Fujitsu Proprietary and Confidential All Rights Reserved, ©2006 Fujitsu Network Communications Simplicity and Automation in Reconfigurable Optical Networks.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
M A Wajid Tanveer Infrastructure M A Wajid Tanveer
Advertisements

Next-Generation ROADMs
A Possible New Dawn for the Future GÉANT Network Architecture
©2007 Fujitsu Network Communications Trends for Research and Educational Optical Networks February 13, 2007 Tom McDermott Director, CTO Office, Fujitsu.
Towards Dynamic and Scalable Optical Networks  Brian Smith 3 rd May 2005.
SMUCSE 8344 Optical Networks Introduction. SMUCSE 8344 Why Optical? Bandwidth Low cost ($0.30/yard) Extremely low error rate ( vs for copper.
Lecture: 4 WDM Networks Design & Operation
EE 230: Optical Fiber Communication Lecture 16 From the movie Warriors of the Net Active WDM Components and Networks.
Optical communications & networking - an Overview
Reconfigurable Optical Networks using WSS based ROADMs Steven D. Robinson VP, Product Management  Five Essential Elements of the.
Reducing the Cost of Optical Networks Rob Adams, VP Product Marketing/Product Line Management.
Paweł Pilewski Pre-Sales Engineer MICROSENS GmbH & Co. KG
Lecture: 9 Elastic Optical Networks Ajmal Muhammad, Robert Forchheimer Information Coding Group ISY Department.
Chapter 4 Circuit-Switching Networks
Serge Melle VP, Technical Marketing Infinera
® IP over ???? ® GLOBECOM ‘99 December 6, ® Globecom ‘99 December 6, 1999OutlineOutline Concentrate on the network core Deficiencies with traditional.
An introduction to: WDM for IP/MPLS service provider networks Anders Enström Product Manager Transmode Systems.
Institute of Technology, Sligo Dept of Computing Semester 3, version Semester 3 Chapter 3 VLANs.
Ralph Santitoro March 25, 2010 Delivering Next-Generation Services How Packet Optical Networking and Connection-Oriented Ethernet Are Changing Metro Networks.
1 Introduction to Optical Networks. 2 Telecommunications Network Architecture.
An SAIC Company Slide 1. IP and Optical: Better Together? Ann Von Lehmen Telcordia Technologies LTS.
Workshop IP/Optical; Chitose, Japan; 9-11 July 2002 OTN Equipment and Deployment in Today’s Transport Networks Session 5 Dr. Ghani AbbasQ9/15 Rapporteur.
Optical Investment Directions Internet 2 Fall Member Meeting Rod Wilson Director, Advanced Technology Investments
LECTURE 9 CT1303 LAN. LAN DEVICES Network: Nodes: Service units: PC Interface processing Modules: it doesn’t generate data, but just it process it and.
Lighting up the metro backbone to enable advanced services
1 | Infinera Copyright 2013 © Intelligent Transport Network Manuel Morales Technical Director Infinera.
NOBEL WP5 Meeting Munich – 14 June 2005 WP5 Cost Study Group Author:Martin Wade (BT) Lead:Andrew Lord (BT) Relative Cost Analysis of Transparent & Opaque.
1 | Infinera Copyright 2013 © Infinera's Photonic Integrated Circuits (PICs) Intelligent Transport Network By Dr. Abdul Hyee.
1 Reliable high-speed Ethernet and data services delivery Per B. Hansen ADVA Optical Networking February 14, 2005.
TTM1 – 2013: Core networks and Optical Circuit Switching (OCS)
Valentino Cavalli Workshop, Bad Nauheim, June Ways and means of seeing the light Technical opportunities and problems of optical networking.
Fujitsu Proprietary and Confidential All Rights Reserved, ©2006 Fujitsu Network Communications Simplicity and Automation in Reconfigurable Optical Networks.
Lecture Note on Dense Wave Division Multiplexing (DWDM)
Optical Networks Division 1 Role of Dynamic Optical Networks in Transitioning to IP Centric Architectures Emanuel Nachum Vice President, Marketing ECI.
