………………….10
2.6 Future of SDH……………………………………………………..10
2.7 Diagram for Automatic Protection Switching (APS)
(Line Protection)…………………………......................................11
2.8 Diagram for Automatic Protection Switching (APS)
(Unidirectional Rings)…………………………………………….12
2.9 Diagram for Automatic Protection Switching (APS)
(BI-Directional Rings)……………………………………….........13
3. E-Carrier………………………………………………………………...14
3.1 E1………………………………………………………………….14
3.2 Hierarchy Levels…………………………………………………..15
4. Multiplexing……………………………………………………………..16
4.1 Categories of Multiplexing………………………………………...16
4.2 Diagram for Time Division Multiplexing………………………... 17
4.3 Diagram for Wavelength Division Multiplexing…………………. 17
4.4 CWDM v/s DWDM………………………………………………. 18
5. Sampling(Signal Processing)…………………………………………… 19
6. Media Connectivity……………………………………………………... 20
6.1 Electrical………………………………………………………….. 20
6.2 Optical Fiber……………………………………………………… 21
6.3 Design……………………………………………………………. .22
6.4 Size Matters…………………………………………………….… 22
6.5 Ethernet…………………………………………………………… 23
6.6 Cabling……………………………………………………………. 23
7. Multiplexer/Demultiplexer………………………………………….….. 25
7.1 XDM-100………………………………………………………… 25
7.2 XDM-1000……………………………………………………….. 26
7.3 XDM-2000……………………………………………………….. 27
7.4 BG-20B/20E……………………………………………………... 28
8. Carrier Ethernet Switch/Router………………………………………... 30
INTRODUCTION
The original telecommunication system was developed for PSTN (Public Switch
Telephone Network) for voice communications. But now communication networks
include all types of voice, video and data communication over copper wire, optical fibers
and wireless medium.
With the inception of Internet, increasingly numbers of computer networks are now
connected via the Internet. So now the concept of telecommunication system has
increased complexity significantly. These systems can be divided into different types by
the information they carry. With this kind of categorization, communication systems can
be categorized as long-haul point-to-point links, distribution networks, MAN (metro area
network) and WAN (wide area network).
Computers with modems can transmit and receive digital data via the PSTN network
with enhanced data services such as DSL.
2. Cable TV systems
CATV is still the biggest player for television broadcasting. But now they are facing
competitions from Satellite, DSL video on demand. CATV providers also entered into
data communication market and VoIP services.
3. Data Networks
With modern telecommunication systems, all information are transmitted in digital form.
These digital networks can be categorized based on network topology, switching
technology and the communication protocols.
Both SDH and SONET are widely used today. SONET in the U.S. and Canada and SDH
in the rest of the world. Although the SONET standards were developed before SDH,
their relative penetrations in the worldwide market dictate that SONET is considered the
variation.
Synchronous networking differs from PDH in that the exact rates that are used to
transport the data are tightly synchronized across the entire network, using atomic clocks.
This synchronization system allows entire inter-country networks to operate
synchronously, greatly reducing the amount of buffering required between elements in
the network.
Both SONET and SDH can be used to encapsulate earlier digital transmission standards,
such as the PDH standard, or used directly to support either Asynchronous Transfer
Mode (ATM) or so-called Packet over SONET/SDH (POS) networking. As such, it is
inaccurate to think of SDH or SONET as communications protocols in and of
themselves, but rather as generic and all-purpose transport containers for moving both
voice and data. The basic format of an SDH signal allows it to carry many different
services in its Virtual Container (VC) because it is bandwidth-flexible.
The basic unit of transmission
The basic unit of framing in SDH is a STM-1 (Synchronous Transport Module level - 1),
which operates at 155.52 Mbit/s. SONET refers to this basic unit as an STS-3c
(Synchronous Transport Signal - 3, concatenated), but its high-level functionality, frame
size, and bit-rate are the same as STM-1.
SDH frame
The STM-1 (Synchronous Transport Module level - 1) frame is the basic transmission
format for SDH or the fundamental frame or the first level of the synchronous digital
hierarchy. The STM-1 frame is transmitted in exactly 125 microseconds, therefore there
are 8000 frames per second on a fiber-optic circuit designated OC-3 (optical carrier
three). The STM-1 frame consists of overhead and pointers plus information payload.
The first 9 columns of each frame make up the Section Overhead and Administrative
Unit Pointers, and the last 261 columns make up the Information Payload. The pointers
(H1, H2, H3 bytes) identify Administrative Units (AU) within the information payload.
