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Issues of the Synchronous Digital Hierarchy
Twelfth Meeting
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Network Design Elements
Multiplexer Translates STM-1 signals into STM-4, STM-16 or STM-64. Demultiplexes in the opposite direction of transmission. Regenerators Rregenerates a perfectly formed signal Add/drop multiplexers (ADMs) Carries out a switching function with pointer mechanism Drop out’ a VC which can then be replaced (add) with another VC. Cross-connects or Digital Cross Connecs (DXCs) Has both SDH and PDH interfaces, Has large number of switching connections (cross-connects) between these interfaces. Allow large numbers of paths to be interconnected at points of high traffic density.
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SDH Network Structure
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Vertical Add Drop Multiplexer (ADM)
ADMs are installed between STM-1 terminal multiplexers VCs can be dropped out of the STM-1 frame at each of the intermediate (add/drop) nodes. (ADMs) Similarly, other VCs can be added in their place; The total capacity of the path at any point cannot be greater than the STM-1 payload VC-12 can only be added into a vacant position.
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Ring Add Drop Multiplexer (ADM)
Joining the two terminal multiplexers together, Then replace them with ADMs. Access to and from the ring is via the add/drop capability of each ADM Example: A and C are connected by fibre-optic cables. Traffic is duplicated and passes around the entire ring, Traffic travels in opposite directions Switching position at A and C only determines that the traffic is added and dropped from the ring.
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Restoring traffic in a Ring ADMs
No manual intervention, in the event of a failure. Full restoration in a few milliseconds Referred to as self-healing. Example: The event of a break in the ring. Immediate switching actions at C passes the traffic to the standby fibre. Why C The closest node the to the failure
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Network Architecture Layer 1 Layer 2 Layer 3
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Synchronization Two SDH networks, A and B
Each network is running a separate clock An STM-1 line system connecting the two are shown below.
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Synchronization: Clock Drift
a) The original signal generated in using the clock of network A b) The same signal, that is produced by network A, generated using the clock of network B This clock drifting cause corruption of data Buffers are used at the interface to control the differences.
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Synchronization: Buffer
A buffer is a storage device used in time division multiplexing. Data is ‘written’ into a buffer using clock A Data is ‘read out’ using clock B Buffer size is chosen based timing variations between reading and writing. When will the buffer empty When clock B is faster than A.
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Primary Referencing Clock
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Pointer Operation – Controlled Slips
The timing of the STM-4 frame is generated by byte-interleaving four VC-4s, Each VC-4 is contained within an STM-1 frame Example, (a), (b) and (c) – originate from same station as the STM-4; (d) comes into the station on an STM-1 line system. STM-4 will drift apart from the STM-1 signal The buffer approaches its lower limit STM-4 makes a pointer adjustment to the location of VC-4(d). In frame n + 1 This is referred to as wander
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Jitter Jitter is a term used to describe the phase variation between signals Reference signal is a bit-stream to be transmitted using a clock pulse Jittered signal is the same bit-stream after it has been transported across an SDH network with the following difference: It has pulses that do not line up with the clock. If this clock is used, it will read a ‘0’ and not a ‘1’ as transmitted
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Jitter: De-synchronizer
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Bit Error Rate (BER) transmission A sequence of 100 bits
There are two bits in error at the end. BER = 2 × 10-2. Failure if BER >10-3 Acceptable if 10-6 < BER < 10-3 Normal if BER <10-6
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Bit-Interleaved parity (BIP)
The frame is divided into blocks of bits Organize them in a columns Each column has an extra bit added (even parity of odd parity) Perform a parity check
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Memorize Error performance
Errored block (EB) – a block in which one or more bits are in error. Errored second (ES) – a 1 second period with one or more errored blocks (includes severely errored seconds during available time). Severely errored second (SES) – a 1 second period that contains 30% or more errored blocks . Background block error (BBE) – an EB in available time not occurring as part of an SES. ES ratio (ESR) – the ratio of ES to total seconds in available time. SES ratio (SESR) – the ratio of SES to total seconds in available time. BBE ratio (BBER) – the ratio of EB to total blocks, excluding SES and unavailable time. Unavailable time – unavailable time commences at the start of a block of ten consecutive SESs, and finishes at the start of a block of ten consecutive seconds, each of which is not an SES. Memorize
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