Reconfigurable OADMs Reconfigurable OADM (ROADM)
Metro/regional optical network architectures for Internet applications Per B. Hansen, Dir. Bus. Dev. Internet2’s Spring Member Meeting May 3, 2005.
Intorduction to Lumentis
LAN Switching and Wireless – Chapter 1
17575_03_2003 © 2003, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Optical Networking: From Photons to Packets Rajiv Ramaswami VP/GM Optical Technology Group.
Internet-2 Fall Meeting Optical Panel Tuesday September 20 th 2005
Five Essential Elements for Future Regional Optical Networks Harold Snow Sr. Systems Architect, CTO Group.
Summary - Part 2 - Objectives The purpose of this basic IP technology training is to explain video over IP network. This training describes how video can.
Internet 3 Optimizing Optical Networks with Multi-Haul Networks
Impact of Photonic Integration on Optical Services Serge Melle VP Technical Marketing, Infinera.
Chapter 3 - VLANs. VLANs Logical grouping of devices or users Configuration done at switch via software Not standardized – proprietary software from vendor.
Optical Networking Industry Perspective BoF Internet 2 Fall Meeting Zouheir Mansourati Movaz Networks.
1 | © 2015 Infinera Open SDN in Metro P-OTS Networks Sten Nordell CTO Metro Business Group
Reconfigurable Optical Mesh and Network Intelligence Nazar Neayem Alcatel-Lucent Internet 2 - Summer 2007 Joint Techs Workshop Fermilab - Batavia, IL July.
Optical + Ethernet: Converging the Transport Network An Overview.
Repeaterless DWDM – A 317km Caribbean Festoon Segment Upgrade with Terrestrial MSTP CANTO 2007 TRACK A Flamboyant South Wednesday 27 June 2007 Connecting.
© Copyright 2006 Glimmerglass. All Rights Reserved. More than just another single point of failure? Optical Switching.
Rehab AlFallaj.  Network:  Nodes: Service units: PC Interface processing Modules: it doesn’t generate data, but just it process it and do specific task.
Metro/regional optical network architectures for Internet applications Per B. Hansen, Dir. Bus. Dev. Joint Techs Workshop July 18, 2005.
Company confidential Koby Reshef. Company confidential Connect antennas to the base stations or BBUs with reduced fiber resources by factor 8 (or more)
Rob Adams, VP Product Marketing/Product Line Management From Infrastructure to Equipment to Ongoing Operations Reducing the Cost of Optical Networking.
1 Revision to DOE proposal Resource Optimization in Hybrid Core Networks with 100G Links Original submission: April 30, 2009 Date: May 4, 2009 PI: Malathi.
Photonic Components Rob Johnson Standards Engineering Manager 10th July 2002 Rob Johnson Standards Engineering Manager 10th July 2002.
Deploying 40Gbps Wavelengths and Beyond  Brian Smith.
Burst Transmission, Burst Switching and Dynamic Circuit Switching Prof. Leonid Kazovsky, PNRL Stanford presented by 리준걸 INC Lab. Seoul Nat’l.
1 | © 2016 Infinera Copyright 3D: Future Transport Network Architectures.
An evolutionary approach to G-MPLS ensuring a smooth migration of legacy networks Ben Martens Alcatel USA.
Reconfigurable Optical Mesh and Network Intelligence
CT1303 LAN Rehab AlFallaj.
The University of Adelaide, School of Computer Science
Ethernet Solutions for Optical Networks
Flexible Transport Networks
Alcatel Confidential and Proprietary
Optical communications & networking - an Overview
MCS Multicast Switch for Next Generation ROADM. Multicast optical switch ( MCS ) is based on PLC technology and MEMS technology , which can route any.
Presentation transcript:

Fujitsu Proprietary and Confidential All Rights Reserved, ©2006 Fujitsu Network Communications Simplicity and Automation in Reconfigurable Optical Networks Dr. Tom McDermott Director, CTO Office, Fujitsu