The Section overhead of an STM-1 signal (SOH) is divided into two parts: the
Regenerator Section Overhead (RSOH) and the Multiplex Section Overhead (MSOH).
The overheads contain information from the system itself, which is used for a wide range
of management functions, such as monitoring transmission quality, detecting failures,
managing alarms, data communication channels, service channels, etc.
1 octet = 8 bit
Total content : 9 x 270 octets = 2430 octets
Network Topology
The flexibility of SDH can be used to best advantage by introducing a new network
topology. Traditional networks make use of mesh and hub (i.e., star) arrangements, but
SDH, with the help of DXCs and hub multiplexers, allows these to be used in a much
more comprehensive way. SDH also enables these arrangements to be combined with
rings and chains of ADMs to improve flexibility and reliability across the core and access
areas of a network. Figure 4 shows the basic fragments of network topology that can be
combined.
Rings could supply improved services to a high-density business area, a major science
park, or a conference/exhibition center. In addition, they may displace multiple local
exchanges by multiplexers and fiber connections to a single major exchange for lower
costs.
Depending on the regulatory position and the relative age and demands of different parts
of an operator's network, SDH may be introduced first for the following reasons:
to give broadband and flexible access to customers over optical fibers where
provision of copper pairs is inadequate for the demand, such as by introducing
IDLC–type systems (integrated digital loop carrier using remote multiplexers
connected to a service switch via optical fibers)
to give time-switched leased lines, other services, and improved utilization of the
network or to maximize the availability of specific services; these applications
would use ADMs, hubs, or low-order DXC–types such as 4/1 or 1/1
Future of SDH
Almost all new fiber-transmission systems now being installed in public networks use
SDH or SONET. They are expected to dominate transmission for decades to come, just
as their predecessor PDH has dominated transmission for more than 20 years (and still
does in terms of total systems installed). Bit rates in long-haul systems are expected to
rise to 40 Gbps soon after the year 2000, at the same time as systems of 155 Mbps and
below penetrate more deeply into access networks.
AUTOMATIC PROTECTION SWITCHING (APS)
LINE PROTECTION
UNIDIRECTIONAL RINGS
BI-DIRECTIONAL RINGS
E-CARRIER
The E-carrier standards form part of the Plesiochronous Digital Hierarchy (PDH) where
groups of E1 circuits may be bundled onto higher capacity E3 links between telephone
exchanges or countries. This allows a network operator to provide a private end-to-end
E1 circuit between customers in different countries that share single high capacity links
in between.
In practice, only E1 (30 circuit) and E3 (480 circuit) versions are used. Physically E1 is
transmitted as 32 timeslots and E3 512 timeslots, but one is used for framing and
typically one allocated for signalling call setup and tear down. Unlike Internet data
services, E-carrier systems permanently allocate capacity for a voice call for its entire
duration. This ensures high call quality because the transmission arrives with the same
short delay (Latency) and capacity at all times.
E1 circuits are very common in most telephone exchanges and are used to connect to
medium and large companies, to remote exchanges and in many cases between
exchanges. E3 lines are used between exchanges, operators and/or countries, and have a
transmission speed of 34.368 Mbit/s.
E1
An E1 link operates over two separate sets of wires, usually twisted pair cable. A
nominal 3 Volt peak signal is encoded with pulses using a method that avoids long
periods without polarity changes. The line data rate is 2.048 Mbit/s (full duplex, i.e.
2.048 Mbit/s downstream and 2.048 Mbit/s upstream) which is split into 32 timeslots,
each being allocated 8 bits in turn. Thus each timeslot sends and receives an 8-bit sample
8000 times per second (8 x 8000 x 32 = 2,048,000). This is ideal for voice telephone calls
where the voice is sampled into an 8 bit number at that data rate and reconstructed at the
other end. The timeslots are numbered from 0 to 31.
One timeslot (TS0) is reserved for framing purposes, and alternately transmits a fixed
pattern. This allows the receiver to lock onto the start of each frame and match up each
channel in turn. The standards allow for a full Cyclic Redundancy Check to be performed
across all bits transmitted in each frame, to detect if the circuit is losing bits
(information), but this is not always used. Unlike the earlier T-carrier systems developed
in North America, all 8 bits of each sample are available for each call. This allows the E1
systems to be used equally well for circuit switch data calls, without risking the loss of
any information.