Fujitsu Proprietary and Confidential All Rights Reserved, ©2006 Fujitsu Network Communications Why Reconfigurable Optical Networks for Research and Education? Distance and capacity 10G circuits across regional distances 100Gb/s to Tb/s of capacity Protocol transparency Ethernet, SONET, Fiber Channel Protocols Lowest latency possible Automation Rapid circuit establishment and re-arrangement University Research Laboratory Research Laboratory Radio Astronomy High Speed Grid Computing Uncompressed HD Video Antenna Site

Fujitsu Proprietary and Confidential All Rights Reserved, ©2006 Fujitsu Network Communications Optical Networking Evolution WDM ROADM WDM ROADM 0-300km 2.5G - 160G 0-600km 10G-400G km 10G - 1.6T Simplicity Flexibility/ Distance Capacity Single Ring Topologies Reconfigurable wavelength assignment Automatic power balancing Operational ease equivalent to SONET ADMs Arbitrary topologies Dynamic wavelength assignment Automatic power balancing Universal amplifiers Tunable components xWDM access integration Sub-wavelength integration Simpler than SONET Operations Point to Point topologies Static wavelength assignment Manual power adjustments Heavy operational burden

Fujitsu Proprietary and Confidential All Rights Reserved, ©2006 Fujitsu Network Communications Optical Hubbing: Dynamic Networking Across any Topology Multiple, small rings Additional Fiber pairs required Costly OEO between rings Manual Fibering Between Rings Non-integrated spurs Single growable structure Only 1 fiber pair between any two sites No OEO between rings Automated connectivity between rings Integrated spurs 2 pairs ROADM Two-degree nodes Mixed two degree and multi-degree nodes 1 pair

Fujitsu Proprietary and Confidential All Rights Reserved, ©2006 Fujitsu Network Communications Optical Hubbing – Dynamic Assignment vs. Manual Patching Eliminates transponders Eliminates NE’s Single TID 10x reduction in fibering Automatic reconfiguration Fibering is independent of Wavelength routing Wavelength assignment Wavelength quantity Allows multiple network deployment scenarios Number of Fibers to Interconnect Rings 234 Number of Rings per Hub Site Optical Hubbing Reduces Fibering Optical Hub Back to Back DWDM Back to Back Optical Hubbing ROADM Fibering depends directly on wavelength assignment 100’s of jumpers for a large system Fibering done day one. Wavelengths assigned dynamically 10’s of jumpers for a large system

Fujitsu Proprietary and Confidential All Rights Reserved, ©2006 Fujitsu Network Communications Technology Breakthrough – Wavelength Selective Switch (WSS) Single, integrated device Replaces optical demultiplexer, multiplexer and optical switches Removes unnecessary loss on thru path -> more nodes, more reach, more savings Any wavelength or any group of wavelengths to any/multiple ports Enables optical hubbing and arbitrary network topologies DEMUX MUXSwitch

Fujitsu Proprietary and Confidential All Rights Reserved, ©2006 Fujitsu Network Communications Optical Fabric Technology Evolution N port DWDM device Switches individual Wavelengths between DWDM ports Colorless operation Low through loss – large networks, many nodes Can be mixed with 2- degree fabrics on a network basis 2 port DWDM device Blocks individual wavelengths on through path Other components perform wavelength add/drop Used in Broadcast and Select Architectures 1xN WSS WaveBlocker 2 port DWDM + N wavelength port device Switches individual wavelengths to single client ports Low through loss – large networks, many nodes Complex cascading required for multi-degree solutions Integrated PLC  West East 2-degree solution West EastWest East Client ports North South Client Multi-degree solution Waveblocker iPLCWavelength Selective Switch

Fujitsu Proprietary and Confidential All Rights Reserved, ©2006 Fujitsu Network Communications Remote Touchless Service Activation – Revolutionizes Service Velocity First-generation DWDM Multiple site visits Manual patching for through circuits Manual power balancing Limited service velocity Touchless provisioning Site visits at service edge only Automated SONET & wavelength provisioning Operational simplicity Quantum leap in service velocity Site visits only for service card installation. Fujitsu-pioneered technology 2 ROADM “In one small region, we would have to do 30,000 individual fiber jobs without using ROADMs,” “… transition to Ethernet becomes easier with a ROADM infrastructure because we can react quickly.” G. Keith Cambron, SVP of AT&T labs at OFC 2006.