Hierarchy levels
The PDH based on the E0 signal rate is designed so that each higher level can multiplex a
set of lower level signals. Framed E1 is designed to carry 30 E0 data channels + 1
signalling channel, all other levels are designed to carry 4 signals from the level below.
Because of the necessity for overhead bits, and justification bits to account for rate
differences between sections of the network, each subsequent level has a capacity greater
than would be expected from simply multiplying the lower level signal rate (so for
example E2 is 8.448 Mbit/s and not 8.192 Mbit/s as one might expect when multiplying
the E1 rate by 4).
Note, because bit interleaving is used, it is very difficult to demultiplex low level
tributaries directly, requiring equipment to individually demultiplex every single level
down to the one that is required.
Signal Rate
E0 64 kbit/s
E1 2.048 Mbit/s
E2 8.448 Mbit/s
E3 34.368 Mbit/s
E4 139.264 Mbit/s
MULTIPLEXING
A device that performs the multiplexing is called a multiplexer (MUX), and a device that
performs the reverse process is called a demultiplexer (DEMUX).
Inverse multiplexing (IMUX) has the opposite aim as multiplexing, namely to break one
data stream into several streams, transfer them simultaneously over several
communication channels, and recreate the original data stream.
Categories of multiplexing
The two most basic forms of multiplexing are time-division multiplexing (TDM) and
frequency-division multiplexing (FDM), both either in analog or digital form. FDM
requires modulation of each signal.
Variable bit rate digital bit streams may be transferred efficiently over a fixed bandwidth
channel by means of statistical multiplexing, for example packet mode communication.
Packet mode communication is an asynchronous mode time-domain multiplexing, which
resembles but should not be considered as time-division multiplexing.
Digital bit streams can be transferred over an analog channel by means of code-division
multiplexing (CDM) techniques such as frequency-hopping spread spectrum (FHSS) and
direct-sequence spread spectrum (DSSS).
Theory
Let x(t) be a continuous signal which is to be sampled, and that sampling is performed by
measuring the value of the continuous signal every T seconds, which is called the
sampling interval. Thus, the sampled signal x[n] given by:
The sampling frequency or sampling rate fs is defined as the number of samples obtained
in one second, or fs = 1/T. The sampling rate is measured in hertz or in samples per
second.
We can now ask: under what circumstances is it possible to reconstruct the original signal
completely and exactly (perfect reconstruction)?
The frequency equal to one-half of the sampling rate is therefore a bound on the highest
frequency that can be unambiguously represented by the sampled signal. This frequency
(half the sampling rate) is called the Nyquist frequency of the sampling system.
Frequencies above the Nyquist frequency fN can be observed in the sampled signal, but
their frequency is ambiguous. That is, a frequency component with frequency f cannot be
distinguished from other components with frequencies NfN + f and NfN – f for nonzero
integers N. This ambiguity is called aliasing. To handle this problem as gracefully as
possible, most analog signals are filtered with an anti-aliasing filter.
MEDIA CONNECTIVITY
Electrical
All power line communications systems operate by impressing a modulated carrier signal
on the wiring system. Different types of powerline communications use different
frequency bands, depending on the signal transmission characteristics of the power
wiring used. Since the power wiring system was originally intended for transmission of
AC power, in conventional use, the power wire circuits have only a limited ability to
carry higher frequencies. The propagation problem is a limiting factor for each type of
power line communications. A new discovery called E-Line that allows a single power
conductor on an overhead power line to operate as a waveguide to provide low
attenuation propagation of RF through microwave energy lines while providing
information rate of multiple Gbps is an exception to this limitation.
Data rates over a power line communication system vary widely. Low-frequency (about
100-200 kHz) carriers impressed on high-voltage transmission lines may carry one or
two analog voice circuits, or telemetry and control circuits with an equivalent data rate of
a few hundred bits per second; however, these circuits may be many miles long. Higher
data rates generally imply shorter ranges; a local area network operating at millions of
bits per second may only cover one floor of an office building, but eliminates installation
of dedic
The first solution to these problems is to keep cable lengths short, since pick up and
transmission are essentially proportional to the length of the cable. The second solution is
to route cables away from trouble. Beyond this, there are particular cable designs that
minimise electromagnetic pickup and transmission. Three of the principal design
techniques are shielding, coaxial geometry, and twisted-pair geometry.
Coaxial design helps to further reduce low-frequency magnetic transmission and pickup.
In this design the foil or mesh shield is perfectly tubular – ie., with a circular cross
section – and the inner conductor (there can only be one) is situated exactly at its centre.
This causes the voltages induced by a magnetic field between the shield and the core
conductor to consist of two nearly equal magnitudes which cancel each other.
Optical fiber
An optical fiber (or fibre) is a glass or plastic fiber that carries light along its length.
Fiber optics is the overlap of applied science and engineering concerned with the design
and application of optical fibers. Optical fibers are widely used in fiber-optic
communications, which permits transmission over longer distances and at higher
bandwidths (data rates) than other forms of communications. Fibers are used instead of
metal wires because signals travel along them with less loss, and they are also immune to
electromagnetic interference. Fibers are also used for illumination, and are wrapped in
bundles so they can be used to carry images, thus allowing viewing in tight spaces.
Specially designed fibers are used for a variety of other applications, including sensors
and fiber lasers.
Light is kept in the core of the optical fiber by total internal reflection. This causes the
fiber to act as a waveguide. Fibers which support many propagation paths or transverse
modes are called multi-mode fibers (MMF), while those which can only support a single
mode are called single-mode fibers (SMF). Multi-mode fibers generally have a larger
core diameter, and are used for short-distance communication links and for applications
where high power must be transmitted. Single-mode fibers are used for most
communication links longer than 550 metres (1,800 ft).
The process of communicating using fiber-optics involves the following basic steps:
Creating the optical signal involving the use of a transmitter, relaying the signal along the
fiber, ensuring that the signal does not become too distorted or weak, receiving the
optical signal, and converting it into an electrical signal
Design
In practical fibers, the cladding is usually coated with a tough resin buffer layer, which
may be further surrounded by a jacket layer, usually plastic. These layers add strength to
the fiber but do not contribute to its optical wave guide properties. Rigid fiber assemblies
sometimes put light-absorbing ("dark") glass between the fibers, to prevent light that
leaks out of one fiber from entering another. This reduces cross-talk between the fibers,
or reduces flare in fiber bundle imaging applications.[1]
Size Matters
Fiber, as we said, comes in two types, singlemode and multimode. Except for fibers used
in specialty applications, singlemode fiber can be considered as one size and type. If you
deal with long haul telecom or submarine cables, you may have to work with specialty
singlemode fibers.
Multimode fibers originally came in several sizes, optimized for various networks and
sources, but the data industry standardized on 62.5 core fiber in the mid-80s (62.5/125
fiber has a 62.5 micron core and a 125 micron cladding.) Recently, as gigabit and 10
gigabit networks have become widely used, an old fiber has been revived. The 50/125
fiber was used from the late 70s with lasers for telecom applications before singlemode
fiber became available. It offers higher bandwidth with the laser sources used in the
gigabit LANs and can go longer distances. While it still represents a smaller volume than
62.5/125, it is growing.
Ethernet
Ethernet over twisted pair refers to the use of cables that contain insulated copper wires
twisted together in pairs for the physical layer of an Ethernet network—that is, a network
in which the Ethernet protocol provides the data link layer. Other Ethernet cable
standards use coaxial cable or optical fiber. There are several different standards for this
copper-based physical medium. The most widely used are 10BASE-T, 100BASE-TX,
and 1000BASE-T (Gigabit Ethernet), running at 10 Mbit/s, 100 Mbit/s (also Mbps or
Mbs-1), and 1000 Mbit/s (1 Gbit/s) respectively. These three standards all use the same
connectors. Higher speed implementations nearly always support the lower speeds as
well, so that in most cases different generations of equipment can be freely mixed. They
use 8 position modular connectors, usually called RJ45 in the context of Ethernet over
twisted pair. The cables usually used are four-pair or above twisted pair cable. Each of
the three standards support both full-duplex and half-duplex communication. According
to the standards, they all operate over distances of up to 100 meters.
The common names for the standards derive from aspects of the physical media. The
number refers to the theoretical maximum transmission speed in megabits per second
(Mbit/s). The BASE is short for baseband, meaning that there is no frequency-division
multiplexing (FDM) or other frequency shifting modulation in use; each signal has full
control of wire, on a single frequency. The T designates twisted pair cable, where the pair
of wires for each signal is twisted together to reduce radio frequency interference and
crosstalk between pairs (FEXT and NEXT). Where there are several standards for the
same transmission speed, they are distinguished by a letter or digit following the T, such
as TX. Some higher-speed standards use coaxial cable, designated by CX.