Fujitsu Proprietary and Confidential All Rights Reserved, ©2006 Fujitsu Network Communications Automatic Power Balancing Maintains equal channel output power in face of wavelength assignment/rearrangement/network failure Enables software provisionable wavelength add/drop/thru and reconfigure No manual adjustments anywhere All wavelength power levels equal Fujitsu patented technology Fujitsu Technology

Fujitsu Proprietary and Confidential All Rights Reserved, ©2006 Fujitsu Network Communications Automating Control and Management GMPLS enabled topology discovery Populates EMS database for assured inventory tracking Verifies fiber connectivity Craft user sees whole network easily Circuit provisioning options Point and click from EMS Activated from EMS with explicit route – signaled using GMPLS Activated from EMS, computed route using GMPLS Circuit tracking with GMPLS Network element layer understands end to end circuit view Simplifies troubleshooting and alarm correlation ROADM

Fujitsu Proprietary and Confidential All Rights Reserved, ©2006 Fujitsu Network Communications Summary Optical Networking provides substantial value for R&E applications Transparency, distance, capacity, automation Optical networking surpasses the simplicity of SONET networking Elimination of manual adjustments Zero-lambda turnup In-service wavelength additions to spans, rings In-service addition of nodes to rings In-service addition of rings and spurs to networks Network automation uniquely enabled by Optical Hubbing Auto-adjusting amplifiers Tunable components GMPLS control plane and EMS

Fujitsu Proprietary and Confidential All Rights Reserved, ©2006 Fujitsu Network Communications

FLASHWAVE ® 7500 ROADM One Platform - Three Powerful Configurations FLASHWAVE 7500 core 40 channels WSS ROADM, 8-degree Hubbing Best-in-Class transmission performance <= 24 nodes, <= 1000 km ring size, without OEO Active, non-banded Dynamic, self-tuning optical network Common Transponders and Software Perfect for metro & regional applications FLASHWAVE 7500 small system 32 Channel FOADM and ROADM 19” shelf; 19” & 23” rack mounted option <= 16 nodes, 800km ring size without OEO Active, non-banded, self-tuning Common Transponders and Software Compact, low cost Metro/Edge applications FLASHWAVE 7500 extension system Lower-cost, smaller capacity FLASHWAVE 7500 Extension Perfect for Pt - Pt spurs or extensions Combine with Passive Coupler and Amp where needed Common Optical Line Cards (ie Transponders) and OLC shelf Fully featured Cost optimized

Fujitsu Proprietary and Confidential All Rights Reserved, ©2006 Fujitsu Network Communications FLASHWAVE ® Easy Operations Throughout Ownership Lifecycle Design and engineering Engineer the network once! Grow subtended rings/arcs as needed with no up-front investment or back-end penalty No manual adjustments No hardware changeouts No wavelength restrictions Installation and turn-up Cabling wizard Auto in-service plug-in units No manual attenuators to adjust Patented zero-lambda turn-up Auto provisioning of network-side through paths and optical supervisory channel (OSC)

Fujitsu Proprietary and Confidential All Rights Reserved, ©2006 Fujitsu Network Communications FLASHWAVE ® Easy Operations Throughout Ownership Lifecycle Provisioning and reconfiguration No readjustment of Patented, Self- Tuning amplifiers. Add circuits like you do with SONET Self-tuning amplifiers Add/remove lambdas with no power balancing or truck rolls Add/remove nodes in-service Add rings/arcs to hub nodes in service Telcordia™ flow-through NETSMART 1500 EMS point and click A-Z provisioning GMPLS Control Plane Signaled provisioning Full-band tunable transponders allow wavelength selection after card installation