Cabling
Twisted-pair Ethernet standards are such that the majority of cables can be wired
"straight-through" (pin 1 to pin 1, pin 2 to pin 2 and so on), but others may need to be
wired in the "crossover" form (receive to transmit and transmit to receive).
It is conventional to wire cables for 10 or 100 Mbit/s Ethernet to either the T568A or
T568B standards. Since these standards differ only in that they swap the positions of the
two pairs used for transmitting and receiving (TX/RX), a cable with TIA-568A wiring at
one end and TIA-568B wiring at the other is referred to as a crossover cable. The terms
used in the explanations of the 568 standards, tip and ring, refer to older communication
technologies, and equate to the positive and negative parts of the connections.
100BASE-TX follows the same wiring patterns as 10BASE-T but is more sensitive to
wire quality and length, due to the higher bit rates.
1000BASE-T uses all four pairs bi-directionally and the standard includes auto MDI-X;
however, implementation is optional. With the way that 1000BASE-T implements
signaling, how the cable is wired is immaterial in actual usage. The standard on copper
twisted pair is IEEE 802.3ab for Cat 5e UTP, or 4D-PAM5; four dimensions using PAM
(pulse amplitude modulation) with five voltages, −2 V, −1 V, 0 V, +1 V, and +2 V [2]
While +2 V to −2 V voltage may appear at the pins of the line driver, the voltage on the
cable is nominally +1 V, +0.5 V, 0 V, −0.5 V and −1 V[3].
100BASE-TX follows the same wiring patterns as 10BASE-T but is more sensitive to
wire quality and length, due to the higher bit rates.
1000BASE-T uses all four pairs bi-directionally and the standard includes auto MDI-X;
however, implementation is optional. With the way that 1000BASE-T implements
signaling, how the cable is wired is immaterial in actual usage. The standard on copper
twisted pair is IEEE 802.3ab for Cat 5e UTP, or 4D-PAM5; four dimensions using PAM
(pulse amplitude modulation) with five voltages, −2 V, −1 V, 0 V, +1 V, and +2 V [2]
While +2 V to −2 V voltage may appear at the pins of the line driver, the voltage on the
cable is nominally +1 V, +0.5 V, 0 V, −0.5 V and −1 V[3].
Multiplexer/Demultiplexer
In electronics, a multiplexer or mux (occasionally the term muldex or muldem[1] is also
found, for a combination multiplexer-demultiplexer) is a device that performs
multiplexing; it selects one of many analog or digital input signals and forwards the
selected input into a single line. A multiplexer of 2 n inputs has n select bits, which are
used to select which input line to send to the output.
An electronic multiplexer makes it possible for several signals to share one device or
resource, for example one A/D converter or one communication line, instead of having
one device per input signal. In electronics, a demultiplexer (or demux) is a device
taking a single input signal and selecting one of many data-output-lines, which is
connected to the single input. A multiplexer is often used with a complementary
demultiplexer on the receiving end.
XDM-100
An economical, highly-scalable Metro Access multiservice aggregation platform with
add-on CWDM capability. Ideal for developing organizations, this modular shelf accepts
a large variety of interfaces, supports a wide range of redundant/non-redundant
configurations and covers E1/DS-3 to STM-16/OC-48 It supports Carrier Class Ethernet
and CWDM.
XDM-100 works in concert with the entire ECI portfolio to provide a complete solution
tied together by ECI's 1Net architectural framework
Features
Full non-blocking 30 Gbps matrix
Supports 10/100BaseT and Gigabit Ethernet switching for data services
Redundant multiservice ADM 4/16
Scalable STM4/16 traffic aggregation; multi-ring, point-2-point topology
High scalability and modularity, versatility of interfaces and services
Benefits
Cost-effective pay-as-you-grow solution for access networks
Fully redundant architecture
Supports extended ambient temperature ranges
XDM-1000
The XDM®-1000 is a future-proof converged multiservice optical platform optimized for
metro and regional networks. The XDM-1000 offers unique convergence of
SDH/SONET, TDM/ATM, Carrier Ethernet/MPLS, and all-range WDM/OTN ROADM
on a single platform, leading the P-OTS’ (Packet Optical Transport System) market
segment. With a 100% non-blocking E1 to STM-64 switching matrix of 120 Gbps, and a
variety of interfaces from E1 through STM-1/4/16/64 and FE/GE/10 GE up to 40/80
DWDM channels, it fits a broad range of applications and services, including mobile
backhaul, business, MSOs, CoCs, and residential triple play. With extensive support of
both data (L1, L2, EoS, MPLS) and optics (C/DWDM, WSS ROADM), it supports a
smooth migration path to packets-based networks.
FEATURES
Unique convergence of SDH/SONET, TDM/ATM, Carrier Ethernet/MPLS and
all-range WDM/OTN ROADM on a single platform – leading the P-OTS (Packet
Optical Transport System) platform
Hybrid and scalable platform for services – PDH (E1, E3, DS-3), SDH/SONET
(STM-1/4/16/64/OC-3/12/48/192), data (ATM, FE/GE (Ethernet L1, L2, MPLS))
Advanced optics – In-service scalability to handle terabit traffic via C/DWDM
and support state of the art 10 degree ROADM for pure optical networks
Full non-blocking 120 Gbps LO/HO matrix, from E1 to STM-64
Topology agnostic – enabling mesh, ring, multi-ring, star, and point-to-point
topologies
Advanced Ethernet services – E-Line (point-to-point), E-LAN (multipoint-to-
multipoint), E-Tree (rooted-multipoint)
ASON/GMPLS support
Build as you grow® modular design
BENEFITS
Massive traffic concentrator
Leverages existing infrastructure to deliver new services
Reduces the risks associated with rolling out new services
Smooth migration to carrier class Ethernet services over optical transport
networks
Uses same HW among various family members
Carrier class protection, restoration, and resiliency
XDM-2000
Optimized for pure DWDM and converged optical applications, the XDM-2000 is
designed for metro and metro-regional cores. A high density DWDM platform providing
intelligent sublambda grooming and optimum wavelength utilization, transporting up to
1.6 Tbps and integrating the most advanced optical units with varied interfaces and an
ultra high-capacity matrix.
XDM-2000 works in concert with the entire ECI portfolio to provide a complete solution
tied together by ECI's 1Net architectural framework
Features
Delivers all services from 50 Mbps to 10 Gbps to 80 DWDM channels
Full non-blocking 120 Gbps matrix, from E-1 to STM-64
Compact size: 19" or 23" rack mounting
Benefits
BG-20B/20E
The BG-20/20E is a unique, fully integrated SDH multiplexer designed for access
networks and enterprise CPEs, supporting a wide-ranging and attractive combination of
cost-effective high-performance Carrier-Class Ethernet , SDH, PDH, and legacy PCM
services. Its scalable architecture implements network expansion, helping provide new
services while tailoring solutions to the needs of medium and large enterprises.
Features
Multiple Cross-connect (DXC 1/0) capabilities
DS0 to full SDH 4/3/1 with a rich mix of low bitrate interfaces
Supports Carrier Class Ethernet Services with Ethernet L1 and L2 and MPLS-
based services
SDH reliability, security, and management of data services
Multiple PCM interfaces: POTS, VF interfaces, V24, V35/V11, Ethernet over
PDH (NxE1), Nx64K
Benefits
Profit booster with tiered configurable services over existing infrastructure
Supports a range of services from POTS to carrier class Ethernet
Seamless bandwidth scalability from STM-1 to STM-4
Huge savings via minimal power usage, reduced footprint, remote management
Carrier Ethernet Switch/Router
An evolution is underway in today's metro networks. Market trends are driving a
transition from traditional services to new services that offer lower-cost bandwidth and
greater connectivity. As such, Ethernet - with its familiarity, simplicity, low cost and
greater economies of scale - has become the preferred delivery platform for next-
generation services. However, current Ethernet switch/routers often lack the
performance, reliability, and density required in carrier environments.
With its 9000 Family of Carrier Ethernet switch/routers, ECI combines its expertise in
metro transport with advanced IP/MPLS software to deliver a Carrier Ethernet solution
with the manageability, reliability, and deterministic performance that carriers require.
With ECI's 9000 Family, carriers now have a clear path for transforming their metro
infrastructure into a cost-efficient packet-optical network that efficiently supports any
Ethernet or IP service with same reliability and performance characteristics found in
transport networks. The 9000 Family enables operators to converge disparate networks
and collapse layers of complexity, reducing costs and streamlining service delivery.
The 9000 Family provides an end-to-end Carrier Ethernet metro solution from customer
premises to the metro core via two series of products - the 9700 and the 9200. Both series
are integrated with LightSoft, ECI's network multilayer management system for TDM,
packet, and optical networks, and have been tested and certified by the Metro Ethernet
Forum (MEF) to meet MEF standards for service delivery over Gigabit Ethernet and 10
Gigabit Ethernet interfaces.
Benefits: