00534454
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series V100R002C00
Product Description Issue
01
Date
2009-06-30
HUAWEI TECHNOLOGIES CO., LTD.
Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. 2009. All rights reserved. No part of this document may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without prior written consent of Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Trademarks and Permissions and other Huawei trademarks are trademarks of Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. All other trademarks and trade names mentioned in this document are the property of their respective holders.
Notice The purchased products, services and features are stipulated by the contract made between Huawei and the customer. All or part of the products, services and features described in this document may not be within the purchase scope or the usage scope. Unless otherwise specified in the contract, all statements, information, and recommendations in this document are provided “AS IS” without warranties, guarantees or representations of any kind, either express or implied. The information in this document is subject to change without notice. Every effort has been made in the preparation of this document to ensure accuracy of the contents, but the statements, information, and recommendations in this document do not constitute a warranty of any kind, express or implied.
Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. Address:
Huawei Industrial Base Bantian, Longgang Shenzhen 518129 People's Republic of China
Website:
http://www.huawei.com
Email:
[email protected]
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
i
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
About This Document
About This Document Purpose This document describes the networking application, functions, structure, features of the equipment. This document provides guides to get the general information about the OptiX PTN 1900.
Related Versions The following table lists the product versions related to this document. Product Name
Version
OptiX PTN 1900
V100R002C00
OptiX iManager T2000
V200R007C03
Intended Audience This document is intended for: l
Network Planning Engineers
Organization This document is organized as follows.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Chapter
Description
1 Overview
Describes the equipment features and the position of the equipment in the network.
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
iii
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
About This Document
Chapter
Description
2 Functions and Features
Describes the service types, processing capability, service interfaces, protection capability, QoS, OAM feature, NSF function and DCN mode that are supported by the equipment.
3 System Architecture
Describes the functional modules, hardware structure and software structure of the equipment.
4 Services
Describes the services of the equipment.
5 Key Features
Describes the main features of the equipment.
6 Protection
Describes the equipment-level protection and network-level protection of the equipment.
7 Operation, Administration and Maintenance
Describes the operation, maintenance and management capabilities of the equipment and the T2000 network management system used for the equipment.
8 Security Management
Describes the main technical characteristics of the equipment in terms of safe operation.
9 Networking Application
Describes the application of the equipment on mobile services , L2VPN services and offload solutions.
10 Technical Specifications
Describes the technical specifications of the equipment.
A Compliant Standards and Protocols
Describes the compliant standards and protocols of the equipment.
B Glossary
Lists the glossary used in this document.
C Acronyms and Abbreviations
Lists the acronyms and abbreviations used in this document.
Conventions Symbol Conventions The symbols that may be found in this document are defined as follows. Symbol
Description
DANGER
WARNING iv
Indicates a hazard with a high level of risk, which if not avoided, will result in death or serious injury. Indicates a hazard with a medium or low level of risk, which if not avoided, could result in minor or moderate injury.
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
Symbol
About This Document
Description
CAUTION
Indicates a potentially hazardous situation, which if not avoided, could result in equipment damage, data loss, performance degradation, or unexpected results.
NOTE
Indicates a tip that may help you solve a problem or save time.
TIP
Provides additional information to emphasize or supplement important points of the main text.
General Conventions The general conventions that may be found in this document are defined as follows. Convention
Description
Times New Roman
Normal paragraphs are in Times New Roman.
Boldface
Names of files, directories, folders, and users are in boldface. For example, log in as user root.
Italic
Book titles are in italics.
Courier New
Examples of information displayed on the screen are in Courier New.
Command Conventions The command conventions that may be found in this document are defined as follows.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Convention
Description
Boldface
The keywords of a command line are in boldface.
Italic
Command arguments are in italics.
[]
Items (keywords or arguments) in brackets [ ] are optional.
{ x | y | ... }
Optional items are grouped in braces and separated by vertical bars. One item is selected.
[ x | y | ... ]
Optional items are grouped in brackets and separated by vertical bars. One item is selected or no item is selected.
{ x | y | ... }*
Optional items are grouped in braces and separated by vertical bars. A minimum of one item or a maximum of all items can be selected.
[ x | y | ... ]*
Optional items are grouped in brackets and separated by vertical bars. Several items or no item can be selected.
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
v
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
About This Document
GUI Conventions The GUI conventions that may be found in this document are defined as follows. Convention
Description
Boldface
Buttons, menus, parameters, tabs, window, and dialog titles are in boldface. For example, click OK.
>
Multi-level menus are in boldface and separated by the ">" signs. For example, choose File > Create > Folder.
Keyboard Operations The keyboard operations that may be found in this document are defined as follows. Format
Description
Key
Press the key. For example, press Enter and press Tab.
Key 1+Key 2
Press the keys concurrently. For example, pressing Ctrl+Alt +A means the three keys should be pressed concurrently.
Key 1, Key 2
Press the keys in turn. For example, pressing Alt, A means the two keys should be pressed in turn.
Mouse Operations The mouse operations that may be found in this document are defined as follows. Action
Description
Click
Select and release the primary mouse button without moving the pointer.
Double-click
Press the primary mouse button twice continuously and quickly without moving the pointer.
Drag
Press and hold the primary mouse button and move the pointer to a certain position.
Update History Updates between document issues are cumulative. Therefore, the latest document issue contains all updates made in previous issues.
Update in 01 (2009-06-30) Based on Product Version V100R002C00 This document is the first release of the V100R002C00 version. vi
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
About This Document
Update in Issue 07 (2009-06-01) Based on Product Version V100R001 The update of the document are as follow: l
Chapter 10 Technical Specifications: The power consumption is updated.
Update in Issue 06 (2009-04-20) Based on Product Version V100R001 The update of the document are as follow: l
Chapter 10 Technical Specifications: The technical specifications of the optical interfaces on the boards are updated.
Update in Issue 05 (2009-02-20) Based on Product Version V100R001 The update of the document are as follow: l
Chapter 2 Functions and Features, Chapter 3 System Architecture and Chapter 10 Technical Specifications: TN72CXP and TN81EFF8 boards are added.
l
Chapter 2 Functions: External time interface is added.
l
Chapter 5 Key Features: IEEE 1588 V2 clock is added.
l
Chapter 10 Technical Specifications: The number of supported APS protection groups is added. The number of supported ML-PPP groups is added.
Update in Issue 04 (2009-01-10) Based on Product Version V100R001 The update of the document are as follow: l
Chapter 5 Key Features: DCN packets can be transparently transported over the IP tunnel or GRE tunnel is added.
l
Chapter 5 Key Features: Synchronous Ethernet Clock is added.
Update in Issue 03 (2008-10-20) Based on Product Version V100R001 The update of the document are as follow: l
Chapter 2 Functions and Features and Chapter 6 Protection: TPS protection is added.
l
Chapter 4 Services and Chapter 10 Technical Specifications: The number of supported ATM services supported by the OptiX PTN 1900 is modified from 512 to 1k (remote service) and from 256 to 512 (local service).
l
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Chapter 4 Services and Chapter 10 Technical Specifications: Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
vii
About This Document
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
The number of supported ATM connections supported by the OptiX PTN 1900 is modified from 1k to 2k (remote service) and from 512 to 1k (local service). l
Chapter 10 Technical Specifications: The power consumption of the CXP board is modified from 124.1 W to 70.6 W.
Update in Issue 02 (2008-08-20) Based on Product Version V100R001 The update of the document are as follow: l
Chapter 2 Functions and Features and Chapter 10 Technical Specifications: Information about the Ve-1.2 interface is deleted.
l
Chapter 10 Technical Specifications: The supported number of MAC addresses is described separately for the static and dynamic scenarios.
l
Chapter 10 Technical Specifications: The number of multicast groups supported by the OptiX PTN 1900 is modified from 256 to 512.
Update in Issue 01 (2008-05-10) Based on Product Version V100R001 This document is the first release of the V100R001 version.
viii
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
Contents
Contents About This Document...................................................................................................................iii 1 Overview......................................................................................................................................1-1 1.1 Equipment Introduction...................................................................................................................................1-2 1.2 Network Application.......................................................................................................................................1-2
2 Functions and Features..............................................................................................................2-1 2.1 Service Types..................................................................................................................................................2-3 2.2 Service Processing Capability.........................................................................................................................2-3 2.2.1 Switching Capability..............................................................................................................................2-3 2.2.2 Maximum Access Capability.................................................................................................................2-3 2.3 Interface Types................................................................................................................................................2-4 2.3.1 Service Interfaces...................................................................................................................................2-4 2.3.2 Administration and Auxiliary Interfaces................................................................................................2-5 2.4 Networking Capability....................................................................................................................................2-6 2.5 Protection Capability.....................................................................................................................................2-11 2.6 QoS................................................................................................................................................................2-12 2.7 OAM Features...............................................................................................................................................2-13 2.8 NSF................................................................................................................................................................2-14 2.9 Clock.............................................................................................................................................................2-14 2.10 DCN Scheme...............................................................................................................................................2-15
3 System Architecture...................................................................................................................3-1 3.1 Functional Modules.........................................................................................................................................3-2 3.2 Hardware Structure......................................................................................................................................... 3-3 3.2.1 Overview................................................................................................................................................3-4 3.2.2 Cabinet................................................................................................................................................... 3-4 3.2.3 Subrack...................................................................................................................................................3-6 3.2.4 Boards.....................................................................................................................................................3-8 3.2.5 Valid Slots for Boards............................................................................................................................3-9 3.3 Software Architecture...................................................................................................................................3-10 3.3.1 Overview..............................................................................................................................................3-10 3.3.2 NE Software.........................................................................................................................................3-12 3.3.3 Board Software.....................................................................................................................................3-13
4 Services.........................................................................................................................................4-1 Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
ix
Contents
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
4.1 Overview.........................................................................................................................................................4-2 4.1.1 Service Model........................................................................................................................................4-2 4.1.2 Service Processing..................................................................................................................................4-7 4.2 Ethernet Service..............................................................................................................................................4-9 4.3 ATM Service.................................................................................................................................................4-13 4.4 Circuit Emulation Service.............................................................................................................................4-14 4.5 L3VPN Services............................................................................................................................................4-16
5 Key Features................................................................................................................................5-1 5.1 MPLS..............................................................................................................................................................5-3 5.1.1 MPLS Background.................................................................................................................................5-3 5.1.2 Basic MPLS Concepts............................................................................................................................5-3 5.1.3 MPLS System Structure.........................................................................................................................5-5 5.1.4 MPLS Features of the Equipment..........................................................................................................5-5 5.2 IS-IS Routing Protocol....................................................................................................................................5-6 5.3 BGP.................................................................................................................................................................5-8 5.4 OSPF Protocol...............................................................................................................................................5-10 5.5 RIP.................................................................................................................................................................5-12 5.6 MPLS Signaling............................................................................................................................................5-14 5.7 PWE3............................................................................................................................................................5-14 5.8 IP Tunnel and GRE Tunnel...........................................................................................................................5-15 5.9 QoS................................................................................................................................................................5-17 5.10 IGMP Snooping...........................................................................................................................................5-20 5.11 MSTP/RSTP/STP........................................................................................................................................5-21 5.12 ACL ............................................................................................................................................................5-22 5.13 BFD.............................................................................................................................................................5-23 5.14 Synchronous Ethernet Clock.......................................................................................................................5-23 5.15 IEEE 1588 V2 Clock...................................................................................................................................5-25
6 Protection.....................................................................................................................................6-1 6.1 Equipment Level Protection............................................................................................................................6-2 6.1.1 TPS Protection........................................................................................................................................6-2 6.1.2 1+1 Protection for the CXP Board.........................................................................................................6-3 6.1.3 1+1 Protection for the PIU.....................................................................................................................6-4 6.2 Network Level Protection...............................................................................................................................6-4 6.2.1 MPLS 1+1 and 1:1 Protection................................................................................................................6-5 6.2.2 FRR Protection.......................................................................................................................................6-7 6.2.3 Ethernet LAG Protection........................................................................................................................6-9 6.2.4 Ethernet Spanning Tree Protection......................................................................................................6-10 6.2.5 LMSP Protection..................................................................................................................................6-12 6.2.6 Packet E1 ML-PPP Protection.............................................................................................................6-15 6.2.7 IMA Protection.....................................................................................................................................6-16
7 Operation, Administration and Maintenance......................................................................7-1 x
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
Contents
7.1 OAM Capability..............................................................................................................................................7-2 7.1.1 Operation and Configuration Tools........................................................................................................7-2 7.1.2 Monitoring and Maintenance.................................................................................................................7-2 7.1.3 Diagnosis and Debugging...................................................................................................................... 7-3 7.1.4 Expansion and Upgrade......................................................................................................................... 7-3 7.2 T2000 Network Management System.............................................................................................................7-3
8 Security Management................................................................................................................8-1 8.1 Authentication Management...........................................................................................................................8-2 8.2 Authorization Management.............................................................................................................................8-2 8.3 Network Security Management.......................................................................................................................8-2 8.4 System Security Management.........................................................................................................................8-3 8.5 NE Security Log Management........................................................................................................................8-3 8.6 Syslog Management........................................................................................................................................8-3
9 Networking Application...........................................................................................................9-1 9.1 Application of the Equipment for Mobile Services........................................................................................ 9-2 9.2 Application of the OptiX PTN 1900 for the L2VPN Service.........................................................................9-6 9.2.1 Transport of the E-Line Service.............................................................................................................9-6 9.2.2 Transport of the E-LAN Service............................................................................................................9-7 9.3 Offload Solution..............................................................................................................................................9-9
10 Technical Specifications.......................................................................................................10-1 10.1 System Specifications.................................................................................................................................10-2 10.2 System Performance....................................................................................................................................10-3 10.3 Technical Specifications of Boards.............................................................................................................10-5 10.3.1 Technical Specification of the ETFC.................................................................................................10-6 10.3.2 Technical Specifications of the EFF8................................................................................................10-7 10.3.3 Technical Specification of the EFG2.................................................................................................10-7 10.3.4 Technical Specification of the MD1..................................................................................................10-8 10.3.5 Technical Specification of the CD1...................................................................................................10-9 10.3.6 Technical Specification of the AD1...................................................................................................10-9 10.3.7 Technical Specifications of the AFO1.............................................................................................10-10 10.3.8 Technical Specification of the POD41.............................................................................................10-11 10.3.9 Technical Specification of the L12..................................................................................................10-12 10.3.10 Technical Specification of the L75................................................................................................10-12 10.3.11 Technical Specification of the TN71CXP......................................................................................10-13 10.3.12 Technical Specification of the TN72CXP......................................................................................10-13 10.3.13 Technical Specification of the PIU................................................................................................10-13 10.3.14 Technical Specification of the FANA............................................................................................10-13 10.3.15 Technical Specification of the FANB............................................................................................10-14 10.4 Laser Class................................................................................................................................................10-14 10.5 Specifications of Clock Interfaces.............................................................................................................10-14 10.6 Reliability Specifications..........................................................................................................................10-15 Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
xi
Contents
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10.7 EMC Performance Specifications.............................................................................................................10-16 10.8 Safety Certification...................................................................................................................................10-16 10.9 Environment Requirements.......................................................................................................................10-17 10.9.1 Environment for Storage..................................................................................................................10-17 10.9.2 Environment for Transportation.......................................................................................................10-19 10.9.3 Environment for Operation..............................................................................................................10-21
A Compliant Standards and Protocols.....................................................................................A-1 B Glossary......................................................................................................................................B-1 C Acronyms and Abbreviations................................................................................................C-1 Index.................................................................................................................................................i-1
xii
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
Figures
Figures Figure 1-1 Appearance of the OptiX PTN 1900..................................................................................................1-2 Figure 1-2 Network application of the OptiX PTN 1900.....................................................................................1-3 Figure 2-1 Networking mode I for mobile communication.................................................................................2-7 Figure 2-2 Networking mode II for mobile communication................................................................................2-8 Figure 2-3 Networking mode for offload solution...............................................................................................2-8 Figure 2-4 Networking Mode for E-Line Services...............................................................................................2-9 Figure 2-5 Networking Mode for E-LAN Services..............................................................................................2-9 Figure 2-6 Networking Mode for E-Aggr Services............................................................................................2-10 Figure 2-7 Networking Mode for L3VPN..........................................................................................................2-11 Figure 2-8 OAM mechanism of the OptiX PTN 1900.......................................................................................2-13 Figure 3-1 Functional modules of the OptiX PTN 1900......................................................................................3-2 Figure 3-2 OptiX PTN 1900 subrack installed in the cabinet..............................................................................3-4 Figure 3-3 Appearance of the cabinets used to house the OptiX PTN 1900........................................................3-5 Figure 3-4 Structure of the OptiX PTN 1900 subrack.........................................................................................3-6 Figure 3-5 Slot layout of the OptiX PTN 1900....................................................................................................3-7 Figure 3-6 Logical block diagram for the software architecture of the OptiX PTN 1900.................................3-11 Figure 3-7 Architecture of the NE software for the OptiX PTN 1900...............................................................3-12 Figure 3-8 Architecture of the board software for the OptiX PTN 1900...........................................................3-13 Figure 4-1 MPLS-Based PWE3 Service model of the OptiX PTN 1900............................................................4-3 Figure 4-2 BGP/MPLS service model of the OptiX PTN 1900...........................................................................4-5 Figure 4-3 OptiX PTN 1900 service model.........................................................................................................4-6 Figure 4-4 E-Line service illustration................................................................................................................4-11 Figure 4-5 E-LAN service illustration................................................................................................................4-12 Figure 4-6 E-Aggr service illustration................................................................................................................4-13 Figure 4-7 CES service application model.........................................................................................................4-15 Figure 4-8 Retiming synchronization mode of the CES service clock..............................................................4-16 Figure 4-9 Networking Application of the BGP/MPLS L3VPN.......................................................................4-17 Figure 4-10 Service packet forwarding of the BGP/MPLS L3VPN..................................................................4-18 Figure 5-1 Label encapsulation structure.............................................................................................................5-4 Figure 5-2 Encapsulation location of labels in Ethernet frames...........................................................................5-4 Figure 5-3 Typical application of the PWE3......................................................................................................5-15 Figure 5-4 ATM PWE3 over MPLS tunnel.......................................................................................................5-16 Figure 5-5 ATM PWE3 over IP tunnel..............................................................................................................5-16 Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
xiii
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
Figures
Figure 5-6 ATM PWE3 over GRE tunnel .........................................................................................................5-17 Figure 5-7 ACL based on flow classification.....................................................................................................5-23 Figure 5-8 Typical networking for synchronous Ethernet................................................................................. 5-24 Figure 5-9 Architecture of the IEEE 1588 V2 clock..........................................................................................5-25 Figure 5-10 Typical networking for IEEE 1588 V2 clock synchronization...................................................... 5-27 Figure 6-1 MPLS 1+1 protection.........................................................................................................................6-5 Figure 6-2 MPLS 1:1 protection..........................................................................................................................6-6 Figure 6-3 FRR protection...................................................................................................................................6-8 Figure 6-4 Ethernet LAG protection....................................................................................................................6-9 Figure 6-5 Switching network with multiple VLANs........................................................................................6-11 Figure 6-6 Network topology after the MSTP begins running.......................................................................... 6-12 Figure 6-7 LMSP 1+1 protection....................................................................................................................... 6-13 Figure 6-8 LMSP 1:1/1:N protection................................................................................................................. 6-14 Figure 6-9 Packet E1 ML-PPP protection..........................................................................................................6-16 Figure 6-10 IMA transmission...........................................................................................................................6-16 Figure 8-1 Schematic diagram of Syslog protocol transmitting...........................................................................8-4 Figure 9-1 Networking application of the OptiX PTN 1900 for transport of mobile services (E1 service between the base station and equipment)............................................................................................................................9-4 Figure 9-2 Networking application of the OptiX PTN 1900 for transport of mobile services (IMA E1 service between the base station and equipment)..............................................................................................................9-5 Figure 9-3 Networking application of the OptiX PTN 1900 for transport of mobile services (FE service between the base station and equipment)............................................................................................................................9-6 Figure 9-4 Networking Application of the E-Line Service..................................................................................9-7 Figure 9-5 Networking Application of the E-LAN Service.................................................................................9-8 Figure 9-6 Offload solution................................................................................................................................9-10 Figure 9-7 Application in an ATM-forwarding-based ADSL network (MPLS Tunnel used)...........................9-10 Figure 9-8 Application in an ATM-forwarding-based ADSL network (IP Tunnel used)..................................9-11 Figure 9-9 Application in an ATM-forwarding-based ADSL network (GRE Tunnel used).............................9-11 Figure 9-10 Application in an ETH-forwarding-based ADSL network.............................................................9-12 Figure 9-11 Application in an IP-forwarding-based ADSL network (IP tunnel used)...................................... 9-12 Figure 9-12 Application in an IP-forwarding-based ADSL network (GRE tunnel used)..................................9-12
xiv
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
Tables
Tables Table 2-1 Switching capability of the OptiX PTN 1900......................................................................................2-3 Table 2-2 OptiX PTN 1900 interface quantity.....................................................................................................2-4 Table 2-3 Service interfaces of the OptiX PTN 1900..........................................................................................2-5 Table 2-4 Administration and auxiliary interfaces of the OptiX PTN 1900........................................................2-5 Table 2-5 Equipment level protection................................................................................................................2-11 Table 2-6 Network level protection....................................................................................................................2-12 Table 3-1 Mapping relation between slots for processing boards and interface boards of the OptiX PTN 1900 ...............................................................................................................................................................................3-7 Table 3-2 Mapping relation between processing boards and interface boards of the OptiX PTN 1900..............3-8 Table 3-3 Boards and their key functions.............................................................................................................3-8 Table 3-4 Valid slots for boards in the OptiX PTN 1900 subrack.......................................................................3-9 Table 4-1 Comparison among L2 Ethernet services stipulation.........................................................................4-10 Table 4-2 Instances for service packet forwarding of the BGP/MPLS L3VPN.................................................4-18 Table 5-1 MPLS features of OptiX PTN 1900.....................................................................................................5-6 Table 5-2 MPLS specification of OptiX PTN 1900.............................................................................................5-6 Table 5-3 HQoS action points at the access side and the network side of the equipment..................................5-20 Table 5-4 Comparison among the MSTP, STP and RSTP.................................................................................5-21 Table 6-1 E1 TPS protection schemes and supported boards .............................................................................6-2 Table 6-2 TPS protection parameters...................................................................................................................6-3 Table 6-3 1+1 protection parameters of the CXP board.......................................................................................6-3 Table 6-4 MPLS 1+1 and 1:1 protection parameters...........................................................................................6-7 Table 6-5 LMSP protection parameters..............................................................................................................6-15 Table 9-1 Application of the OptiX PTN 1900 for the mobile service................................................................9-2 Table 9-2 Application of the OptiX PTN 1900 for the E-Line service................................................................9-7 Table 9-3 Application of the OptiX PTN 1900 for the E-LAN service...............................................................9-8 Table 10-1 Specifications of the cabinets for the OptiX PTN 1900 subrack.....................................................10-2 Table 10-2 Specifications of the OptiX PTN 1900 subrack...............................................................................10-2 Table 10-3 System performance specifications..................................................................................................10-3 Table 10-4 Interface specifications of the ETFC................................................................................................10-6 Table 10-5 Specifications of the interfaces on the EFF8....................................................................................10-7 Table 10-6 Specifications of the interfaces on the EFG2...................................................................................10-8 Table 10-7 Wavelengths of 1000BASE-CWDM interfaces on the EFG2.........................................................10-8 Table 10-8 Specifications of interfaces on the CD1...........................................................................................10-9 Table 10-9 Specifications of interfaces on the AD1...........................................................................................10-9 Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
xv
Tables
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description Table 10-10 Specifications of interfaces on the AFO1....................................................................................10-10 Table 10-11 Specifications of interfaces on the POD41..................................................................................10-11 Table 10-12 Specifications of interfaces on the POD41..................................................................................10-11 Table 10-13 Interface specifications of the L12...............................................................................................10-12 Table 10-14 Interface specifications of the L75...............................................................................................10-13 Table 10-15 Laser Class...................................................................................................................................10-14 Table 10-16 Specifications of clock interfaces of the OptiX PTN 1900..........................................................10-15 Table 10-17 Timing and synchronization performance....................................................................................10-15 Table 10-18 Reliability specifications..............................................................................................................10-15 Table 10-19 Safety certifications that the OptiX PTN 1900 has passed..........................................................10-16 Table 10-20 Climatic requirements of the OptiX PTN 1900 for storage.........................................................10-18 Table 10-21 Density requirements for mechanically active substances during storage...................................10-19 Table 10-22 Density requirements for chemically active substances during storage.......................................10-19 Table 10-23 Requirements of mechanical stress for storage............................................................................10-19 Table 10-24 Climatic requirements for transportation.....................................................................................10-20 Table 10-25 Density requirements for mechanically active substances during transportation........................10-21 Table 10-26 Density requirements for chemically active substances during transportation............................10-21 Table 10-27 Requirements of mechanical stress for transportation.................................................................10-21 Table 10-28 Temperature and humidity required by the OptiX PTN 1900 for operation................................10-22 Table 10-29 Other climatic requirements of the OptiX PTN 1900 for operation............................................10-22 Table 10-30 Density requirements for mechanically active substances during operation...............................10-23 Table 10-31 Density requirements for chemically active substances during operation...................................10-23 Table 10-32 Requirement of mechanical stress for operation..........................................................................10-23
xvi
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
1 Overview
1
Overview
About This Chapter This chapter describes the features and network application of the OptiX PTN 1900. 1.1 Equipment Introduction The OptiX PTN 1900 is new generation metropolitan optical transport platform, which is developed by Huawei for packet transport. 1.2 Network Application The OptiX PTN 1900 is applied at the convergence layer and the access layer of a metropolitan transport network.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
1-1
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
1 Overview
1.1 Equipment Introduction The OptiX PTN 1900 is new generation metropolitan optical transport platform, which is developed by Huawei for packet transport. As emerging data services are widely applied, operators require increasing bandwidth of the transport network and demand more flexibility of scheduling bandwidth. As a circuit-switching network, the traditional SDH-based multiservice transport network is inapplicable to the data services that feature burst and flexibility. In addition, the traditional connectionless IP network should not be used as a telecommunication carrier network because it cannot strictly ensure the quality and performance of important services. With the pseudo wire emulation edge-to-edge (PWE3) technology, the multi-protocol label switch (MPLS) technology, as well as ideal operation, administration and maintenance (OAM) and protection switching mechanism, the OptiX PTN 1900 is able to provide services of carrierclass quality in a packet transport network and SDH transport network. Figure 1-1 shows the OptiX PTN 1900 equipment. Figure 1-1 Appearance of the OptiX PTN 1900
1.2 Network Application The OptiX PTN 1900 is applied at the convergence layer and the access layer of a metropolitan transport network. The OptiX PTN 1900 is mainly used in the convergence layer and the access layer of a metropolitan transport network. It accesses services from the client side to a packet transport network. Figure 1-2 shows the network application of the OptiX PTN 1900. 1-2
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
1 Overview
Figure 1-2 Network application of the OptiX PTN 1900 Backbone layer
WDM/SDH backbone
IP/MPLS backbone
STM-N
GE/10GE Metro WDM
Convergence layer
PTN convergence
SDH convergence
P T N Access layer
Packet access
SDH access
BTS
NodeB
DSLAM
OptiX PTN 3900 OptiX PTN 1900
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
L2 access
Enterprise private line
Switch SDH network element
1-3
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
2
2 Functions and Features
Functions and Features
About This Chapter The OptiX PTN 1900 supports various types of services, and provides abundant functions and features to ensure service transport quality and efficiency. 2.1 Service Types The OptiX PTN 1900 supports L3VPN service, Ethernet services, asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) services, and circuit emulation services (CES). 2.2 Service Processing Capability The service processing capability of the OptiX PTN 1900 is categorized into the switching capability and the service access capability. 2.3 Interface Types The external interfaces of the OptiX PTN 1900 are categorized into service interfaces, and administration and auxiliary interfaces. 2.4 Networking Capability The OptiX PTN 1900 supports various networking modes to apply to different scenarios. 2.5 Protection Capability The OptiX PTN 1900 provides equipment level protection and network level protection. 2.6 QoS The OptiX PTN 1900 provides hierarchical end-to-end quality of service (QoS) management, and thus provides high quality transports that are differentiated by service. 2.7 OAM Features The OptiX PTN 1900 supports Ethernet operations, administration and maintenance (OAM) and MPLS OAM, to realize fast defect detection and to trigger protection switching. In this way, the carrier-class quality of service is guaranteed in the packet switching network. 2.8 NSF With the non-stop forwarding (NSF) function, data forwarding can be properly performed even when the control plane of the equipment is faulty (for example, the CPU is restarted). In this case, key services on the network are protected. 2.9 Clock Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
2-1
2 Functions and Features
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the physical layer clock synchronization mechanism, the external clock input/output, and the equipment internal clock. In addition, the OptiX PTN 1900 also supports the IEEE 1588 V2 clock synchronization 2.10 DCN Scheme The data communication network (DCN) is an integral part of network management, and is used to transmit the network management information. The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the inband DCN to ensure the intercommunication of network management information.
2-2
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
2 Functions and Features
2.1 Service Types The OptiX PTN 1900 supports L3VPN service, Ethernet services, asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) services, and circuit emulation services (CES). The OptiX PTN 1900 processes the following Ethernet services: l
E-Line services
l
E-LAN services
l
E-Aggr services
The OptiX PTN 1900 processes the following ATM services: l
ATM emulation service
l
IMA emulation service
The OptiX PTN 1900 processes the E1 CES service. The OptiX PTN 1900 processes the L3VPN service.
2.2 Service Processing Capability The service processing capability of the OptiX PTN 1900 is categorized into the switching capability and the service access capability. 2.2.1 Switching Capability The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the packet-based service switching. 2.2.2 Maximum Access Capability The OptiX PTN 1900 is capable of accessing services through various interfaces.
2.2.1 Switching Capability The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the packet-based service switching. Table 2-1 lists the switching capability of the OptiX PTN 1900. Table 2-1 Switching capability of the OptiX PTN 1900 Product
Switching Capability
Line Rate I/O Capability
OptiX PTN 1900
10 G
10 G
Note: The OptiX PTN 1900 provides unidirectional switching capability of 10 Gbit/s in the ingress and egress directions. That is, the OptiX PTN 1900 provides bidirectional switching capability of 20 Gbit/s.
2.2.2 Maximum Access Capability The OptiX PTN 1900 is capable of accessing services through various interfaces. Table 2-2 lists the access capabilities of different interfaces of the OptiX PTN 1900. Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
2-3
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
2 Functions and Features
Table 2-2 OptiX PTN 1900 interface quantity Interface Type
Access Capability (Board Name)
Processing Capability (Board Name)
Entire Equipment Access Capability
Accessed by Interface Board or Processing Board
E1 (including IMA E1, MLPPP E1, and TDM E1)
16 (L75/L12)
32 (MD1)
64
Accessed by interface board
Packet over SDH/SONET (POS) STM-1/4
2 (POD41)
10 (CXP)
10
Accessed by interface board
FE electrical interface
12 (ETFC)
55 (CXP)
55
Accessed by interface board
FE optical interface
8 (EFF8)
39 (CXP)
39
Accessed by interface board
GE
2 (EFG2)
10 (CXP)
10
Accessed by interface board
Channelized STM-1
2 (CD1)
2 (CD1)
8
Accessed by processing board
ATM STM-1
2 (AD1)
2 (AD1)
8 (AD1)
8 (AFO1)
39 (CXP)
39 (AFO1)
The ATM STM-1 signals can be accessed by processing board (AD1) as well as interface board (AFO1)
2.3 Interface Types The external interfaces of the OptiX PTN 1900 are categorized into service interfaces, and administration and auxiliary interfaces. 2.3.1 Service Interfaces The OptiX PTN 1900 provides multiple types of interfaces. 2.3.2 Administration and Auxiliary Interfaces The administration and auxiliary interfaces include the administration interfaces, external clock interfaces, and alarm interfaces.
2.3.1 Service Interfaces The OptiX PTN 1900 provides multiple types of interfaces. Table 2-3 lists the service interfaces supported by the OptiX PTN 1900.
2-4
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
2 Functions and Features
Table 2-3 Service interfaces of the OptiX PTN 1900 Interface Type
Description
Remark
FE interface
Electrical interfaces: 10/100BASE-TX Optical interfaces: 100BASE-FX
Applicable to UNI and NNI
GE interface
1000BASE-SX, 1000BASE-LX, 1000BASEVX, 1000BASE-ZX, 1000BASE-CWDM
Applicable to UNI and NNI
POS interface
STM-1 optical interfaces: S-1.1, L-1.1, L-1.2
Applicable to UNI and NNI
STM-4 optical interfaces: S-4.1, L-4.1, L-4.2, Ve-4.2 ATM STM-1 interface
S-1.1, L-1.1, L-1.2
Applicable to UNI
Channelized STM-1 interface
S-1.1, L-1.1, L-1.2
Applicable to UNI and NNI
E1 interface
75-ohm/120-ohm E1 electrical interfaces: DB44 connectors
Applicable to UNI and NNI
NOTE
UNI Connects with BTS or NodeB. NNI Connects with PSN network.
2.3.2 Administration and Auxiliary Interfaces The administration and auxiliary interfaces include the administration interfaces, external clock interfaces, and alarm interfaces. Table 2-4 lists the administration and auxiliary interfaces of the OptiX PTN 1900. Table 2-4 Administration and auxiliary interfaces of the OptiX PTN 1900 Interface Type
Description
Quantity
Administration interface
Ethernet NM interface (ETH)
1 (RJ-45)
Cascading network interface (EXT)
1 (RJ-45)
Administration serial interface (F&f)
1 (RJ-45)
Cabinet indicator interface (four-channel)
1 (RJ-45)
Cabinet indicator cascading interface (fourchannel)
1 (RJ-45)
Alarm input interface (four-channel)
1 (RJ-45)
Alarm output and cascading interface (twochannel output and two-channel cascading)
1 (RJ-45)
Auxiliary interface
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
2-5
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
2 Functions and Features
Interface Type
Description
Quantity
External clock interface
Common interface for 120-ohm clock input and output (2048 kbit/s or 2048 kHz)
2 (RJ-45)
External time interfaces
DCLS time input interface DCLS time output interface 1PPS + time information input interface, or 1PPS + time information output interface
NOTE The external clock and external time share one interface, which can be used as either clock or time, but not both, at the same time. When the TN71CXP board is applied, the equipment provides only the external clock interface. That is, the external time interface is not available.
2.4 Networking Capability The OptiX PTN 1900 supports various networking modes to apply to different scenarios.
Networking Interface The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the following interfaces for networking. l
GE
l
FE
l
POS STM-4
l
POS STM-1
l
ML-PPP NOTE
l
It is recommended that the ML-PPP should be used to form the chain network.
l
The FE electrical interface is not recommended to be used as networking interface.
Typical Networking for Mobile Communication Figure 2-1 and Figure 2-2 show the typical networking modes of the OptiX PTN equipment for mobile communication. Figure 2-3 shows the networking application of the OptiX PTN equipment in the offload solution.
2-6
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
2 Functions and Features
Figure 2-1 Networking mode I for mobile communication
ML-PPP POS
POS
POS ML-PPP
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 3900
BTS
NodeB
OptiX PTN 1900
BSC
RNC
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
2-7
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
2 Functions and Features
Figure 2-2 Networking mode II for mobile communication
GE GE
GE
GE GE
OptiX PTN 3900
BTS
NodeB
OptiX PTN 1900
BSC
RNC
Figure 2-3 Networking mode for offload solution
HSDPA flow
Wholesale ADSL network
R99 flow
Leased line
NodeB
ADSL modem
2-8
OptiX PTN 1900
RNC
OptiX PTN 3900
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
2 Functions and Features
For details on the networking application of the OptiX PTN equipment for mobile communication, see 9.1 Application of the Equipment for Mobile Services. For details on the networking application of the OptiX PTN equipment in the offload solution, see9.3 Offload Solution.
Typical Networking for Ethernet Services Figure 2-4 shows the typical networking mode of the PTN equipment for E-Line services. Figure 2-4 Networking Mode for E-Line Services FE GE E-Line Protection Path OptiX PTN 3900
OptiX PTN 1900
CE
Figure 2-5 shows the typical networking mode of the PTN equipment for E-LAN services. Figure 2-5 Networking Mode for E-LAN Services
FE GE E-LAN
OptiX PTN 3900
OptiX PTN 1900
CE
Figure 2-6 shows the typical networking mode of the PTN equipment for E-Aggr services.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
2-9
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
2 Functions and Features
Figure 2-6 Networking Mode for E-Aggr Services
FE OptiX PTN 3900
NodeB
OptiX PTN 1900
RNC
GE Convergence link
For details on the networking application of the OptiX PTN equipment for Ethernet services, see 9.2 Application of the OptiX PTN 1900 for the L2VPN Service.
Typical Networking for L3VPN Figure 2-7 shows the typical networking mode of the L3VPN.
2-10
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
2 Functions and Features
Figure 2-7 Networking Mode for L3VPN
VPN 1
VPN 2
CE-C
CE-A Backbone network P
P PE
PE PE VPN 2
P
P
VPN 1 CE-D
CE-B
OptiX PTN 3900/OptiX PTN 1900
CE
For details on the networking application of the OptiX PTN equipment for L3VPN, see 4.5 L3VPN Services.
2.5 Protection Capability The OptiX PTN 1900 provides equipment level protection and network level protection. The OptiX PTN 1900 provides various equipment level protection schemes, as listed in Table 2-5. Table 2-5 Equipment level protection Protection Object
Protection Scheme
Revertive Mode
E1 sub-board
1:1 TPS
Revertive
System control, cross-connect and multiprotocol processing board
1+1 hot backup
Non-revertive
Power interface unit
1+1 hot backup
-
The OptiX PTN 1900 provides various network level protection schemes, as listed in Table 2-6. Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
2-11
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
2 Functions and Features
Table 2-6 Network level protection Protected Object
Protection Scheme
MPLS Tunnel
1+1 protection 1:1 protection Reroute protection Fast reroute (FRR) protection
Ethernet link
Link aggregation group (LAG) protection Multiple spanning tree protocol (MSTP) protection
POS STM-1/ POS STM-4
1+1 linear MSP
Channelized STM-1
1+1 linear MSP
1:1 linear MSP
1:1 linear MSP ATM STM-1
1+1 linear MSP 1:1 linear MSP 1:N (2≤N≤7) linear MSP (AFO1)
IMA group
IMA member protection
ML-PPP group
ML-PPP member protection
2.6 QoS The OptiX PTN 1900 provides hierarchical end-to-end quality of service (QoS) management, and thus provides high quality transports that are differentiated by service. The OptiX PTN 1900 provides complete QoS grooming mechanisms, which include the following: l
DiffServ mode based on flow classification. With the DiffServ mode, the OptiX PTN 1900 helps operators provide services of different quality classes for users. Hence, operators can provide an integrated network that can carry data, voice and video services.
l
QoS for end-to-end services –
Hierarchical QoS (HQoS) mechanism at the access side. The HQoS mechanism helps control the overall bandwidth for a single service type, a single service access point, multiple service access points, a single service or multiple services.
–
Traffic Engineering (TE) mechanism at the network side. The TE mechanism helps balance the network traffic to ensure the service quality.
With the complete QoS mechanisms, the OptiX PTN 1900 ensures that the specifications of delay, delay variation, and bandwidth are satisfied for different services, and thus guarantees the provision of carrier-class services. 2-12
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
2 Functions and Features
2.7 OAM Features The OptiX PTN 1900 supports Ethernet operations, administration and maintenance (OAM) and MPLS OAM, to realize fast defect detection and to trigger protection switching. In this way, the carrier-class quality of service is guaranteed in the packet switching network. Figure 2-8 shows the OAM mechanism of the OptiX PTN 1900. Figure 2-8 OAM mechanism of the OptiX PTN 1900 CE
FE PTN
PTN
Router
Router
IEEE 802.1ag
Service Layer (UNI to UNI) Connectivity Layer
ITU Y.1731 IEEE 802.3ah ITU Y.1711
CE
FE
Access Link
PW
Access Link
LSP
At the network level, the OptiX PTN 1900 supports MPLS OAM and Ethernet OAM. l
l
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the following MPLS OAM functions. –
The equipment provides hardware support, to transmit and receive connectivity verification (CV) messages, fast failure detection (FFD) messages, backward defect indicator (BDI) messages, and forward defect indicator (FDI) messages, and to perform timeout judgment for these messages. In compliance with ITU-T Y.1710 and ITU-T Y. 1711, the fast continuity check and failure indication are realized. As supported by the equipment, the minimum period for transmitting the FFD packets is 3.3 ms.
–
The equipment supports the MPLS Tunnel Ping and TraceRoute commands, and also the virtual circuit connectivity verification (VCCV) command for the PW. These commands can be used to detect and locate the faults.
–
The equipment supports performance monitoring for MPLS Tunnel. In compliance with ITU-T Y.1710, the equipment provides hardware support for the monitoring of packet loss ratio, packet delay and packet delay variation.
The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the following Ethernet OAM functions that are compliant with IEEE 802.1ag and ITU-T Y.1731. –
The equipment provides hardware support for the Ethernet continuity check (ETH-CC) and the performance monitoring. As supported by the equipment, the minimum period for transmitting the OAM frames is 3.3 ms.
–
The control plane of the equipment supports the Ethernet loopback (ETH-LB) and Ethernet link trace (ETH-LT) operations. Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
2-13
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
2 Functions and Features –
The equipment supports performance monitoring for the E-Line service. In compliance with ITU-T Y.1731, the equipment provides hardware support for the monitoring of packet loss ratio, packet delay, and packet delay variation.
At the link layer, the OptiX PTN 1900 supports the following OAM mechanisms. l
The equipment supports Ethernet OAM that is compliant with IEEE 802.3ah. Each Ethernet port supports link discovery, link state monitoring, remote fault indication, and remote loopback.
l
The equipment supports ATM OAM, including the fault management in the F4 OAM and F5 OAM.
2.8 NSF With the non-stop forwarding (NSF) function, data forwarding can be properly performed even when the control plane of the equipment is faulty (for example, the CPU is restarted). In this case, key services on the network are protected. The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the protocol level graceful restart (GR) technology (for example, the LDP GR). In the case of a fault, the neighbor nodes do not delete the route information. In this way, services are still forwarded and the network route oscillation is avoided. When the CXP board should be configured with 1+1 protection, the OptiX PTN 1900 supports the NSF function in the case of the reset of the CXP board.
2.9 Clock The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the physical layer clock synchronization mechanism, the external clock input/output, and the equipment internal clock. In addition, the OptiX PTN 1900 also supports the IEEE 1588 V2 clock synchronization
Physical Layer Clock Synchronization The clock system of the OptiX PTN 1900 supports extracting the clock information from the following transmission links: l
Extraction of clock signals from POS STM-1/STM-4 interfaces
l
Extraction of clock signals from channelized STM-1 interfaces
l
Extraction of clock signals from ATM STM-1 interfaces
l
Extraction of clock signals from synchronous Ethernet interfaces
l
Extraction of clock signals from E1 interfaces
The OptiX PTN 1900 Input/output of two 120-ohm external clock sources. The OptiX PTN 1900 supports three clock working modes, that is, the locked, hold-over, and free-run modes. The OptiX PTN 1900 also supports the processing and transfer of synchronization status messages (SSM). The synchronous Ethernet is a technology used to synchronize the clock at the Ethernet physical layer. Clock signals are extracted directly from the serial bit flow on the Ethernet link. These clock signals are then used for data transmission. In this way, the clock signals are transferred. 2-14
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
2 Functions and Features
IEEE 1588 V2 IEEE 1588 V2 is a time synchronization protocol that provides the nanosecond accuracy to meet the requirements of 3G base stations. OptiX PTN 1900 supports the following features of IEEE 1588 V2: l
The equipment can use the IEEE 1588 V2 protocol to achieve the clock synchronization and time synchronization.
l
The equipment supports the boundary clock (BC) mode, ordinary clock (OC) mode, and transparent clock (TC)/(TC+OC) mode. The TC mode includes the end-to-end (E2E) TC mode and (P2P) TC mode.
l
The equipment supports the BMC algorithm to select clock source.
2.10 DCN Scheme The data communication network (DCN) is an integral part of network management, and is used to transmit the network management information. The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the inband DCN to ensure the intercommunication of network management information. The OptiX PTN 1900 adopts the inband DCN scheme. In this scheme, the setup of dedicated DCN channels is not required, and hence the network construction cost is greatly lowered. The OptiX PTN 1900 supports a maximum of 128 DCN channels. The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the inband DCN through the following interfaces. l
GE
l
FE
l
POS STM-4/STM-1
l
E1 NOTE
l
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
The FE electrical interfaces are not recommended to be used as networking interfaces.
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
2-15
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
3 System Architecture
3
System Architecture
About This Chapter This chapter describes the system architecture of the OptiX PTN 1900 in terms of functional module, hardware structure and software architecture. 3.1 Functional Modules The functional modules of the OptiX PTN 1900 include the service processing module, management and control module, heat dissipation module and power supply module. 3.2 Hardware Structure This section describes the cabinet that can house the OptiX PTN 1900 subrack, subrack structure, and boards in the subrack. 3.3 Software Architecture This section describes the architecture of the NE software and board software.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
3-1
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
3 System Architecture
3.1 Functional Modules The functional modules of the OptiX PTN 1900 include the service processing module, management and control module, heat dissipation module and power supply module. Figure 3-1 shows the functional modules of the OptiX PTN1900. Figure 3-1 Functional modules of the OptiX PTN 1900 External Clock/Time
FE/GE
POS
Clock module
ATM STM-1 GE
客户接口
E1 Channelized STM-1
UNI interface
NNI interface
Switching plane
Service sub-board
ML-PPP
Service sub-board
Service processing module Bus
NM interface Heat dissipation module
Alarm I/O interface Power supply module
Management and control module
Alarm cascade interface CF card F&f
Service Processing Module The service processing module includes the UNI interfaces, NNI interfaces, clock module and switching module. The equipment supports several types of services from the UNI interfaces and NNI interfaces. l
UNI interfaces: E1, ATM STM-1, FE/GE and channelized STM-1
l
NNI interfaces: POS STM-1/STM-4, GE, ML-PPP
The service sub-board and corresponding interface board are jointly used to access channelized STM-1, ATM STM-1 and E1 services. The switching plane processes the service signals accessed into the equipment. The clock module can receive either the network clock from the NNI interfaces or the external input clock from the external clock interfaces. The clock module selects the clock source of 3-2
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
3 System Architecture
better quality and locks phase of the clock source for synchronization. Finally, the clock module provides the system clock for each module and supports the output of clock signals through the external clock interfaces. The clock module processes and transfers the synchronization status messages (SSMs).
Management and Control Module The management and control module uses the bus inside the system for inter-board communication and communication between the system control board and other boards. This module can also transfer the manufacturing information of the management board. This module also supports functions such as inband DCN management and non-stop forwarding. In addition, this module provides complete management interfaces and auxiliary interfaces, including the network management interface, alarm input/output interface, alarm concatenation interface, F&f interface and CF card interface.
Heat Dissipation Module The heat dissipation module dissipates the heat generated by the equipment with flowing air. The heat dissipation module consists of the fan board, fan frame and fans. The fans support the intelligent adjustment of the rotating speed according to the system temperature.
Power Supply Module The power supply module supplies power to the boards and fans of the equipment and monitors the power supply.
3.2 Hardware Structure This section describes the cabinet that can house the OptiX PTN 1900 subrack, subrack structure, and boards in the subrack. 3.2.1 Overview The OptiX PTN 1900 equipment consists of the subrack and boards. 3.2.2 Cabinet The OptiX PTN 1900 can be installed in a 300 mm deep ETSI cabinet (N63E cabinet or T63 cabinet) or in a third-party 19-inch cabinet. 3.2.3 Subrack The OptiX PTN 1900 is of a dual-layer structure. The subrack consists of the processing board area, interface board area, power supply board area and fan area. 3.2.4 Boards Boards of the OptiX PTN 1900 include the service sub-board, interface board, system control, cross-connect and multiprotocol processing board, fan board and power supply board. 3.2.5 Valid Slots for Boards The OptiX PTN 1900 provides 11 slots in total. Service sub-boards must be inserted on the CXP board. Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
3-3
3 System Architecture
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
3.2.1 Overview The OptiX PTN 1900 equipment consists of the subrack and boards. Figure 3-2 shows the subrack installed in the cabinet. Figure 3-2 OptiX PTN 1900 subrack installed in the cabinet
Cabinet
Subrack
Mounting ear
3.2.2 Cabinet The OptiX PTN 1900 can be installed in a 300 mm deep ETSI cabinet (N63E cabinet or T63 cabinet) or in a third-party 19-inch cabinet. shows the cabinets used to house the OptiX PTN 1900 subrack.
3-4
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
3 System Architecture
Figure 3-3 Appearance of the cabinets used to house the OptiX PTN 1900
T63 cabinet
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
N63E cabinet
3-5
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
3 System Architecture
3.2.3 Subrack The OptiX PTN 1900 is of a dual-layer structure. The subrack consists of the processing board area, interface board area, power supply board area and fan area.
Subrack Structure Figure 3-4 shows the structure of the OptiX PTN 1900 subrack. Figure 3-4 Structure of the OptiX PTN 1900 subrack
Interface board area
Power supply board area Fan area
Processing board area Fan area
Functions of these areas of the subrack are as follows. l
Processing board area, which is used to house the system control, cross-connect and multiprotocol unit (CXP) and service sub-boards.
l
Interface board area, which is used to house the interface boards.
l
Power supply board area, which is used to house the power supply boards.
l
Fan area, which is used to house the fan tray assembly and air filter.
Slot Allocation The upper layer of the OptiX PTN 1900 subrack has eight slots and the lower layer has three slots. Each of slots 1 and 2 has two sub-slots for sub-boards. Figure 3-5 shows the position of each slot in the OptiX PTN 1900 subrack.
3-6
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
3 System Architecture
Figure 3-5 Slot layout of the OptiX PTN 1900 SLOT 3 SLOT 10 (FANA)
SLOT 8(PIU)
SLOT 4 SLOT 5 SLOT 6
SLOT 9(PIU)
SLOT 7 SLOT 11 (FANB)
SLOT 1-1
SLOT 1-2
SLOT 2-1
SLOT 2-2
SLOT 1
SLOT 2
Mapping Relation Between Processing Boards and Interface Boards Table 3-1 lists the mapping relation between slots for processing boards and interface boards. Table 3-1 Mapping relation between slots for processing boards and interface boards of the OptiX PTN 1900 Slots for Processing Boards
Slots for Interface Boards
Slot 1-1
Slots 3-4
Slot 1-2
Slots 5-6
Slot 2-1
Slots 3-4
Slot 2-2
Slots 5-6
Slots 1, 2
Slots 3-7
NOTE l The ETFC, EFF8, EFG2, AFO1 and POD41 can be housed in any slots of slots 3-7. l When the ETFC is housed in slot 3, the last 5 ports is not available. l When the EFF8 or AFO1 is housed in slot 3, the last port is not available. l In the case of the TPS protection, slot 1-1 and slot 2-1 protect each other and house service sub-boards
of the same type. l In the case of the TPS protection, slot 1-2 and slot 2-2 protect each other and house service sub-boards
of the same type. l When the MD1 is not configured with TPS protection, insert the MD1 to the CXP in slot 1.
Table 3-2 lists the mapping relation between processing boards and interface boards.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
3-7
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
3 System Architecture
Table 3-2 Mapping relation between processing boards and interface boards of the OptiX PTN 1900 Processing Board
Service Sub-Board
Interface Board
CXP
MD1
L75, L12
AD1, CD1
-
-
ETFC, EFG2, POD41, EFF8, AFO1
3.2.4 Boards Boards of the OptiX PTN 1900 include the service sub-board, interface board, system control, cross-connect and multiprotocol processing board, fan board and power supply board. Table 3-3 lists the boards of the OptiX PTN 1900 and their functions. Table 3-3 Boards and their key functions
3-8
Board Type
Board Name
Key Function
Service sub-board
MD1, CD1, AD1
l
Processes E1 signals.
l
Accesses and processes channelized STM-1 and ATM STM-1 signals.
Interface board
ETFC, EFG2, POD41, L12, L75, EFF8, AFO1
Accesses ATM STM-1, FE, GE, POS STM-1/STM-4 and E1 signals.
System control, crossconnect and multiprotocol processing board
CXP
l
Acts as a service processing board and processes services accessed.
l
Grooms services accessed.
l
Provides an interface to connect the system to the T2000.
l
Performs the system control function.
l
Processes the clock and time.
Fan board
FANA, FANB
Dissipates heat generated by the equipment.
Power supply board
PIU
Accesses the external power supply.
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
Board Type
3 System Architecture
Board Name
Key Function
NOTE The CXP has two versions, that is, TN71CXP and TN72CXP.
3.2.5 Valid Slots for Boards The OptiX PTN 1900 provides 11 slots in total. Service sub-boards must be inserted on the CXP board. Table 3-4 lists the valid slots for boards in the OptiX PTN 1900 subrack. Table 3-4 Valid slots for boards in the OptiX PTN 1900 subrack
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Board
Full Name
Valid Slot
Remarks
CXP
System control, crossconnect and multiprotocol processing board
Slots 1 - 2
-
PIU
Power interface unit
Slots 8 - 9
-
FANA
Fan board for the interface board area
Slot 10
-
FANB
Fan board for the processing board area
Slot 11
-
MD1
32 x E1 hybrid service subboard
Slots 1-1, 1-2, 2-1 and 2-2
l
The MD1 should be jointly used with the CXP and L12/L75.
l
When the MD1 is not configured with TPS protection, insert the MD1 to the CXP in slot 1.
l
For TPS protection, slot 2-1 protects slot 1-1 and slot 2-2 protects slot 1-2.
CD1
2 x channelized STM-1 sub-board
Slots 1-1, 1-2, 2-1 and 2-2
The CD1 should be jointly used with the CXP.
AD1
2 x ATM STM-1 sub-board
Slots 1-1, 1-2, 2-1 and 2-2
The AD1 should be jointly used with the CXP.
AFO1
8 x ATM STM-1 interface board
Slots 3 - 7
The AFO1 should be jointly used with the CXP.
ETFC
12 x FE electrical interface board
Slots 3 - 7
The ETFC should be jointly used with the CXP.
EFF8
8 x FE optical interface board
Slots 3 - 7
The EFF8 should be jointly used with the CXP.
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
3-9
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
3 System Architecture
Board
Full Name
Valid Slot
Remarks
EFG2
2 x GE optical interface board
Slots 3 - 7
The EFG2 should be jointly used with the CXP.
POD41
2 x 622/155 Mbit/s POS interface board
Slots 3 - 7
The POD41 should be jointly used with the CXP.
L12
16 x E1 120-ohm electrical interface board
Slots 3 - 6
The L12 should be jointly used with the MD1 and the CXP.
L75
16 x E1 75-ohm electrical interface board
Slots 3 - 6
The L75 should be jointly used with the MD1 and the CXP.
3.3 Software Architecture This section describes the architecture of the NE software and board software. 3.3.1 Overview The software for the OptiX PTN 1900 consists of the management plane, control plane and data/ forwarding plane. 3.3.2 NE Software The NE software manages, monitors and controls the running status of boards in the NE. The NE software also functions as the service unit for the communication between the T2000 and boards. In this way, the T2000 can control and manage the NE. In addition, the NE software manages the software loading, software package loading and fix of the system control board. 3.3.3 Board Software The board software is responsible for Layer 2 switching, the MPLS packet processing and the QoS. The board software monitors and reports the alarms and performance events of each board to the NE software.
3.3.1 Overview The software for the OptiX PTN 1900 consists of the management plane, control plane and data/ forwarding plane. Figure 3-6 shows the logical block diagram for the software architecture of the OptiX PTN 1900.
3-10
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
3 System Architecture
Figure 3-6 Logical block diagram for the software architecture of the OptiX PTN 1900 System control, cross-connect and multi-protocol processing board
Management plane
System management unit
Control plane
System control unit
sub-board
sub-board Forwarding unit
Data plane
Forwarding unit sub-board
Forwarding unit
Switching unit 交换网板
Forwarding unit sub-board
Management Plane The management plane performs functions such as performance management, fault management, configuration management, software management, Layer 2 protocol control and security management. The NE software and board software both belong to the management plane. The board software is used to manage the data/forwarding plane.
Control Plane The control plane consists of a group of communication entities and controls the calling and connection. The control plane uses signaling to set up, release, monitor and maintain connections, and to recover connections in the case of a fault. Both the NE software and board software are involved in the functions of the control plane.
Data Plane The data plane receives and forwards service data according to the forwarding message generated by the control plane. This plane also monitors the control packets of services and reports these packets to the control plane and the management plane.The data plane is mainly realized through the hardware of the service sub-board and the system control, cross-connect, and multi-protocol processing unit. Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
3-11
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
3 System Architecture
3.3.2 NE Software The NE software manages, monitors and controls the running status of boards in the NE. The NE software also functions as the service unit for the communication between the T2000 and boards. In this way, the T2000 can control and manage the NE. In addition, the NE software manages the software loading, software package loading and fix of the system control board. On the element management layer of the telecommunications management network, the NE software has NE functions, partial coordination functions and operating system functions on the network element layer. The NE software uses the data communication function for the communication between the NE and other parts, including equipment, the T2000 and other NEs. Figure 3-7 shows the architecture of the NE software for the OptiX PTN 1900. Figure 3-7 Architecture of the NE software for the OptiX PTN 1900 Software Platform
GCP
Interface management
Configuration Module
Alarm and performance management DCN
Protocol
Layer 2
QoS MPLS
Equipment management
IGMP snooping MSTP
LACP
Basic frame Hardware driver
Software Platform The software platform consists of the interface management module, alarm and performance management module, and DCN module. Interface management module: This module divides and converts different forms of commands from different types of terminals to the internal commands of the same form. Alarm and performance management module: This module supports the reporting and query of current alarms, storage and query of history alarms, reporting of performance events and management of the system logs. DCN module: This module processes the DCN packets, and provides the communication between the local NE and other parts, including the T2000 and other NEs.
GCP The GCP provides a uniform static or dynamic distribution mechanism for MPLS labels. The GCP also provides routing protocols and trail computation algorithm related to the creation of dynamic service. In addition, the GCP provides the LMP protocol related to the neighbor autodiscovery function of the transport plane. 3-12
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
3 System Architecture
Configuration Module The configuration module consists of the equipment management sub-module and QoS submodule. The functions of the configuration module as follows. l
Responsible for the management configuration of the entire NE, including service management, equipment management, resource management and protocol configuration agent.
l
Responsible for the setting and querying of the attributes of alarms and performance of the managed objects.
l
Responsible for querying and reporting of the performance data.
l
Responsible for inter-board alarm suppression and query of alarms of specified objects.
l
Responsible for storing configuration data.
l
Responsible for providing Layer 2 switching, processing MPLS and IP packets and the QoS function.
Protocol IGMP Snooping protocol, which is a Layer 2 multicast protocol and provides the Layer 2 multicast function. MSTP protocol, which is a spanning tree protocol used for loop release, link backup and VLANbased link load balance. Link aggregation control protocol (LACP) protocol, which is used for linear bandwidth increasing, link backup and load balance.
Basic Frame The basic frame provides the basic platform kernel and system support. For example, the basic frame realizes the board management, distributed message management and log management.
3.3.3 Board Software The board software is responsible for Layer 2 switching, the MPLS packet processing and the QoS. The board software monitors and reports the alarms and performance events of each board to the NE software. Figure 3-8 shows the architecture of the board software for the OptiX PTN 1900. Figure 3-8 Architecture of the board software for the OptiX PTN 1900 Forwarding plane LIB Alarm detection Statistics of performance units
Alarm/log
Performance
Alarm report/ indication
15-m/24-h performance computation
Alarm anti-jitter/ inter-board suppression
RMON
Software management Software package loading Patch management
Basic frame Hardware driver
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
3-13
3 System Architecture
3-14
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
l
The forwarding plane monitors alarms and makes performance statistics.
l
The alarm/log module reports and suppresses alarms.
l
The performance module makes performance statistics and provides RMON functions.
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
4 Services
4
Services
About This Chapter This chapter describes the services of the equipment. 4.1 Overview The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the L2VPN and L3VPN service, Ethernet service, ATM service and CES service. Based on the service model of the OptiX PTN 1900, this section describes the processing of various services in the OptiX PTN 1900. 4.2 Ethernet Service The OptiX PTN 1900 supports various Ethernet services and provides ideal L2VPN solutions. 4.3 ATM Service In the transport network with the packet switching as the core, the OptiX PTN 1900 provides the ATM emulation service. 4.4 Circuit Emulation Service In a packet switching network (PSN), the circuit emulation services are used to transparently transmit the TDM circuit. The OptiX PTN 1900 supports TDM CES accessed by the E1 electrical interfaces and the channelized STM-1 optical interfaces. 4.5 L3VPN Services The OptiX PTN 1900 supports border gateway protocol (BGP)-based or MPLS-based layer3 virtual private network (L3VPN) services. The equipment provides a complete L3VPN solution.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
4-1
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
4 Services
4.1 Overview The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the L2VPN and L3VPN service, Ethernet service, ATM service and CES service. Based on the service model of the OptiX PTN 1900, this section describes the processing of various services in the OptiX PTN 1900. 4.1.1 Service Model According to different equipment interconnected, the services of the PTN equipment have different layer models on the user-network interface (UNI) side and the network-network interface (NNI) side. 4.1.2 Service Processing Based on the PTN service model, this section describes the processing of the Ethernet service, ATM service and CES service in the OptiX PTN 1900.
4.1.1 Service Model According to different equipment interconnected, the services of the PTN equipment have different layer models on the user-network interface (UNI) side and the network-network interface (NNI) side. OptiX PTN 1900 adopts the MPLS-based PWE3 model to process Ethernet services, ATM services, and CES services. OptiX PTN 1900 adopts the BGP/MPLS model to process L3VPN services.
Basic concepts Basic concepts include customer edge (CE), provider edge (PE), provider (P), and site. l
CE is the edge equipment in the user network and has interfaces to directly connect the network of the service provider. A CE can be a router, a switch, or a host. Normally, a CE need not support the MPLS.
l
PE is the edge router of the service provider. It is the edge equipment in the network of the service provider and is directly connected to the CE.
l
P is the backbone router in the network of the service provider. It is not directly connected to the CE. The P equipment needs to have only the basic MPLS forwarding capability.
l
Site is the IP system group where IP systems are interconnected and the connectivity is independent of the network of the service provider. The site is connected to the network of the service provider through the CE. One site can include multiple CEs, but one CE belongs to only one site.
MPLS-Based PWE3 Model The MPLS-Based PWE3 service model of the OptiX PTN 1900 which is used as PE is as shown in Figure 4-1.
4-2
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
4 Services
Figure 4-1 MPLS-Based PWE3 Service model of the OptiX PTN 1900 UNI
NNI Forwarder
Native service processing
Ethernet switch
ATM switch
TDM processing
TDM
ATM
Ethernet
PWE3 (Encapsulation)
Emulated service
Psudo wire
PW Demultiplexer (PW label) Service interface
Physical
Ethernet
ATM
Tunnel (Tunnel label)
IMA
FE
GE
PSN (MPLS) tunneling
TDM
E1/ E1/ STM-1 cSTM-1 cSTM-1
PPP (MP)
PPP HDLC
802.2 802.3
E1/ cSTM-1
STM1/STM-4
GE
ML-PPP
To CE
POS
Data-Link and Physical
Ethernet
To PSN
The UNI side is interconnected to the customer-side equipment (CE), responsible for accessing the customer-side services to the PSN network. In the service model, the functions of layers on the UNI side are described as follows. l
Physical layer The physical layer provides interfaces between the PTN equipment and the transmission media, such as cables and fibers.
l
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
–
In the direction from the CE to the PE, the physical layer processes the physical signals (electrical signals or optical signals) transmitted from the customer-side equipment, extracts information from the signals, and transmits the information to the service interface layer.
–
In the direction from the PE to the CE, the physical layer receives the information transmitted from the service interface layer, converts the information into signals suitable for the transmission through the transmission medium, and then transmits the signals to the customer-side equipment through the physical channel.
Service interface layer –
In the direction from the CE to the PE, the service interface layer receives the information transmitted from the physical layer, distinguishes service types, and transmits the services to the corresponding native service processing (NSP) layer for processing.
–
In the direction from the PE to the CE, the service interface layer receives the service signals transmitted from the NSP layer, selects the proper physical channel type and transmits the signals to the physical layer. Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
4-3
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
4 Services l
NSP layer According to the customer requirements, the NSP layer performs relevant processing for different services.
The NNI side is interconnected to the PSN equipment, to achieve the transmission of customer services in the PSN network. In the service model, the functions of layers on the NNI side are described as follows. l
Emulation service layer The emulation service layer corresponds to the payload that is to be encapsulated into the PW. An emulation service corresponds to a PW. The emulation service layer is an abstract logical layer. The PTN equipment does not perform any specific operation at this layer.
l
PWE3 encapsulation layer The PWE3 encapsulation layer adopts different encapsulation modes for different emulation services. It can encapsulate different emulation services into PWE3 protocol data units or decapsulate different emulation services from PWE3 protocol data units.
l
MPLS layer The MPLS layer contains the following two MPLS labels:
l
–
Outer label, that is, the tunnel label. It is used to create and maintain a tunnel that crosses the MPLS network between the PE stations at two ends of a service, for the purpose of carrying the PW.
–
Inner label, that is, the PW label. It is used to distinguish different PWs in the same tunnel.
Data link layer and physical layer As the carrier layers of the MPLS, the data link layer and the physical layer provide links for the MPLS layer to transmit data. The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the following networkside link types. –
Ethernet link (GE interface)
–
POS link (STM-1 or STM-4 interface)
–
ML-PPP link (E1 interface or channelized STM-1 interface)
The forwarder located between the UNI and the NNI mutually forwards services processed at the NSP layer on the UNI side and the emulation services on the NNI side. NOTE
The Ethernet link of the FE electrical interface is not recommended to be used as the network-side link for the OptiX PTN 1900.
BGP/MPLS Model Figure 4-2 shows the BGP/MPLS service model of the OptiX PTN 1900 which is used as PE.
4-4
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
4 Services
Figure 4-2 BGP/MPLS service model of the OptiX PTN 1900 UNI
Native service processing layer
NNI
VPN label
VRF
MPLS layer
Tunnel label Service interface layer
Physical layer
IP
FE
GE
STM-1
IPoE1
E1/ cSTM-1
PPP (MP)
PPP HDLC
802.2 802.3
E1/ cSTM-1
STM-1/ STM-4
GE
ML-PPP
POS
Data link layer and physical layer
Ethernet
To PSN
To CE
On the UNI side, the equipment is connected to the customer edge (CE) to access the L3VPN services to the PSN. In the case of the BGP/MPLS model, layers on the UNI side have the following functions. l
Physical layer The physical layer provides interfaces to connect transmission media, such as cables or fibers, to the PTN equipment.
l
l
–
In the CE-to-PE direction, the physical layer processes the physical signals (electrical or optical signals) transmitted from the user-side equipment, extracts information from the signals, and then sends the signals to the service interface layer.
–
In the PE-to-CE direction, the physical layer receives information transmitted from the service interface layer, converts the information into signals that can be transmitted over the transmission medium, and then sends the signals to the user-side equipment through the physical channel.
Service interface layer –
In the CE-to-PE direction, the service interface layer receives information transmitted from the physical layer, extracts and sends IP packets to corresponding VPN routing and forwarding tables (VRFs) for processing.
–
In the PE-to-CE direction, the service interface layer receives service signals transmitted from VRFs, selects proper types of physical channels, and sends the service signals onto the physical layer.
Native service processing module On the native service processing layer, respective VRF processes each L3VPN service. The VRF has the following functions:
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
–
Forwards IP packets of each service port (UNI ports and NNI ports) in the native VPN according to the routing table of the VPN.
–
Updates routes connected to the CE by running the same routing protocol as CE. Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
4-5
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
4 Services –
Updates routes of the VPN by using the multi-protocol extensions for border gateway protocol (MP-BGP) on all equipment in the VPN.
On the NNI side, the native service processing layer is connected to the PSN equipment to transmit the L3VPN services in the PSN network. In the case of the BGP/MPLS service model, layers on the NNI side have the following functions. l
MPLS layer The MPLS layer includes two MPLS labels:
l
–
The external MPLS label is a tunnel label, which is used to create and maintain a tunnel between PEs at two ends of a service. The tunnel crosses an MPLS network to carry PWs.
–
The internal MPLS label is a PW label, which identifies a PW in a tunnel.
Data link layer and physical layer The data link layer and the physical layer work as the MPLS carrier layer and provide links for the MPLS layer to transmit data. The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the following types of network-side links. –
Ethernet link (FE interface or GE interface)
–
cSTM-1 link
–
ML-PPP link (E1 interface)
Service Model of P Equipment Figure 4-3 shows the service model of OptiX PTN 1900 which is used as P equipment. Figure 4-3 OptiX PTN 1900 service model NNI
NNI Forwarder
Tunnel label
MPLS layer
Data-Link and Physical
Tunnel label
MPLS layer
PPP (MP)
PPP HDLC
802.2 802.3
PPP (MP)
PPP HDLC
802.2 802.3
E1/ cSTM-1
STM1/STM4
GE/1 0GE
E1/ cSTM-1
STM1/STM4
GE/1 0GE
ML-PPP
POS
Ethernet
ML-PPP
To PSN
POS
Data-Link and Physical
Ethernet
To PSN
The NNI side, interconnected with the PSN equipment, transmits the services in the public PSN. 4-6
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
4 Services
The OptiX PTN 1900 has only the MPLS forwarding capability. That is, the OptiX PTN 1900 forwards the MPLS packets according to the forwarding table of tunnel labels.
4.1.2 Service Processing Based on the PTN service model, this section describes the processing of the Ethernet service, ATM service and CES service in the OptiX PTN 1900.
Ethernet Service Processing At the physical layer on the UNI side, the OptiX PTN 1900 supports the interconnection to the customer-side equipment through the following physical interfaces to access the Ethernet service. l
FE
l
GE
The service interface layer on the UNI side: l
In the direction from the CE to the PE, receives the signals transmitted from the physical layer, extracts the Ethernet frames, and sends the Ethernet frames to the Ethernet switch module at the native service processing (NSP) layer for processing.
l
In the direction from the PE to the CE, receives the Ethernet frames transmitted from the Ethernet switch module that is at the NSP layer, and sends the Ethernet frames to the corresponding Ethernet physical channel.
According to the customer requirements, the NSP layer on the UNI side performs the following processing. l
Processes a VLAN tag for the Ethernet frames (adds, strips or exchanges a VLAN tag).
l
Performs the QoS processing, such as flow classification and congestion management.
l
Controls the access authority by using the access control list (ACL).
l
Performs the Ethernet OAM processing according to IEEE 802.1ag or IEEE 802.3ah.
The forwarder located between the UNI and the NNI mutually forwards the Ethernet service at the NSP layer on the UNI side and the relevant PW on the NNI side. The forwarder can adopt the following two modes to determine the relevant PW of the Ethernet service. l
Port that accesses the Ethernet service
l
Port that accesses the Ethernet service + VLAN ID of the Ethernet frame
The emulation service layer on the NNI side corresponds to the payload that is to be encapsulated into the PW. The emulation service layer is an abstract logical layer. The PTN equipment does not perform any specific operation at this layer. The PWE3 encapsulation layer on the NNI side adds the PW header to an Ethernet frame to form a PW protocol data unit (PDU). At the MPLS layer on the NNI side, by using two tags, the OptiX PTN 1900 distinguishes the PW that carries the service from the tunnel that carries the PW. At the data link layer and the physical layer on the NNI side, the OptiX PTN 1900 carries and transmits the MPLS packet through different links. Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
4-7
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
4 Services NOTE
On the NNI side, the Ethernet service can be carried by a QinQ Tunnel instead of an MPLS Tunnel. In this case, the C-VLAN and S-VLAN tags are used instead of MPLS labels. On the NNI side, the Ethernet service can be directly carried by a physical Ethernet port without using the PWE3 encapsulation and MPLS label technology. In this case, the Ethernet port is fully occupied by the Ethernet service.
ATM Service Processing At the physical layer on the UNI side, the OptiX PTN 1900 supports the interconnection to the customer-side equipment through the following physical interfaces to access the ATM service. l
STM-1
l
Channelized STM-1 (IMA adaptation is adopted.)
l
E1 (IMA adaptation is adopted.)
The service interface layer on the UNI side: l
In the direction from the CE to the PE, receives the signals transmitted from the physical layer, extracts the ATM cells, and sends the ATM cells to the ATM switch module at the NSP layer for processing.
l
In the direction from the PE to the CE, receives the ATM cells transmitted from the ATM switch module that is at the NSP layer, and sends the ATM cells to the corresponding physical channel.
According to the customer requirements, the NSP layer on the UNI side performs the following processing. l
Performs the VP switching.
l
Performs the VC switching.
l
Performs the ATM OAM processing.
The forwarder located between the UNI and the NNI mutually forwards the ATM service at the NSP layer on the UNI side and the relevant PW on the NNI side. The forwarder can adopt the following modes to determine the relevant PW of the ATM service. l
VCC
l
VPC
The emulation service layer on the NNI side corresponds to the payload that is to be encapsulated into the PW. The emulation service layer is an abstract logical layer. The PTN equipment does not perform any specific operation at this layer. The PWE3 encapsulation layer on the NNI side can adopt the following two modes to encapsulate the ATM cells into a PW PDU. l
Encapsulating one ATM cell into a PW PDU.
l
Encapsulating N (N<=31) ATM cells into a PW PDU. This is also referred to as ATM cell concatenation.
At the MPLS layer on the NNI side, by using two tags, the OptiX PTN 1900 distinguishes the PW that carries the service from the tunnel that carries the PW. At the data link layer and the physical layer on the NNI side, the OptiX PTN 1900 carries and transmits the MPLS packet through different links. 4-8
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
4 Services
CES Service Processing At the physical layer on the UNI side, the OptiX PTN 1900 supports the interconnection to the customer-side equipment through the following physical interfaces to access the CES service. l
Channelized STM-1
l
E1
The service interface layer on the UNI side: l
In the direction from the CE to the PE, receives the signals transmitted from the physical layer, extracts the TDM services, and sends the TDM services to the TDM processing module at the NSP layer for processing.
l
In the direction from the PE to the CE, receives the TDM services transmitted from the TDM processing module that is at the NSP layer, and sends the TDM services to the corresponding physical channel.
According to the customer requirements, the NSP layer on the UNI side performs the following processing l
Performs the multiplexing and demultiplexing for channelized STM-1 signals and E1 signals.
l
Performs the E1 (VC-12) granularity scheduling for the channelized STM-1 signals.
The forwarder located between the UNI and the NNI mutually forwards the TDM service at the NSP layer on the UNI side and the relevant PW on the NNI side. The forwarder can adopt the following two modes to determine the relevant PW of the TDM service. l
E1 port that accesses the TDM service
l
Channelized STM-1 port and VC-12 timeslot that access the TDM service
The emulation service layer on the NNI side corresponds to the payload that is to be encapsulated into the PW. The emulation service layer is an abstract logical layer. No specific operation is performed at this layer. The PWE3 encapsulation layer on the NNI side can adopt the following two modes to encapsulate the TDM service into a PW PDU. l
Structure-agnostic encapsulation. In this case, the emulated E1 signals are considered as a bit stream. No matter whether the emulated E1 signals have the timeslot structure, the PTN equipment does not recognize the timeslot structure.
l
Structure-aware encapsulation. In this case, the emulated E1 signals are considered as a structure-aware bit stream consisting of 64 kbit/s timeslots. The 64 kbit/s timeslots are visible to the PTN equipment.
At the MPLS layer on the NNI side, by using two tags, the OptiX PTN 1900 distinguishes the PW that carries the service from the tunnel that carries the PW. At the data link layer and the physical layer on the NNI side, the OptiX PTN 1900 carries and transmits the MPLS packet through different links.
4.2 Ethernet Service The OptiX PTN 1900 supports various Ethernet services and provides ideal L2VPN solutions. Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
4-9
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
4 Services
A virtual private network (VPN) is a private network constructed on the basis of the public network. The L2VPN is the VPN based on technologies of the link layer. The VPN constructed on the public network can provide the same security, reliability and manageability as the existing private networks. Service providers can provide the VPN value-added service for enterprises to fully use the existing network resources and to increase the service volume. In addition, service providers can consolidate long-term partnership with enterprises. For VPN users, the cost to lease the network is saved. The flexibility of the VPN networking makes the network management easier for enterprises. As the network security and encryption technology develops, the private data can be transmitted over the public network with security.
Service Form For the OptiX PTN 1900, the Ethernet service has the following forms. l
Point-to-point service: E-Line service
l
Multipoint-to-multipoint service: E-LAN service
l
Multipoint-to-point converging service: E-Aggr service
The QoS processing, such as flow classification and bandwidth control, can be performed for the Ethernet service. Standardization organizations such as ITU-T, IETF and MEF stipulate the model frames for L2 Ethernet services. Table 4-1 lists these model frames. In this document, the L2 Ethernet services are of the model frame stipulated by MEF. Table 4-1 Comparison among L2 Ethernet services stipulation Service Type
Service Multiplexing
Transport Tunnel
IETF Model
ITU-T Model
MEF Model
Point-topoint service
Line
Physically isolated
Physically isolated
-
EPL
E-Line
Virtual Line
Physically isolated
VLAN
-
EVPL
MPLS
VPWS
VLAN
Physically isolated
-
VLAN
-
MPLS
VPWS
Multipointtomultipoint service
4-10
LAN
Physically isolated
Physically isolated
-
EPLAN
Virtual LAN
VLAN
Physically isolated
-
EVPLAN
S-VLAN
-
MPLS
VPLS
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
E-LAN
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
Service Type
4 Services
Service Multiplexing
Transport Tunnel
IETF Model
S-VLAN
B-MAC
-
ITU-T Model
MEF Model
B-VLAN
E-Line Service Illustration Figure 4-4 illustrates the E-Line service provided by the PTN products. Company A has two branches in City 1 and City 3. Company B has two branches in City 2 and City 3. Company C has two branches in City 1 and City 2. The branches of Company A, Company B, and Company C require data communication among themselves. Private line services are then provided to Company A, Company B, and Company C separately for the communication requirement. In addition, the data are isolated. Figure 4-4 E-Line service illustration
Metro carrier Ethernet
Company A
Metro carrier Ethernet
Nationwide/Global carrier Ethernet
Company C
Metro carrier Ethernet
City 1
Company A
Company B City 3
E-Line1 City 2
E-Line2 E-Line3
Company C
Company B
E-LAN Service Illustration Figure 4-5 illustrates the E-LAN service provided by the PTN products. The headquarters of Company Z is in City 3. Branch A of Company Z is located at City 1, City 2 and City 3. Branch B of Company Z is located at City 1 and City 2. Branch A and Branch B have no service connection. Data from the two branchs should be isolated. The headquarters needs to communicate with the branchs and to access to the Internet. The PTN products can be used to provide the E-LAN service. Different VLAN tags are used to identify service data from different branchs. In this way, the headquarters can communicate with Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
4-11
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
4 Services
the branchs and the data from different branchs are isolated. In addition, the VLAN is used to isolate the Internet data accessed by the headquarters from the internal service data. Figure 4-5 E-LAN service illustration
ISP
Metro carrier Ethernet
Nationwide/Global carrier Ethernet
Branch B
Headquarter
Metro carrier Ethernet Branch A
Metro carrier Ethernet
City 1
Branch B City 3
City 2
VLAN1 VLAN2 VLAN3
Branch A
Branch B
Branch A
E-Aggr Service Illustration The E-Aggr service is a point-to-point bidirectional convergence service. Figure 4-6 illustrates the E-Aggr service provided by the PTN products. To construct a 3G network, an operator needs to converge services from each NodeB and transmit the converged services to the RNC. The data flow between NodeB and the RNC is taken as a service. At the convergence node, overall bandwidth is specified for the services to ensure the QoS.
4-12
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
4 Services
Figure 4-6 E-Aggr service illustration
FE
FE
GE
FE
OptiX PTN 3900
Node B
OptiX PTN 1900
RNC
4.3 ATM Service In the transport network with the packet switching as the core, the OptiX PTN 1900 provides the ATM emulation service. The OptiX PTN 1900 accesses ATM services at the source node and encapsulates the ATM cells in the PW and then transports them to the destination node. At the destination node, ATM cells are recovered. In this way, ATM services are emulated. The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the following encapsulation schemes. l
1:1 virtual channel connection (VCC) mapping scheme: one VCC is mapped into one PW.
l
N:1 VCC mapping scheme: N (N≤32) VCCs are mapped into one PW.
l
1:1 virtual path connection (VPC) mapping scheme: one VPC is mapped into one PW.
l
N:1 VPC mapping scheme: N (N≤32) VPCs are mapped into one PW.
The OptiX PTN 1900 can access the IMA service and supports the following operations. l
Query of the IMA link status.
l
Add the channelized STM-1 VC-12 link (CD1) or E1 link to the IMA group.
l
Delete the channelized STM-1 VC-12 link (CD1) or E1 link from the IMA group.
The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the following ATM specifications. Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
4-13
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
4 Services l
The OptiX PTN 1900 supports a maximum of 1k ATM services (remote service) and a maximum of 512 ATM services (local service), each optical interface supports 512 ATM services.
l
The OptiX PTN 1900 supports a maximum of 2k ATM connections (remote service) and a maximum of 1k ATM connections (local service), each optical interface supports 1k ATM connections.
The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the following IMA specifications. l
The CD1 board supports a maximum of 64 IMA groups.
l
The MD1 board supports a maximum of 32 IMA groups.
l
Each IMA group contains a maximum of 32 E1 links or 32 channelized STM-1 VC-12 channels.
For the ATM service, the QoS policies can be configured in relation to the service type and bandwidth.
4.4 Circuit Emulation Service In a packet switching network (PSN), the circuit emulation services are used to transparently transmit the TDM circuit. The OptiX PTN 1900 supports TDM CES accessed by the E1 electrical interfaces and the channelized STM-1 optical interfaces.
Application Model The OptiX PTN 1900 uses the PWE3 technology to provide the CES. The CES mainly applies to the wireless service and enterprise private line service. For 2G/3G stations or enterprise private lines, the PTN equipment accesses E1 signals from E1 lines or channelized STM-1 lines. The PTN equipment then encapsulates the E1 signals into packets, which are then transported to the opposite end through the PW. Figure 4-7 shows the process.
4-14
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
4 Services
Figure 4-7 CES service application model
Backbone layer IP/MPLS backbone
Convergence RNC layer
BSC
Access layer
NodeB
BTS OptiX PTN 3900
BTS OptiX PTN 1900
NodeB CES
Emulation Mode The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the CES services in both the structured emulation mode and unstructured emulation mode. The structured emulation mode is also the structure-aware TDM circuit emulation service over packet switched network (CESoPSN) mode. l
In this mode, the equipment detects the frame structure, framing scheme and timeslot information in the TDM circuit.
l
In this mode, the equipment processes the overhead in the TDM frames and extracts the payload. The equipment then places each channel of timeslots into the packet payload in a certain sequence. In this way, each channel of services are fixed and known.
The unstructured emulation mode is also the structure-agnostic TDM over packet (SAToP) mode. l
In this mode, the equipment does not detect the structure of any TDM signals, but takes signals as bit flow of the fixed rate. In this way, the overall TDM signals is emulated.
l
In this mode, the overhead and payload in the TDM signals are transparently transmitted.
In the structured emulation mode, the OptiX PTN 1900 senses the E1 structure of the TDM signal and provides the idle 64 kbit/s timeslot suppression function to save the transmission bandwidth. Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
4-15
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
4 Services
Service Clocks TDM services have high requirements for clock synchronization. The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the retiming synchronization mode. In the retiming synchronization mode, the system clock of the PEs are synchronized and the system clock is used as the service clock (retiming). Thus, all the PEs and CEs are synchronized and the service clocks of the TDM services on all the CEs and PEs are synchronized. See Figure 4-8. Figure 4-8 Retiming synchronization mode of the CES service clock
CES BTS
TDM
PE
PE
TDM
BSC
4.5 L3VPN Services The OptiX PTN 1900 supports border gateway protocol (BGP)-based or MPLS-based layer3 virtual private network (L3VPN) services. The equipment provides a complete L3VPN solution.
Basic Concepts The BGP/MPLS L3VPN, based on the PE, is an L3VPN technology of the provider provisioned VPN (PPVPN). It uses the BGP to issue VPN routes in the backbone network of the service provider and uses the MPLS to forward VPN packets in the backbone network of the service provider. The BGP/MPLS L3VPN enables flexible networking and can be easily extended. In addition, the BGP/MPLS L3VPN supports the MPLS QoS and MPLS TE. Figure 4-9 shows the schematic diagram of BGP/MPLS L3VPN application.
4-16
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
4 Services
Figure 4-9 Networking Application of the BGP/MPLS L3VPN
VPN 1
CE-C
CE-A
VPN 2
Backbone network P
P PE
PE PE VPN 2
P
P
VPN 1 CE-D
CE-B
OptiX PTN 3900/OptiX PTN 1900
CE
Route Diffusion The route is the basis of the Layer 3 IP forwarding. The diffusion and differentiation of routers is a core problem to be solved by the L3VPN solution The BGP/MPLS L3VPN solution of the OptiX PTN equipment supports the following routing mechanisms: l
Runs the open shortest path first (OSPF), routing information protocol (RIP), and E-BGP routing protocols together with the CE to complete the VPN route diffusion between the local equipment and the CE.
l
Uses the MP-BGP protocol to complete the VPN route diffusion between PEs in the same VPN.
l
Uses the IS-IS routing protocol for networking between the OptiX PTN equipment.
Service Forwarding The BGP/MPLS L3VPN adopts the MPLS technology to forward service packets by using two MPLS labels. On the PE connected to the CE, the VPN, to which a service packet belongs, is distinguished by using the inner MPLS label. When traveling the public PSN, the service packets are forwarded in the public PSN by using the outer MPLS label. As shown in Figure 4-10, IP packets of the CE-C in VPN 2 need be transmitted to the subnet connected to CE-B. For the packet forwarding process, see Table 4-2. Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
4-17
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
4 Services
Figure 4-10 Service packet forwarding of the BGP/MPLS L3VPN
CE-A VPN 1
IP VPN 2 Label 3
Link
IP
IP
VPN 2 Label 2
VPN 2 Label 1
Link
Link
P1
VPN 2
IP ETH CE-C
P2
PE-Y PE-X IP ETH PE-Z VPN 2
P3
P4
VPN 1 CE-D
CE-B
Table 4-2 Instances for service packet forwarding of the BGP/MPLS L3VPN NE
Action
Description
CE-C
Forwards a IP packet.
The destination IP address is the host that is connected to CE-B and is located in VPN 2. The IP packet is transmitted to PE-Y through an Ethernet link.
IP ETH
PE-Y
Extracts the IP packet.
PE-Y extracts the IP packet from the Ethernet link that is connected to CEC.
IP
PE-Y
Determines the VPN that the IP packet belongs to.
PE-Y determines that the packet belongs to VPN 2 based on the Ethernet port and then adds a MPLS private label, which corresponds to VPN 2, to the IP packet.
Routes and forwards the packet.
PE-Y checks for the virtual routing and forwarding (VRF) table corresponding to VPN 2. Based on the VRF table, it learns that the packet should be forwarded to the tunnel between PE-Y and PE-X. Then, PE-Y adds MPLS label 1, which corresponds to the tunnel, to the IP packet.
PE-Y
4-18
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Label Stack
IP VPN 2
IP VPN 2 Label 1
Link
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
NE
Action
Description
P2
MPLS forwarding
P2 extracts the outer MPLS label from the packet and checks for the MPLS forwarding table. Then, P2 forwards the MPLS forwarding table to the link connected to P1 and exchanges the outer label with label 2.
P1
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
MPLS forwarding
P1 extracts the outer MPLS label from the packet and checks for the MPLS forwarding table. Then, P2 forwards the MPLS forwarding table to the link connected to PE-X and exchanges the outer label with label 3.
PE-X
Determines the VPN that the packet belongs to.
PE-X extracts the forwarded MPLS packet, strips the two MPLS labels, and determines that the packet belongs to VPN 2 based on the inner label.
PE-X
Routes and forwards the packet.
PE-X checks for the VRF table corresponding to VPN 2. Based on the VRF table, it learns that the packet should be forwarded to the Ethernet link connected to CE-B. Then, PE-X adds Ethernet encapsulation to the IP packet and sends it to CE-B.
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
4 Services
Label Stack IP VPN 2 Label 2
Link
IP VPN 2 Label 3
Link
IP
IP ETH
4-19
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features
5
Key Features
About This Chapter This chapter describes key features of the equipment. 5.1 MPLS The OptiX PTN 1900 uses the multiprotocol label switching (MPLS) technology to transport multiple types of services. This section describes the basic concepts related to the MPLS and application of the MPLS supported by the OptiX PTN 1900. 5.2 IS-IS Routing Protocol The intermediate system to intermediate system (IS-IS) routing protocol, a link state protocol, belongs to the internal gateway protocol and is applicable to the internal of the autonomous system. The OptiX PTN 1900 uses the IS-IS routing protocol, which is used with the label distribution protocols RSVP-TE and LDP to realize the dynamic creation of the MPLS LSP. 5.3 BGP In the case of the L3VPN service application, the OptiX PTN 1900 uses the BGP to control route advertisement and selection of the best route. On the client side, the OptiX PTN 1900 discovers routes by running the external BGP (E-BGP). On the network side, the OptiX PTN 1900 discovers routes by running the multiprotocol extensions for BGP-4 (MP-BGP). 5.4 OSPF Protocol The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the open shortest path first (OSPF) protocol. On the client side, the OptiX PTN 1900 discovers routes by running the OSPF protocol. On the network side, the OptiX PTN 1900 discovers routes by running the OSPF protocol and provides the conditions for tunnel creation, that is, enables OSPF traffic engineering (TE). 5.5 RIP The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the routing information protocol (RIP). On the client side, the OptiX PTN 1900 obtains the routing information and discovers routes by running the RIP. 5.6 MPLS Signaling The MPLS signaling used by the OptiX PTN 1900 includes LSP signaling and PW signaling. The LSP signaling is responsible for distributing LSP labels and the PW signaling is responsible for distributing PW labels to establish PW. 5.7 PWE3 The pseudo wire emulation edge-to-edge (PWE3) technology is used to provide tunnels on the packet switching network (IP/MPLS) to emulate the Layer 2 VPN protocol for some services, Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
5-1
5 Key Features
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
such as the TDM, ATM and Ethernet services. The emulated VPN protocol is used to connect the traditional network and packet switching network. In this way, networks are extended and resources can be shared. 5.8 IP Tunnel and GRE Tunnel The OptiX PTN 1900 can use the IP tunnel or GRE tunnel to carry the ATM PWE3 service, CES PWE3 service and ETH PWE3 service. In this way, ATM emulation services and ETH emulation services can be transparently transmitted in an IP network. 5.9 QoS The equipment supports DiffServ based on the standard, including flow classification, flow policing, traffic shaping, congestion management and queue scheduling. 5.10 IGMP Snooping The Internet group management protocol (IGMP) Snooping function is used to realize multicast distribution. 5.11 MSTP/RSTP/STP The multiple spanning tree protocol (MSTP) is compatible with the spanning tree protocol (STP) and rapid spanning tree protocol (RSTP). In addition, the MSTP rectifies the defects of the STP and RSTP. The MSTP supports fast reconfiguration and provides multiple paths for forwarding data. During the data forwarding process, the VLAN data is of load balance. The MSTP complies with IEEE 802.1s. 5.12 ACL To filter data packets, the access control list (ACL) can be used to stipulate a series rules in order. The equipment classifies the received data packets according to the ACL rules and then forwards or discards these packets. 5.13 BFD The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the bidirectional forwarding detection (BFD) function. The Hello mechanism is used to detect states of Ethernet links. 5.14 Synchronous Ethernet Clock The OptiX PTN 1900 realizes the synchronous Ethernet clock on the Physical layer. 5.15 IEEE 1588 V2 Clock The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the function of adopting the IEEE 1588 V2 protocol to realize clock synchronization and time synchronization.
5-2
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features
5.1 MPLS The OptiX PTN 1900 uses the multiprotocol label switching (MPLS) technology to transport multiple types of services. This section describes the basic concepts related to the MPLS and application of the MPLS supported by the OptiX PTN 1900. 5.1.1 MPLS Background The multiprotocol label switching (MPLS) was originally used to increase the forwarding speed of a router. Currently, the MPLS are evolving to the backbone routing and the VPN solution. 5.1.2 Basic MPLS Concepts Several basic MPLS concepts facilitate the understanding of the MPLS technology. These basic MPLS concepts include forwarding equivalence class (FEC), label, label distribution protocol (LDP) and label switched path (LSP). 5.1.3 MPLS System Structure The MPLS system consists of the control plane and forwarding plane. 5.1.4 MPLS Features of the Equipment Using the MPLS technology, the OptiX PTN 1900 not only greatly increases the packet forwarding speed but also provides the capability of seamlessly connecting to Layer 2 networks such as the ATM and Ethernet networks. In addition, the OptiX PTN 1900 provides better solutions for application of the TE, VPN and QoS.
5.1.1 MPLS Background The multiprotocol label switching (MPLS) was originally used to increase the forwarding speed of a router. Currently, the MPLS are evolving to the backbone routing and the VPN solution. The MPLS is integrated with the Layer 3 routing function of the IP network and the highly effective forwarding mechanism of the traditional Layer 2 network. Similar to the forwarding scheme of the existing Layer 2 network, the forwarding plane is connection-oriented. Hence, the MPLS can be seamlessly connected to Layer 2 networks such the ATM and Ethernet networks. In addition, the MPLS provides better solutions for the application of the traffic engineering (TE), virtual private network (VPN) and quality of service (QoS). Hence, the MPLS becomes a criterion for expanding the data network and increasing the network operability. To better meet the requirements of the transport network for service quality, the connectionless feature of the standard MPLS should be simplified, and the OAM and protection capabilities should be enhanced. In compliance with the latest international standards, the OptiX PTN 1900 supports a series of MPLS features for the transport network.
5.1.2 Basic MPLS Concepts Several basic MPLS concepts facilitate the understanding of the MPLS technology. These basic MPLS concepts include forwarding equivalence class (FEC), label, label distribution protocol (LDP) and label switched path (LSP).
Forwarding Equivalence Class As a classification forwarding technology, the MPLS considers the packets of the same forwarding scheme as a class, which is called an FEC. In the MPLS network, the packets in the same FEC are processed in the same way. Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
5-3
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features
Label A label is a short identifier of fixed length and is locally valid (only valid in the MPLS domain). The label is used to identify the FEC that one packet belongs to. On certain conditions, for example, when load sharing is required, several labels may correspond to one FEC, but one label just indicates one FEC. The packet headers carry labels and the labels do not contain any topology information. Labels are locally valid. A label has four bytes, which are encapsulated in the way illustrated in Figure 5-1. Figure 5-1 Label encapsulation structure 0
19 Label
22 23 Exp S
31 TTL
A label has the following four sections. l
Label: 20 bits. The label section indicates the label value and is used as the forwarding pointer.
l
Exp: 3 bits. The Exp section is reserved for test and currently used for CoS.
l
S: 1 bit. The S section is an identifier at the bottom of a stack. The MPLS supports the layered labels, or multiple labels. If S is 1, it indicates that the label is at the bottom.
l
TTL: 8 bits. The TTL section has the same indication as the time to live (TTL) of IP packets.
As a connection identifier, the label is similar to the VPI/VCI for ATM. The labels are encapsulated between the link layer and the network layer in a Ethernet frame. Figure 5-2 shows the encapsulation location of labels. Figure 5-2 Encapsulation location of labels in Ethernet frames Ethernet/PPP header
Label
Layer 3 data
Ethernet/SONET/SDH packet
LDP The LDP is the control protocol for the MPLS. Similar to the signaling protocol of the traditional network, the LDP is responsible for creation and maintenance of LSP and PW, FEC classification, and label distribution. The MPLS can use several types of label distribution protocols.
5-4
l
Some protocols are exclusively stipulated for label distribution, such as LDP and constraintrouting label distribution protocol (CR-LDP). The OptiX PTN 1900 uses the LDP to create and maintain PWs.
l
Some exiting protocols can be extended to support the label distribution, such as border gateway protocol (BGP) and resource reservation protocol (RSVP). The OptiX PTN Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features
1900 uses the resource reservation protocol-traffic engineering (RSVP-TE) protocol to create and maintain LSPs.
LSP In an MPLS network, the path involved in an FEC is called an LSP. The LSP is a unidirectional path from the ingress to egress. Each node on an LSP is a label switched router (LSR). According to the data transport direction, adjacent LSRs are upstream LSR and downstream LSR. The LSPs are classified into static LSPs and dynamic LSPs. The static LSPs are manually configured by the administrator. The dynamic LSPs are created dynamically by the RSVP-TE protocol.
5.1.3 MPLS System Structure The MPLS system consists of the control plane and forwarding plane. The control plane of the MPLS system is connectionless. The control plane of the MPLS system uses the powerful and flexible routing function of a Layer 3 network, which meets the network requirements of new application. The forwarding plane is also called a data plane, which is connection-oriented and can use Layer 2 networks such as Ethernet. The MPLS uses short labels of fixed length to encapsulate packets. The forwarding plane then quickly forwards the encapsulated packets.
5.1.4 MPLS Features of the Equipment Using the MPLS technology, the OptiX PTN 1900 not only greatly increases the packet forwarding speed but also provides the capability of seamlessly connecting to Layer 2 networks such as the ATM and Ethernet networks. In addition, the OptiX PTN 1900 provides better solutions for application of the TE, VPN and QoS. To ensure the service quality required in a transport network, the OptiX PTN 1900 simplifies the non-connection-oriented feature of the MPLS. l
The OptiX PTN 1900 does not use the penultimate hop popping (PHP).
l
The OptiX PTN 1900 does not support LSP Merge, for the LSP Merge makes the source of a data flow unknown. If the source is unknown, the OAM and performance monitoring become difficult or unusable.
l
The OptiX PTN 1900 does not support the equal cost multiple path (ECMP), for the ECMP makes the CC of the OAM and performance monitoring complex.
In addition, the OptiX PTN 1900 provides complete OAM support and powerful protection capabilities. l
The OptiX PTN 1900 uses the MPLS OAM mechanism compliant with ITU-T Y.1711 to fast check the LSP.
l
The OptiX PTN 1900 uses the protection switching mechanism that complies with ITU-T Y.1720 and ITU-T G.8131. The OptiX PTN 1900 not only provides FRR protection for LSPs, but also provides end-to-end transport protection for LSPs.
The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the MPLS technology and has the following MPLS features. Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
5-5
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features
Table 5-1 MPLS features of OptiX PTN 1900 Feature
Description
MPLS basic function
The equipment supports basic MPLS functions and service forwarding. The equipment uses the RSVP-TE protocol to create and maintain the MPLS Tunnels, and uses the LDP to create and maintain the PWs. The equipment uses the MPLS tunnel technology and the pseudo wire emulation edge-to-edge (PWE3) technology to form an MPLS network, where multiple services can be accessed. The equipment supports the static MPLS Tunnel and dynamic MPLS Tunnel. The equipment supports the static PW and dynamic PW.
MPLS OAM
The equipment supports the MPLS OAM in compliance with ITU-T Y. 1711. The equipment supports Ping and TraceRoute commands for the MPLS Tunnel.
MPLS protection
The equipment supports the MPLS Tunnel re-route (RR). The equipment supports the MPLS Tunnel fast re-route (FRR). The equipment supports the 1+1 protection and 1:1 protection for the MPLS Tunnel.
Others
The equipment supports the TE based on the MPLS Tunnel. The equipment supports the MPLS QoS.
Table 5-2 MPLS specification of OptiX PTN 1900 Feature
Specifications
Maximum number of MPLS tunnel
1k
Maximum number of PWs
2k
5.2 IS-IS Routing Protocol The intermediate system to intermediate system (IS-IS) routing protocol, a link state protocol, belongs to the internal gateway protocol and is applicable to the internal of the autonomous system. The OptiX PTN 1900 uses the IS-IS routing protocol, which is used with the label distribution protocols RSVP-TE and LDP to realize the dynamic creation of the MPLS LSP. The IS-IS routing protocol used by the OptiX PTN 1900 creates and synchronizes the link state database (LSD) through routing protocol packets, such as link state PDUs. Based on the LSDB 5-6
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features
and path cost, the OptiX PTN 1900 uses the optimized shortest path first (SPF) algorithm to generate the routing table, and uses the IS-IS TE of the IS-IS routing protocol to generate the traffic engineering database (TEDB). The TEDB and routing table are the bases of creating the MPLS LSP. The TEDB computes the route that the MPLS LSP travels through. The routing table forwards the RSVP-TE and LDP protocol packets to realize label distribution. In this way, the MPLS LSP is dynamically created. Three features of the IS-IS routing protocol are supported by the OptiX PTN 1900, that is, three types of IS-IS routing protocol packets, optimized SPF algorithm, path cost, and IS-IS traffic engineering (IS-IS TE).
Three Types of IS-IS Routing Protocol Packets The IS-IS routing protocol belongs to the network player of the OSI protocol model. The IS-IS routing protocol runs directly at the data link layer. When the IS-IS routing protocol is processed, the decapsulation of the network layer is absent. With the preceding feature, the IS-IS routing protocol is more applicable to the PTN transport network using the MPLS packet switching technology. The IS-IS routing protocol packets use the uniform encapsulation format. The length of the packets is changeable and the extensibility is strong. The complexity of the protocol is decreased, because the types of the protocol packets are few. Thus, the running is more reliable and efficient. The OptiX PTN 1900 realizes the following three types of IS-IS routing protocol packets: l
Hello packets Hello packets are used to construct and maintain neighbor relation between network nodes. Hence, Hello packets are also called IS-to-IS hello (IIH) PDUs.
l
Link state PDUs Link state PDUs are used to exchange the link state information. In a network running the IS-IS routing protocol, each network node generates a link state PDU, which contains all the link state information of this network node. To generate its own LSDB, each network node collects all the link state PDUs within the local domain and between domains.
l
SNP packets Sequence number PDUs (SNP) describe the link state PDUs in all or part of the LSDB. The SNP is used to synchronize and maintain the LSDB of each network node in the PTN network.
Optimized SPF Algorithm The IS-IS routing protocol realized by the OptiX PTN 1900 uses the optimized SPF algorithm for route computation and update. When the topology is changed, the resources (network bandwidth, processing capability of network nodes, and memory) for updating the new route are few, and thus the convergence rate of the entire network is improved.
path cost The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the manual setting of path cost, and controls the route that the MPLS LSP travels through when it is dynamically created.
IS-IS TE When the MPLS constructs the LSP, the traffic engineering information of all the links in the local domain should be known. The IS-IS TE realized by the OptiX PTN 1900 supports the Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
5-7
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features
construction of the MPLS LSP. The OptiX PTN 1900 obtains the traffic engineering information (link utilization and path cost) of all the links in the network through the IS-IS routing protocol. It constructs and synchronizes the TEDB, and uses the constrained shortest path first (CSPF) algorithm used by the TEDB to compute the route that the MPLS LSP travels through.
5.3 BGP In the case of the L3VPN service application, the OptiX PTN 1900 uses the BGP to control route advertisement and selection of the best route. On the client side, the OptiX PTN 1900 discovers routes by running the external BGP (E-BGP). On the network side, the OptiX PTN 1900 discovers routes by running the multiprotocol extensions for BGP-4 (MP-BGP). As an exterior gateway protocol (EGP), the border gateway protocol (BGP) runs between autonomous systems (ASs) to control route advertisement and selection of the best route. NOTE
An AS is a collection of routers that are under the control of one entity and have the same internal routing policy.
The BGP supported by the OptiX PTN 1900 complies with RFC 3107 (Carrying Label Information in BGP-4), RFC 1997 (BGP Communities Attribute), RFC 4271 (A Border Gateway Protocol 4) and RFC 4760 (Multiprotocol Extensions for BGP-4).
Basic Concepts The basic concepts with regard to the BGP are as follows: l
Speaker: The OptiX PTN equipment that transmits the BGP messages is referred to as a speaker, which receives or generates new routing information and advertises the routing information to its peers. When a BGP speaker receives routing information from another AS, the BGP speaker advertises the routes to its peers in the AS, if the route is better than the known routes or the BGP speaker does not contain the routes.
l
Peer: The BGP speakers that exchange the routing information are peers to each other.
l
Internal BGP (I-BGP): When the BGP runs in the same AS, the BGP is referred to as IBGP.
l
External BGP (E-BGP): When the BGP runs in different ASs, the BGP is referred to as EBGP.
l
MP-BGP: MP-BGP is the multiprotocol extensions for the BGP-4. The MP-BGP supports multiple network protocols. MP-BGP runs in the same AS.
BGP Messages In the PSN, the BGP notifies the routing information, maintains and interrupts connections by transporting the BGP messages. The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the following messages:
5-8
l
Open messages: When a TCP connection is established, the Open messages are sent to establish connections between BGP peers.
l
Update messages: The Update messages are transported for peers to exchange the routing information. The Update messages can advertise the information about multiple reachable routes with the same attributes and delete the information about multiple unreachable routes. Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features
l
Keepalive messages: The Keepalive messages are sent periodically to the peers to maintain the validity of connections. When receiving the Open messages, the peers send the Keepalive messages to maintain the validity of connections. After the acknowledgment, the peers can exchange the Update, Notification, and Keepalive messages.
l
Notification messages: When detecting a status error, the Notification messages are sent to peers. Then, the BGP connection is interrupted immediately. NOTE
The routing information is transported according to the incremental updates. That is, only route changes are notified.
BGP Attributes BGP routing attributes are a series of parameters that further define certain routes and thus help the BGP to filter and select routes. The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the following BGP attributes: l
Origin: The Origin attribute defines the origin of the path information.
l
AS_Path: The AS_Path attribute records the numbers of the ASs that one route traverses from the local to the destination, in a vector sequence. The AS_Path attribute avoids route loops. Generally, the BGP does not receive the information about the route whose AS_Path attribute contains the local AS number. In this manner, the route loop is avoided.
l
Next_Hop: The Next_Hop attribute indicates the address of the next hop along the message transmission path to the destination.
l
Multi-exit-descriminator (MED): The MED attribute is transmitted only between two adjacent ASs to determine the best route along which the traffic enters the AS. The route whose MED value is the smallest is selected as the best route with priority.
l
Community: The Community attribute simplifies the routing policy and facilitates the maintenance and management of routes.
BGP Route Selection Policy When there are multiple routes with the same destination, the BGP selects the routes by using the following polices: 1.
Discards the route whose next hop is unreachable.
2.
Prefers the route of the highest Local_Pref value.
3.
Prefers the route that starts from the OptiX PTN equipment.
4.
Prefers the route with the least AS_Path.
5.
Prefers the route whose Origin is the lowest.
6.
Prefers the route whose MED is the lowest.
7.
Prefers the routes learned from the E-BGP.
8.
Prefers the route of the shortest path in the AS.
BGP Route Notification Principle The OptiX PTN 1900 notifies the routing information by adhering to the following principles: l
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
When there are multiple valid routes, the BGP speaker advertises only the best route to its peers. Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
5-9
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features l
The BGP speaker advertises only the routing information that it uses to its peers.
l
The BGP speaker advertises all the routes that it learns from the E-BGP to its peers (including E-BGP peers and I-BGP peers).
l
The BGP speaker does not advertises the routes that it learns from the I-BGP to its I-BGP peers.
l
The BGP speaker advertises the routes that it learns from the I-BGP to its E-BGP peers, when the synchronization of the BPG and IGP is not enabled.
l
The BGP speaker advertises all the BGP routes to the new peers once the connections are established. NOTE
The synchronization between the BGP and IGP refers to the process where the BGP adds a new route to the routing table only after the IGP adds the new route to the routing table. If the BGP is not synchronous with the IGP, the BGP straightly adds new routes to the routing table.
5.4 OSPF Protocol The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the open shortest path first (OSPF) protocol. On the client side, the OptiX PTN 1900 discovers routes by running the OSPF protocol. On the network side, the OptiX PTN 1900 discovers routes by running the OSPF protocol and provides the conditions for tunnel creation, that is, enables OSPF traffic engineering (TE). The OSPF protocol is a dynamic interior gateway protocol (IGP) that is compiled based on link status by IETF. On the network, the OSPF protocol transfers the link state information and computes routes to obtain the routing information according to the link state information. The OSPF protocol supported by the OptiX PTN 1900 complies with RFC 3623 (Graceful OSPF Restart), RFC 2328 (OSPF Version 2), RFC 3630 (TE Extensions to OSPF Version 2), and RFC 2370 (The OSPF Opaque LSA Option).
Basic Concepts The basic concepts with regard to the OSPF protocol include the OSPF protocol packet, link state advertisement (LSA), neighbor, adjacency, router ID, and OSPF TE. l
l
5-10
There are the following categories of OSPF protocol packets: –
Hello packets: The Hello packets are used to discover and maintain the OSPF neighborhood and are sent periodically.
–
Database description (DD) packets: Exchanging the DD packets are used to maintain synchronization of the databases. The DD packets describe the summary of the local link state database (LSDB).
–
Link state request (LSR) packet: The LSR packets are used to request for the required LSA from each other. The LSR packets are sent to each other only after they successfully start to exchange the DD packets.
–
Link state update (LSU) packet: The LSU packets are used to send the required LSA to each other.
–
Link state acknowledgment (LSAck) packet: The LSAck packets are used to acknowledge the received LSA.
The OSPF advertises the routing information by encapsulating the route description into LSAs. The common LSA categories are as follows: Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features
–
Router LSA (type 1): The router LSA describes the link status and cost of the OptiX PTN equipment and is flooded only in the OSPF area.
–
Network LSA (type 2): The network LSA describes the status of the links in the local network segment and is flooded in the OSPF area.
–
Network summary LSA (type 3): The network summary LSA describes the routes in a certain network segment in the OSPF area and advertises the routing information to other related OSPF areas.
–
AS boundary router (ASBR) summary LSA (Type 4): The ASBR summary LSA describes the routes to the ASBRs and advertises the routing information to all other related OSPF areas except the areas where the ASBRs are located.
–
AS external LSA (type 5): The AS external LSA describes the routers to the outside of the AS and advertises the routing information to all the OSPF areas (Stub area and NSSA excluded).
–
Not so totally stub area (NSSA) LSA (type 7): The NSSA LSA describes the routers to the outside of the AS and is flooded only in the NSSA.
–
Opaque LSA (type 10): The opaque LSA carries the TE information.
l
Neighbor: When running the OSPF protocol, the OptiX PTN equipment sends the Hello packets through the OSPF interface. When receiving the Hello packets, the OptiX PTN equipment checks the related parameters defined in the packets for consistency. If the related parameters are consistent, the neighborhood is established.
l
Adjacency: The neighborhood does not necessarily ensure the adjacency. The network type determines when the adjacency can be established. Two OptiX PTN systems can establish the adjacency only after they successfully exchange the DD packets and LSA.
l
Router ID: A router ID is a 32-bit value that uniquely identifies an OptiX PTN equipment in an AS. A router ID is important for the OptiX PTN equipment to run the OSPF protocol.
l
OSPF TE: The OSPF TE supports the creation of the label switching paths (LSPs) for TE. Before building LSPs, the MPLS protocol has to know the traffic information of all links in the area. The MPLS protocol obtains the TE information of the links through the OSPF protocol.
OSPF Route Computation The OSPF protocol computes routes in the following way: 1.
Each OptiX PTN equipment generates the LSA based on the surrounding network topology and sends the LSA to other systems on the network through the DD packets, LSR packets, or LSU packets.
2.
Each OptiX PTN equipment collects the LSAs sent by the adjacent systems. The collection of LSAs is referred to an LSDB. The OptiX PTN equipment can obtain the topology of the entire network from the LSDB. The LSDB is the same for the OptiX PTN equipment of the PTN network. NOTE
The LSA describes the surrounding topology of the OptiX PTN equipment and the LSDB describes the network topology of the entire AS.
3.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
According to the LSDB, each OptiX PTN equipment computes a shortest path tree that is rooted at itself by using the shortest path first (SPF) algorithm. The tree defines the routes to each node in the AS. Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
5-11
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features
OSPF Area The OSPF protocol logically divides the OptiX PTN systems into areas, which are identified by area IDs. Each interface where the OSPF protocol runs must belong to an area. The OptiX PTN equipment supports the OSPF backbone area, which is responsible for interarea routing information. Backbone areas should be interconnected.
OSPF Router Classification According to the positions in the AS, the OptiX PTN systems can be classified as follows: l
Internal router, IR: All interfaces on an internal router belong to one OSPF area.
l
Backbone router: A backbone router must have one interface or more that belong to a backbone area. Hence, all the routers in the backbone areas are backbone routers.
l
Autonomous System Border Routers, ASBR: The OptiX PTN equipment that exchanges the routing information with other ASs is referred to as ASBR. An ASBR may not be located at the border of an AS. The OptiX PTN equipment that introduces the external routing information is an ASBR.
OSPF Network Classification According to the link-layer protocol types, the OSPF classifies networks as follows: l
Broadcast network: When Ethernet is used as the link-layer protocol, the OSPF considers the network as a broadcast network by default.
l
Point-to-point network: When PPP is used as the link-layer protocol, the OSPF considers the network as a point-to-point network by default.
5.5 RIP The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the routing information protocol (RIP). On the client side, the OptiX PTN 1900 obtains the routing information and discovers routes by running the RIP. The RIP is an internal gateway protocol (IGP). Based on the distance-vector algorithm, the RIP uses the hop count to indicate the distance to the destination. The RIP is applicable to smallscale networks. The RIP supported by the OptiX PTN 1900 complies with the RFC 2453 (RIP Version 2).
Basic Concepts The basic concepts related to the RIP supported by the OptiX PTN 1900 include the hop count, RIP message, RIP routing database, and RIP timer.
5-12
l
Hop count: The RIP uses the hop count to measure the distance to the destination. The hop count is also referred to as metric. As defined in the RIP, if the OptiX PTN equipment is directly connected to a network, the hop count is 0; if the OptiX PTN equipment is connected to a network through one set of equipment, the hop count is 1. The hop count can be determined by analog. To limit the convergence time, the RIP defines that the metric should be an integer in the range of 0 to 15. If the hop count is 16 or more, the RIP defines the metric as infinite. That is, the RIP considers the destination as unreachable.
l
RIP messages: The RIP switches the routing information on the basis of user datagram protocol (UDP) messages by using the RIP packets. The RIP protocol defines two types of Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features
messages, that is, request messages and response messages. The request messages are sent to request the neighbors to send all or part of the routing information and the response messages send all or part of the local routing information. l
l
RIP routing database: One set of the OptiX PTN equipment that runs the RIP manages one RIP routing database, which contains the route entries to all the reachable destinations on the network. The key route entries are as follows: –
Destination address, which is the IP address of the host or network.
–
Next-hop address, which is the IP address of the interface on the adjacent equipment that the RIP packets have to traverse to reach the destination.
–
Interface, which forwards packets.
–
Metric, which indicates the distance from the OptiX PTN equipment to the destination and is an integer in the range of 0 to 15.
–
Routing time, which indicates the period from the last time when the route entries are modified to the present time. When the route entries are modified, the routing time is reset to 0.
–
Route flag, which distinguishes the routes of the internal routing protocol from the routes of the external routing protocol.
RIP timer, which controls the RIP. There are three types of RIP timers, that is, Update, Age, and Garbage-Collect. –
Update time: During the update time, the OptiX PTN equipment periodically transmits the update packets.
–
Age time: If the OptiX PTN equipment fails to receive the update packets from one of its neighbors when the age time expires, the OptiX PTN equipment considers the route to the neighbor as unreachable.
–
Garbage-Collect time: If the OptiX PTN equipment fails to receive the update packets from one of its neighbors during the garbage-collect time, the OptiX PTN equipment deletes the route to the neighbor from the route table.
Working Process of the RIP The RIP receives the routing information from other equipment on the network and thus maintains the local IP-layer route table. In this manner, the IP-layer packets can be transmitted along the correct routes. In addition, the RIP broadcasts the routing information of the local OptiX PTN equipment to inform the neighbor equipment of route changes. When processing the RIP, the OptiX PTN equipment mainly processes the RIP packets and RIP routes. l
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
The OptiX PTN equipment processes the RIP packets as follows: 1.
When the RIP starts running, the initial route table contains the routing information of only the directly-connected interfaces on the local OptiX PTN equipment.
2.
When running the RIP, the OptiX PTN equipment sends the request messages to its neighbors.
3.
When receiving the request messages, the neighbor equipment responds to the request and returns the response messages, which contain the information about the local route table. The neighbor equipment also computes routes.
4.
When receiving the response messages from its neighbors, the OptiX PTN equipment modifies the local route table. Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
5-13
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features l
The OptiX PTN equipment processes the RIP routes as follows: –
When receiving the response messages, the OptiX PTN equipment modifies the route table, sends the messages to trigger updates on its neighbors that send the response messages, and broadcasts the route updates. When receiving the route updates, the neighbor equipment sends the messages to trigger updates to its neighbors. When the broadcast is complete, each set of equipment triggers updates and maintains the latest routing information.
–
The RIP adopts the aging mechanism to process the timeout routes and to ensure the validity of routes. Hence, the RIP periodically sends the local route table to its neighbors. When receiving the routing information, the neighbor equipment updates the local routing information. The equipment that runs the RIP repeats this process without exception.
5.6 MPLS Signaling The MPLS signaling used by the OptiX PTN 1900 includes LSP signaling and PW signaling. The LSP signaling is responsible for distributing LSP labels and the PW signaling is responsible for distributing PW labels to establish PW.
LSP Signaling The OptiX PTN 1900 uses the RSVP-TE protocol as the LSP signaling. At first, the RSVP protocol is used to reserve resources for certain services. In this way, the QoS can be guaranteed. As TE comes up lately, the RSVP protocol is extended to create LSP. In this way, TE is more easily realized. The RSVP-TE protocol used by the OptiX PTN 1900 has the following functions. l
Supports various messages and objects of standard RSVP-TE protocol.
l
Supports shared-explicit (SE) style to reserve resources. For the SE style, resources are reserved for a group of transmitters, which share the reserved resources.
l
Supports refreshing, fast re-transmission and confirmation of the software status.
PW Signaling The OptiX PTN 1900 uses the label distribution protocol (LDP) as the PW signaling. The LDP is a control and signaling protocol for the MPLS. The LDP protocol used by the OptiX PTN 1900 has the following functions. l
Supports extension of the LDP protocol by the PWE3.
l
Supports the extended neighbor discovery mechanism.
l
Supports the label distributing scheme of the downstream on demand.
l
Supports the ordered label control scheme.
l
Supports the liberal retention mode.
5.7 PWE3 The pseudo wire emulation edge-to-edge (PWE3) technology is used to provide tunnels on the packet switching network (IP/MPLS) to emulate the Layer 2 VPN protocol for some services, 5-14
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features
such as the TDM, ATM and Ethernet services. The emulated VPN protocol is used to connect the traditional network and packet switching network. In this way, networks are extended and resources can be shared.
Basic Concept The PWE3 is an end-to-end Layer 2 service carrying technology, and belongs to point-to-point L2VPN. In the two provider edges (PEs) of a network, the LDP is used as the signaling and tunnels are used to emulate various Layer 2 services at the customer edge (CE), such as the Layer 2 data packets and bit flow. In this way, the Layer 2 data at the CE end are transparently transmitted in the network. The PWE3 is used to create point-to-point channels, which are isolated from each other. The Layer 2 packets from users are transparently transmitted among PWs. For PE equipment, the mapping relation between user access interfaces and PWs is determined after the PW connection is set up. For P equipment, MPLS packets are forwarded according to the MPLS labels. The Layer 2 user packets encapsulated in the MPLS packets are not processed.
Typical Application The PWE3 is used to integrate the original access schemes with the existing IP backbone networks. In this way, repeated network construction is reduced and the OpEx is saved. Figure 5-3 Typical application of the PWE3 BSC E1, STM-1 interface FE
RNC
EMS
ATM, GE interface PWE3
PWE3 PWE3
IMA E1, FE interface E1 interface BTS NodeB
5.8 IP Tunnel and GRE Tunnel The OptiX PTN 1900 can use the IP tunnel or GRE tunnel to carry the ATM PWE3 service, CES PWE3 service and ETH PWE3 service. In this way, ATM emulation services and ETH emulation services can be transparently transmitted in an IP network. Take ATM emulation services as an example. Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
5-15
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features
In an MPLS network that consists of the PTN equipment, the PWE3 technology is used to provide the ATM emulation services. Figure 5-4 shows how the ATM emulation services are encapsulated. Figure 5-4 ATM PWE3 over MPLS tunnel ATM switch
PTN
ATM switch
PTN
MPLS network
ATM E1/STM-1
ATM PWE3 PW Label MPLS Label Ethernet
ATM E1/STM-1
If an ATM emulation service that travels through an IP network is required, the OptiX PTN 1900 can use the IP tunnel or GRE tunnel to carry the ATM PWE3. This complies with RFC 4023. As shown in Figure 5-5 and Figure 5-6, an ATM emulation service can be provided between NE A and NE B, even though the IP network between NE A and NE B does not support the MPLS. Figure 5-5 ATM PWE3 over IP tunnel ATM switch
PTN
Router
Router
PTN
ATM switch
IP ne two rk ATM E1/STM-1
5-16
ATM PWE3 PW Label IP Ethernet
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
ATM PWE3 PW Label IP Ethernet
ATM E1/STM-1
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features
Figure 5-6 ATM PWE3 over GRE tunnel ATM switch
PTN
Router
Router
PTN
ATM switch
IP ne two rk ATM E1/STM-1
ATM PWE3 PW Label GRE IP Ethernet
ATM PWE3 PW Label GRE IP Ethernet
ATM E1/STM-1
NOTE
DCN packets can be transparently transported over the IP tunnel or GRE tunnel. When the DCN packets pass through a third-party network, the DCN packets are transported in an end-to-end manner.
5.9 QoS The equipment supports DiffServ based on the standard, including flow classification, flow policing, traffic shaping, congestion management and queue scheduling. With the equipment, the vendors can provide services of different quality classes for users. In this way, an integrated network emerges to carry data, voice and video services at the same time.
QoS in the DiffServ Mode One DiffServ region may contain several types of packets, including VLAN packets and MPLS packets. To provide a good class of service (CoS) for various packets, at the edge of the DiffServ region, the ingress equipment maps the DSCP/EXP/VLAN Pri/S-VLAN dei+pcp into the CoS and the egress equipment maps the CoS into the EXP/VLAN Pri/S-VLAN dei+pcp. One DiffServ region may contain several types of packets, including VLAN packets, MPLS packets and IP packets. Hence, in actual application, the priority of which layer to be mapped into the forwarding class should be specified. The Layer 2 packets include customer VLAN (C-VLAN) packets and service VLAN (S-VLAN) packets. The Layer 3 packets include MPLS packets and IP packets. By default, the equipment maps the forwarding class according to the priorities of Layer 2 packets.
Flow Classification The flow classification indicates that data packets are classified into several priorities or service classes. For example, if the first six bits of the DSCP type of service (ToS) field are used for the flow classification, the flow can be classified into a maximum of 64 classes. After the flow is classified, other QoS features then can be used for different classes. In this way, the class-based congestion management and traffic shaping are realized. The equipment supports the simple flow classification and the complex flow classification. Simple flow classification: Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
5-17
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features
In the simple flow classification, the priorities of external packets and the priorities of internal packets are mapped to each other, according to the DSCP values of IP packets, the EXP values of MPLS packets, and the Pri values of VLAN packets. Equipment support for the simple flow classification: The equipment supports the simple flow classification for S-VLAN packets, C-VLAN packets, IP packets, and MPLS packets. The simple flow classification is performed at an Ethernet port or at a POS port. Purpose of the simple flow classification: The simple flow classification is effective for an internal node in a DS region. In a DS region, the simple flow classification rules are the same for all nodes. The simple flow classification maps the original priorities of packets in the network to the internal priorities of the equipment, so that the packets can be transmitted inside the equipment according to the preset priorities. Compared with the complex flow classification, the simple flow classification features a simplex classification form and easy configuration. In this case, the QoS configuration for each node in a DS region is simplified. Complex flow classification: In the complex flow classification, packets are classified according to relatively complex rules. The processing actions include the ACL, the CAR, and the setting of CoS. Equipment support for the complex flow classification: The equipment supports the complex flow classification for S-VLAN packets, C-VLAN packets, and IP packets. The complex flow classification is performed at an Ethernet port. Purpose of the complex flow classification: In the complex flow classification, packets are classified according to complex rules. Further processing, including the ACL, the CAR, and the setting of grooming class, is also conducted for the flow bandwidth and for the flow forwarding. The complex flow classification features flexible and diversified classification forms. In this case, the user can classify accessed services based on the QoS in a more specific manner.
CAR The committed access rate (CAR) is a method used to limit the rate of accessed packets according to the four preset parameters of the token bucket. The purpose of CAR is to mark accessed packets with colors (or label the packets), and to limit the rate of accessed packets. The CAR provides the following two key functions. l
Labeling: Realized by color marking and re-labeling.
l
Traffic rate limiting: Realized by the specific action taken on the packets after they are marked with colors.
There are two color marking modes: color-blind and color-aware. In both modes, the current rate of packets is compared with the committed information rate (CIR) and peak information rate (PIR) of the token bucket. The packets that exceed the PIR are marked in red. The packets that exceed the CIR but are within the PIR are marked in yellow. The packets that are within the CIR are marked in green. The difference is that, in the color-aware mode, if the packets themselves have a color, their own color is compared with the color that should be marked and then the deeper color is used. 5-18
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features
Traffic rate limiting determines whether to discard some colored packets, and thus limits the access rate of the traffic. The default rule is that the red packets are discarded and the yellow and green packets are allowed to pass. The actions can also be manually set for the three-color packets. NOTE
The token bucket is a technology used to realize the CAR functions. In IETF Recommendations, the single rate three color marker (srTCM) or two rate three color marker (trTCM) algorithm is used to assess packets. According to the assessment result, the packets are marked with colors and labeled with different discarding priorities. The PTN equipment adopts the trTCM algorithm.
Queue Scheduling Packets are sent to queues of different grooming priorities by using different flow classification methods. After the flow classification, the equipment adopts a PQ + WFQ + SPL (that is, priority queuing + weighted fair queuing + Strict Priority-low) method to groom the queues. The PQ method is adopted to groom the CS7, CS6, and EF packets. The WFQ method is adopted to groom the AF packets. The lowest priority is adopted to groom the BE packets.
Congestion Management In the case of a congestion, the equipment discards packets by using the tail-drop method and the weighted random early detect (WRED) method. The network congestion can be alleviated by using these discarding methods. In the tail-drop method, a buffer queue is used to buffer the packets, and the packet discarding priorities are not distinguished during the buffering. When the buffer queue is full, packets that come thereafter are discarded. In the WRED method, the discarding priorities (that is, colors) of packets can be detected. According to the discarding priorities, the upper threshold, lower threshold, and probability are set for the purposes of packet discarding. In this case, different discarding characteristics are provided.
Traffic Shaping The purpose of traffic shaping is to limit the traffic burst of outgoing packets of a network, and thus to transmit the packets out at a relatively even rate. In this way, congestion is prevented on the downstream equipment, and fewer packets are discarded. The equipment adopts the generic traffic shaping (GTS) algorithm.
HQoS The hierarchical QoS (HQoS) is a QoS technology that can both control the service traffic and groom services according to their priorities. With the complete traffic statistics functions provided by the HQoS, the network administrator can supervise the bandwidth occupied by each type of service, and reasonably allocate the bandwidth for services by analyzing the traffic. The traditional QoS grooms traffic on a port basis, but cannot groom traffic on a multiple-user and multiple-service basis. The HQoS, however, provides the multilevel grooming mode. In this mode, the HQoS provides differentiated QoSs for multiple services of multiple users. Compared with the traditional QoS, the HQoS has the following advantages: Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
5-19
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features l
The multilevel grooming mechanism provides rich service capabilities.
l
Parameters such as the maximum queue length and the WRED can be configured for a flow queue.
l
The CIR and PIR can be configured for each user.
The HQoS can be reflected as the hierarchical service grooming. Based on the HQoS, a network carrier can provide further classified service guarantees. The HQoS function is implemented on the equipment at the network edge. The purpose of such an implementation is to maintain a simple core network. In this case, not every piece of equipment in the network is required to conduct the complex QoS processing. At the network edge, the HQoS is implemented as seven levels of grooming: V-UNI+CoS, V-UNI, V-UNI group, PW+CoS, PW, Tunnel, and port+CoS. Table 5-3 lists the action points of the HQoS. Table 5-3 HQoS action points at the access side and the network side of the equipment Action Point
In the Ingress Direction
In the Egress Direction
At the access side
V-UNI+CoS, V-UNI, and V-UNI group
V-UNI+CoS, V-UNI, V-UNI group, and port+CoS
At the network side
PW+CoS, Tunnel, and PW
Tunnel, and port+CoS
The HQoS support for accessed services is described as follows. l
The one-level CAR is supported for each service. The color marking is supported for packets.
l
The three-level (V-UNI+CoS, PW+CoS, and Port+CoS) grooming is supported for each service. Eight queues are supported for each level of grooming. The shaping and WRED functions are supported for the queues. Three of the eight queues are low-delay queues, and the other five are non-low-delay queues.
l
For each service, the ingress NE supports up to four levels of bandwidth limitation, and the egress NE also supports up to four levels of bandwidth limitation.
5.10 IGMP Snooping The Internet group management protocol (IGMP) Snooping function is used to realize multicast distribution. The IGMP Snooping function is helpful in the following aspects. l
The network bandwidth is saved.
l
Each VLAN is independently forwarded. Hence, the information security is increased.
The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the following L2 IGMP Snooping functions. l
5-20
The L2 IGMP Snooping function complies with RFC4541. The L2 IGMP Snooping can analyze and process the IGMPv1 and IGMPv2 protocol packets. When the IGMP Snooping Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features
protocol is enabled and IGMPv3 protocol packets are received, the equipment forwards the packets to all other ports in the VLAN of the packets, except the port receiving the packets. l
The L2 IGMP Snooping only applies to the E-LAN service rather than other types of services.
l
The equipment supports the setting of the aging time of the router port.
l
The equipment supports the setting of maximum non-response times.
l
The equipment supports the setting of the allowed multicast groups for use and the maximum number of their members.
l
The equipment supports addition of static router ports and member ports.
l
The equipment supports the setting of the quick deletion function on the member port. NOTE
For the static member, the quick deletion function cannot be set.
5.11 MSTP/RSTP/STP The multiple spanning tree protocol (MSTP) is compatible with the spanning tree protocol (STP) and rapid spanning tree protocol (RSTP). In addition, the MSTP rectifies the defects of the STP and RSTP. The MSTP supports fast reconfiguration and provides multiple paths for forwarding data. During the data forwarding process, the VLAN data is of load balance. The MSTP complies with IEEE 802.1s. The MSTP divides a switching network into several domains. In each domain, several spanning trees are formed and are independent from each other. Each spanning tree is called a multiple spanning tree instance (MSTI) and each domain is called a multiple spanning tree (MST) domain. The MSTP sets the VLAN mapping table, which specifies the mapping relation between VLAN and MSTI, to connect the VLAN and MSTI. Table 5-4 lists the comparison among the MSTP, STP and RSTP. Table 5-4 Comparison among the MSTP, STP and RSTP
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Spanning Tree Protocol
Feature
Remarks
STP
A spanning tree not of a loop is formed to prevent multicast storm and provide redundant backup.
l
RSTP
l
A spanning tree not of a loop is formed to prevent multicast storm and provide redundant backup.
l
l
Fast reconfiguration.
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
The MSTP and RSTP are compatible, and they can recognize protocol packets of each other. The STP does not recognize the MSTP packets. To be compatible with the STP, the MSTP sets two working modes, which are STPcompatible mode and MSTP mode. In the STP-compatible mode, each port of the equipment transmits STP packets. In the MSTP mode, each port of the equipment transmits MSTP packets and has the MST functions. 5-21
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features
Spanning Tree Protocol
Feature
MSTP
l
A spanning tree not of a loop is formed to prevent multicast storm and provide redundant backup.
l
Fast reconfiguration.
l
Multiple spanning trees realize load balance among VLANs. VLANs of different traffic volume are forwarded to different paths.
Remarks
l
l
Generally, if a switch running the STP is present in a switching network, the port of the equipment connected to the STP switch automatically migrates from the MSTP mode to the STPcompatible mode. If the switch running the STP is removed from the network, the port cannot automatically migrate from the STP-compatible mode back to the MSTP mode.
The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the following key MSTP specifications. l
MSTP topology aggregation time: In the case of a link failure, the aggregation time is less than 1s if the conditions are present for P/A mechanism and is equal to 2 x (Forward Delay Time) if the conditions do not exist for P/A mechanism.
l
Each MST domain supports a maximum of 16 MSTIs.
l
Each port group supports a maximum of 16 Ethernet ports.
l
On the equipment that supports the MSTP, load balance is realized by setting the path cost and port priority for different VLANs. –
Ports in different spanning tree instances have different path cost. Proper path cost makes the traffic of different VLANs forwarded along different physical links. In this way, load balance is realized.
–
In different spanning tree instances, one ports is of different priorities. In this way, one port plays different roles in different MSTIs. As a result, the traffic of different VLANs are transmitted along different physical links. Hence, load balance is realized.
5.12 ACL To filter data packets, the access control list (ACL) can be used to stipulate a series rules in order. The equipment classifies the received data packets according to the ACL rules and then forwards or discards these packets. The ACL is just a group of rules and cannot filter data packets. Instead, the ACL marks a class of data packets. How to process these packets, however, depends on the specific functions that introduce the ACL. For the OptiX PTN 1900, the ACL should be used with the flow classification function to filter data packets. Figure 5-7 shows the details. The flow classification should be created before the creation of ACL. The equipment supports self-defined ACL. The maximum number of ACLs supported by the OptiX PTN 1900 is 4k.
5-22
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features
Figure 5-7 ACL based on flow classification
Network A Flow ID=2 Disable GE Internet GE Enable Flow ID=1 Network B
5.13 BFD The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the bidirectional forwarding detection (BFD) function. The Hello mechanism is used to detect states of Ethernet links. The BFD is a simple Hello protocol, which is similar to the neighbor detection mechanism of the routing protocol in many aspects. A pair of systems periodically transmit the detection packets in the channels where inter-system talk is established. If a system does not receive any detection packets in a certain time from the opposite end, it is determined that some part of the bidirectional channel connected to adjacent nodes is faulty. The OptiX PTN 1900 adopts the asynchronous mode to perform BFD detection for Ethernet links. In the asynchronous mode, the equipment at both ends of a link periodically transmits the BFD control packets to each other. If the equipment does not receive any BFD control packets in a long time from the opposite end, it is determined that the Ethernet link is faulty. The OptiX PTN 1900 performs BFD at intervals of 1 second.
5.14 Synchronous Ethernet Clock The OptiX PTN 1900 realizes the synchronous Ethernet clock on the Physical layer.
Synchronous Ethernet Clock The synchronous Ethernet clock refers to a technology that achieves clock synchronization on the physical layer of Ethernet and thus is similar to the SDH clock. The synchronization process of the synchronous Ethernet clock is as follows: l
The devices such as the primary reference clock (PRC) transfer clock signals to the NE through the external clock interface.
l
NEs transfer the clock signals through the synchronous Ethernet among them.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
5-23
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features l
The clock processing module of each NE extracts the clock signals from the serial bit stream on the Ethernet line and selects a clock source.
l
The clock phase-locked loop traces one of the Ethernet line clocks and generates the system clock.
l
The system clock is used as the transmit clock on the physical layer of Ethernet to transport data. In this way, the clock is transferred to the downstream. NOTE
To achieve the synchronous Ethernet clock, each NE that the synchronization information traverses should support the synchronous Ethernet technology.
The synchronous Ethernet clock has the following features: l
The synchronous Ethernet clock is easy to realize and is highly reliable.
l
The synchronous Ethernet clock adopts the synchronization status information (SSM) to indicate clock quality and exclusive OAM packets to transfer the SSM.
Typical Networking The OptiX PTN equipment constitutes a synchronous Ethernet, supports the synchronous Ethernet interfaces and realizes synchronization on the physical layer of Ethernet. Figure 5-8 shows the typical networking for synchronous Ethernet. Figure 5-8 Typical networking for synchronous Ethernet RNC
NodeB
clock signal
PRC
BTS
BSC
OptiX PTN 3900
OptiX PTN 1900
GE FE
In a synchronous Ethernet, the clock information from devices such as PRC is distributed to the OptiX PTN equipment that is connected to the base transceiver station (BTS) or WCDMA base station (NodeB). Then, the OptiX PTN equipment extracts and transfers the clock signals to the 5-24
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features
BTS or NodeB, base station controller (BSC), and radio network controller (RNC) through synchronous Ethernet interfaces. In this way, the synchronous Ethernet clock is realized.
5.15 IEEE 1588 V2 Clock The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the function of adopting the IEEE 1588 V2 protocol to realize clock synchronization and time synchronization. As a precision time protocol (PTP), the IEEE 1588 V2 protocol achieves the nanosecond-class precision, which meets the requirement of 3G base stations. NOTE
To achieve IEEE 1588 V2 clock synchronization, all NEs on the clock link should support the IEEE 1588 V2 protocol. In the application of networking, the IEEE 1588 V2 clock can achieve the 1 microsecond precision.
BMC Algorithm The best master clock (BMC) algorithm compares data describing two clocks to determine which data describes the better clock, and selects the better clock as the clock source. The BMC algorithm includes the following algorithms: l
Data set comparison algorithm: The NE determines which of the clocks is better, and selects the better clock as the clock source. If an NE receives two or more channels of clock signals from the same grandmaster clock (GMC), the NE selects one channel of the clock signals that traverses the least number of nodes as the clock source.
l
State decision algorithm: The state decision algorithm determines the next state of the port based on the results of the data set comparison algorithm.
Clock Architecture Figure 5-9 shows the architecture of the IEEE 1588 V2 clock. Figure 5-9 Architecture of the IEEE 1588 V2 clock OC1 GMC
TC1
1 BC1 2
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
3
1
BC1 2
TC2+OC2
TC3
OC3
OC4
3
OC5
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
5-25
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features
The OptiX PTN 1900 supports four models for the IEEE 1588 V2 clock architecture. l
Ordinary clock (OC): A clock that has a single IEEE 1588 V2 port and the clock needs to be recovered. It may serve as a source of time, i.e. be a master clock, or may synchronize to another clock, i.e. be a slave clock.
l
Boundary clock (BC): A clock that has multiple IEEE 1588 V2 ports and the clock needs to be recovered. It may serve as the source of time, i.e. be a master clock, and may synchronize to another clock, i.e. be a slave clock.
l
Transparent clock (TC): A device that measures the time taken for a PTP event message to transit the device and provides this information to clocks receiving this PTP event message. That is, the clock device functions as an intermediate clock device to transparently transmit the clock and process the delay, but does not recover the clock.
l
–
End-to-end TC: A transparent clock that supports the use of the end-to-end delay measurement mechanism between slave clocks and the master clock.
–
Peer-to-peer TC: A transparent clock that supports the use of the peer-to-peer delay measurement mechanism.
TC+OC: A clock device corrects and transparently transmits the time stamps for the IEEE 1588 V2 packets, and realizes clock synchronization. NOTE
l
The end-to-end TC and peer-to-peer TC adopt different mechanisms to realize delay transmission, and do not interwork on the same communication path. That is, the adjacent TC devices on the same time path can adopt either the end-to-end TC or peer-to-peer TC, but they cannot adopt both at the same time.
l
Time Stamp (TS) is used to convey time information.
l
PTP event messages are timed messages in that an accurate TS is generated both at transmission and receipt.
Typical Networking By using the IEEE 1588 V2 protocol, the OptiX PTN equipment can transfer the precise time information to achieve clock synchronization and time synchronization for equipment in the network. This meets the requirement of the telecommunications network for precise time. Figure 5-10 shows the typical networking for IEEE 1588 V2 clock synchronization.
5-26
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features
Figure 5-10 Typical networking for IEEE 1588 V2 clock synchronization GMC PRC BC
RNC
BC/TC/TC+OC
NE1 BC/TC/TC+OC BC/TC/TC+OC
BC/TC/TC+OC
BC/TC/TC+OC/OC
NodeB
OptiX PTN 3900
Master clock transfer trail Slave clock transfer trail
OptiX PTN 1900 Clock signals
GE/10GE/STM-N FE
In Figure 5-10, the PRC transfers clock signals to NE1 and RNC, which selects the PRC as the GMC according to the BMC algorithm. In this case, the PRC is of the OC model and only works as the clock source. NE1 is of the BC model, in the case of the connected PRC, NE1 is the clock sink, in the case of the other connected OptiX PTN equipment, NE1 is a clock source. NE1 transmits IEEE 1588 V2 packets to the other OptiX PTN equipment, which transfers the packets downstream. In this case, the other OptiX PTN equipment works in the BC, TC, TC+OC or OC mode. If only one clock source is available for the network, the OptiX PTN equipment can work in BC, TC, or TC+OC mode to realize the following functions: l
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
In the BC mode, the OptiX PTN equipment selects the time source, recovers the system time of the local NE, and adopts the system time as the new time source to transmit the time information downstream. When the intermediate NEs require time synchronization, this mode is applicable. Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
5-27
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
5 Key Features l
In the TC mode, the OptiX PTN equipment updates and transparently transmits the time stamps of the IEEE 1588 V2 packets, and transfers the time information downstream. When the intermediate NEs do not require clock or time synchronization, this mode is applicable.
l
In the TC+OC mode, the OptiX PTN equipment realizes the following functions: –
Updates and transparently transmits the time stamps of the IEEE 1588 V2 packets, and transfers the time information downstream.
–
Synchronizes the clock (not the time) for the local NE.
When the intermediate NEs require clock synchronization, this mode is applicable. l
In the OC mode, the OptiX PTN equipment selects the time source and recovers the system time of the local NE. In addition, the OptiX PTN equipment adopts the system time as the new time source, and transmits the time information downstream through the external time interface. When the intermediate NEs are connected to the NodeB, this mode is applicable.
If multiple clock domains are in the network, the OptiX PTN equipment can work in the TC or TC+OC mode. l
In the case of different GMCs, the IEEE 1588 V2 packets must be transferred through different ports. NOTE
The BC mode is not applicable to this case, because the NE in the BC mode synchronizes itself with one channel of clock signals, which is selected as a clock source from the clock signals and is transferred downstream. One of the clock sources is transferred downstream and the other clock signals are terminated.
NodeB receives time information from the external time interface of the OptiX PTN equipment, and synchronizes the time with RNC.
5-28
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
6 Protection
6
Protection
About This Chapter The OptiX PTN 1900 provides equipment level protection and network level protection. 6.1 Equipment Level Protection The equipment level protection includes the TPS protection for service boards, the 1+1 protection for the system control, cross-connect and multiprotocol processing board (CXP), the 1+1 protection for the power supply, and the protection for fans. 6.2 Network Level Protection The network level protection includes the MPLS Tunnel 1+1 and 1:1 protection, the LMSP protection, the FRR protection, the Ethernet LAG protection, the spanning tree protection, the packet E1 ML-PPP protection and the IMA protection.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
6-1
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
6 Protection
6.1 Equipment Level Protection The equipment level protection includes the TPS protection for service boards, the 1+1 protection for the system control, cross-connect and multiprotocol processing board (CXP), the 1+1 protection for the power supply, and the protection for fans. 6.1.1 TPS Protection The TPS protection scheme protects the E1 service sub-board. When the service sub-board has a hardware failure, the signal flow from the interface board is switched, by software and hardware operations, to a normal service sub-board that is specially used for protection. In this way, the faulty service sub-board is protected. The TPS protection scheme is able to protect E1 physical links. The OptiX PTN 1900 supports a maximum of two groups of 1:1 TPS protection. 6.1.2 1+1 Protection for the CXP Board The 1+1 protection for the CXP board is provided when two CXP boards are installed on the equipment. When the software or hardware of the working CXP is faulty, or when the working and protection CXPs receive a switching command, the CXP working/protection switching occurs. In this way, the protection for the CXP is realized. 6.1.3 1+1 Protection for the PIU Two power interface units (PIU) that provide hot backup for each other are installed on the equipment. When one PIU fails, the equipment can still function properly.
6.1.1 TPS Protection The TPS protection scheme protects the E1 service sub-board. When the service sub-board has a hardware failure, the signal flow from the interface board is switched, by software and hardware operations, to a normal service sub-board that is specially used for protection. In this way, the faulty service sub-board is protected. The TPS protection scheme is able to protect E1 physical links. The OptiX PTN 1900 supports a maximum of two groups of 1:1 TPS protection.
Protection Schemes and Supported Boards The equipment supports TPS protection for E1 physical links. Table 6-1 lists the TPS protection schemes and supported boards. Table 6-1 E1 TPS protection schemes and supported boards Protection Scheme
Supported Boards
Two 1:1 protection groups
MD1
TPS Protection Parameters Table 6-2 lists the TPS protection parameters.
6-2
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
6 Protection
Table 6-2 TPS protection parameters Parameter
Description
Priority
The priority is not involved because the protection scheme is 1:1.
Switching type
Lock/unlock, forced switching, manual switching, automatic switching.
Switching condition
Any of the following conditions triggers the switching: l
The clock of the working board is lost.
l
The working board is offline.
l
The working board is in a cold reset.
l
The working board has a hardware failure.
l
A switching command is issued.
Switching time
In the case of TPS switching, the restoration time for the E1 physical link is less than 50 ms.
Revertive mode
Revertive.
WTR time
300s to 720s. A WTR time of 600s is recommended.
6.1.2 1+1 Protection for the CXP Board The 1+1 protection for the CXP board is provided when two CXP boards are installed on the equipment. When the software or hardware of the working CXP is faulty, or when the working and protection CXPs receive a switching command, the CXP working/protection switching occurs. In this way, the protection for the CXP is realized. On the OptiX PTN 1900, the valid slots for the CXP are slots 1 and 2. Table 6-3 lists the CXP 1+1 protection parameters of the OptiX PTN 1900. Table 6-3 1+1 protection parameters of the CXP board Parameter
Description
Slots for boards
Slots 1 and 2.
Switching condition
Any of the following conditions triggers the switching:
Revertive mode
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
l
The working board has a failure.
l
A switching command is manually issued.
l
The working board is removed.
l
Both ejector levers on the front panel of the working board are rotated to the open position
l
The working board is in a cold reset.
Non-revertive
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
6-3
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
6 Protection NOTE
When the working CXP board is in the process of warm reset, the control plane running on the working CXP board is automatically switched onto the protection CXP board. When the warm reset of the original working CXP is complete and the original working CXP resumes the normal working state, the control plane is automatically switched back onto the original working CXP.
6.1.3 1+1 Protection for the PIU Two power interface units (PIU) that provide hot backup for each other are installed on the equipment. When one PIU fails, the equipment can still function properly. The PIU accesses -48 V or -60 V power supply for the OptiX PTN 1900. The PIU boards are installed in slot 8 and slot 9. The two PIU boards provide hot backup for each other.
6.2 Network Level Protection The network level protection includes the MPLS Tunnel 1+1 and 1:1 protection, the LMSP protection, the FRR protection, the Ethernet LAG protection, the spanning tree protection, the packet E1 ML-PPP protection and the IMA protection. 6.2.1 MPLS 1+1 and 1:1 Protection In the MPLS 1+1 and 1:1 protection, the protection path protects the service that is transported in the working path. When the working path is faulty, the service is switched to the protection path. The 1+1 protection adopts the dual fed and selective receiving mechanism, and the 1:1 protection adopts the single fed and single receiving mechanism. 6.2.2 FRR Protection Fast reroute (FRR) is a feature of MPLS, and provides fast local protection. FRR is usually deployed in a network that requires high reliability. When a local failure occurs in the network, FRR is able to quickly switch the services to a bypass tunnel. In this case, the impact on data services is very small. 6.2.3 Ethernet LAG Protection Link aggregation means that a group of physical Ethernet ports with the same bit rate are bundled together to form a logical port (LAG). In this way, link aggregation increases the bandwidth and provides link protection. OptiX PTN 1900 supports LAG protection for the Ethernet UNI ports. 6.2.4 Ethernet Spanning Tree Protection The multiple spanning tree protocol (MSTP) can be used to prevent a loop. Using an algorithm, the MSTP blocks redundant paths so that the loop network can be trimmed as a tree network. In this case, the proliferation and endless cycling of packets, which can cause a broadcast storm, is prevented in the loop network. The major difference between the MSTP and STP/RSTP protocols is that the MSTP protocol can forward data based on VLAN ID and thus realizes the load balancing. 6.2.5 LMSP Protection In the LMSP protection, the protection path protects the service that is transported in the working path. When the working path is faulty, the service is switched to the protection path. The LMSP protection includes the 1+1 LMSP, 1:1 LMSP and 1:N (2≤N≤7) LMSP. The 1+1 protection adopts the dual fed and selective receiving mechanism, and the 1:1/1:N protection adopts the single fed and single receiving mechanism. These protection schemes are mainly used for the channelized STM-1 port, the ATM STM-1 port and the POS port. The 1:N LMSP is supported by the AFO1 board. 6.2.6 Packet E1 ML-PPP Protection 6-4
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
6 Protection
Multilink PPP (ML-PPP) indicates that several PPP channels are bundled to increase the bandwidth, to share the loading and to provide backup. ML-PPP protection indicates that the services at the network side can be transmitted in bundled PPP channels. In this way, the load of the board ports at the network side can be shared and protected. 6.2.7 IMA Protection Inverse multiplexing for ATM (IMA) demultiplexes a concentrated flow of ATM cells into multiple lower-rate links, and at the remote end multiplexes these lower-rate links to recover as the same sequence as the original concentrated flow of ATM cells. In this way, multiple lowerrate links are flexibly and conveniently multiplexed.
6.2.1 MPLS 1+1 and 1:1 Protection In the MPLS 1+1 and 1:1 protection, the protection path protects the service that is transported in the working path. When the working path is faulty, the service is switched to the protection path. The 1+1 protection adopts the dual fed and selective receiving mechanism, and the 1:1 protection adopts the single fed and single receiving mechanism. In the MPLS protection, the extended APS protocol information is transported through the protection path. The equipment at the two ends exchanges the protocol state information and the switching state information. According to the protocol state and switching state, the equipment at the two ends performs the service switching. The MPLS protection complies with ITU-T G.8131.
MPLS 1+1 Protection Figure 6-1 shows the MPLS 1+1 protection supported by the equipment. Figure 6-1 MPLS 1+1 protection Service detection point Working path
Service detection point Subnetwork
Processing board
Access
Processing board
Cross-connect
Cross-connect
Processing board
Protection path/ protocol path
Access
Processing board
Subnetwork
The MPLS 1+1 protection adopts the dual fed and selective receiving mechanism for services. When the working path is faulty, the receive end selects the service from the protection path. In this way, the service switching is realized. l
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Detection method: Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
6-5
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
6 Protection
l
–
Physical layer check: At the physical layer, the loss of signal is detected in microseconds.
–
Link layer check: The link layer check is performed through the MPLS OAM. If the MPLS OAM check time is 3.3 ms, it ensures that the MPLS automatic switching time is less than 50 ms.
Switching process: The receive end selects the service channel according to the link status.
MPLS 1:1 Protection Figure 6-2 shows the MPLS 1:1 protection supported by the equipment. Figure 6-2 MPLS 1:1 protection Service detection point
Service detection point Working path
Subnetwork
Processing board
Access
Processing board
Cross-connect
Cross-connect
Processing board
Access
Processing board Subnetwork
Protection path
Protocol path
In the MPLS 1:1 protection, the accessed service is transported in the working path. When the working path is faulty, the service is switched to the protection path. The single fed and single receiving mechanism is used for the service. The extended APS protocol information is transported through the protection path. The equipment at the two ends exchanges the protocol state information and the switching state information. According to the protocol state and switching state, the equipment at the two ends performs the service switching. l
l
Detection method: –
Physical layer check: At the physical layer, the loss of signal is detected in microseconds.
–
Link layer check: The link layer check is performed through the MPLS OAM. If the MPLS OAM check time is 3.3 ms, it ensures that the MPLS automatic switching time is less than 50 ms.
Switching process: After a negotiation using the extended APS protocol, the transmit end switches the service to the protection path, and the receive end selects the service from the protection path.
Protection Parameters Table 6-4 lists the parameters of the MPLS 1+1 and 1:1 protection. 6-6
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
6 Protection
Table 6-4 MPLS 1+1 and 1:1 protection parameters Switching Type
Revertive Mode
Switching Protocol
Switching Time
Switching Delay Time
Default WTR Time
1+1 singleended switching
Nonrevertive
Extended APS
≤ 50 ms
0s to 10s (0s by default)
-
1+1 dualended switching
Nonrevertive
Extended APS
≤ 50 ms
0s to 10s (0 by default)
-
1+1 singleended switching
Revertive
Extended APS
≤ 50 ms
0s to 10s (0 by default)
300s
1+1 dualended switching
Revertive
Extended APS
≤ 50 ms
0s to 10s (0 by default)
300s
1:1 dualended switching
Nonrevertive
Extended APS
≤ 50 ms
0s to 10s (0 by default)
-
1:1 dualended switching
Revertive
Extended APS
≤ 50 ms
0s to 10s (0 by default)
300s
Any of the following conditions triggers the switching: l
The board has a failure.
l
The board is in a cold reset.
l
A switching command is manually issued.
l
The physical link is faulty.
l
LSP fault is detected by MPLS OAM.
6.2.2 FRR Protection Fast reroute (FRR) is a feature of MPLS, and provides fast local protection. FRR is usually deployed in a network that requires high reliability. When a local failure occurs in the network, FRR is able to quickly switch the services to a bypass tunnel. In this case, the impact on data services is very small.
Basic Concepts of FRR The basic concepts of FRR are described as follows. l
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Detour mode: Refers to one-to-one backup. In the detour mode, LSPs are protected separately, that is, one protection LSP is specially created for each protected LSP. This protection LSP is called a detour LSP.
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
6-7
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
6 Protection l
Bypass mode: Refers to facility backup. In the bypass mode, one protection LSP is used to protect multiple LSPs. This protection LSP is called a bypass LSP.
l
PLR: Refers to point of local repair. The PLR is the ingress node of a detour LSP or bypass LSP. The PLR must be on the route of the working LSP, and cannot be the egress node of the working LSP.
l
MP: Refers to merge point. The MP is the egress node of a detour LSP or bypass LSP. The MP must be on the working LSP, and cannot be the ingress node.
l
Link protection: In link protection, a direct link connection exists between the PLR and the MP, and the working LSP passes through this link. When this link fails, the services can be switched to a detour LSP or bypass LSP.
l
Node protection: In node protection, the PLR and the MP are connected through an intermediate node, and the working tunnel passes through this node. When this node fails, the services can be switched to a detour LSP or bypass LSP.
FRR protection complies with RFC 4090.
FRR Protection Principle FRR provides protection for links or nodes that are between the PLR and the MP, and connected to the PLR. The basic principle of FRR protection is to use a preconfigured tunnel to protect one or multiple tunnels. The equipment supports the bypass mode. A bypass tunnel refers to a non-FRR-protected tunnel that is designated to protect other tunnels which pass through a certain physical interface. A bypass tunnel is triggered by manual configuration at the PLR. The configuration of a bypass tunnel is similar to that of a common tunnel. The only difference is that the bypass tunnel cannot be configured with the FRR attribute. That is, embedded protection is not allowed for a tunnel. Service restoration time: Less than 50 ms Figure 6-3 shows the FRR protection. Figure 6-3 FRR protection
C
A
D
B
E
MP
PLR F
In Figure 6-3, the working tunnel is marked in blue, and the bypass tunnel is marked in red. FRR protects the B-C link and node C, which are connected to the PLR. When link B-C or node C fails, the data on the working tunnel is switched to the bypass tunnel. After the switching, the original path information between the PLR and the MP is deleted. 6-8
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
6 Protection
6.2.3 Ethernet LAG Protection Link aggregation means that a group of physical Ethernet ports with the same bit rate are bundled together to form a logical port (LAG). In this way, link aggregation increases the bandwidth and provides link protection. OptiX PTN 1900 supports LAG protection for the Ethernet UNI ports. The Ethernet LAG protection can realize the load sharing and the non load sharing among ports. In this case, the bundled links are not distinguished by the working and protection attributes. The system provides inter-board and intra-board LAG protection. When any link is faulty, the service packets are transported to other links. Figure 6-4 shows the Ethernet LAG protection supported by the equipment. Figure 6-4 Ethernet LAG protection Intra-board LAG protection
Inter-board LAG protection Service detection point
Service detection point
Access
...
Ethernet board
Cross-connect
Cross-connect
...
Ethernet board
Ethernet board
Access
Ethernet board
Link aggregation has the following advantages: l
The link bandwidth is increased.
l
The link reliability is improved. When a link is invalid, other links share the services.
l
Load sharing is provided. The links in a link aggregation group (LAG) share the load.
The equipment supports the following two link aggregation modes: l
Manual aggregation
l
Static aggregation
For failed links, the equipment supports the following revertive modes: l
Revertive
l
Non-revertive
The equipment supports the following sharing modes: l
Load sharing
l
Non load sharing
The equipment supports the priority setting for the ports in an LAG. Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
6-9
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
6 Protection
The equipment supports the inter-board and intra-board LAG protection.
Manual Aggregation The manual bundling of ports does not require the link aggregation control protocol (LACP), and does not require the exchange of protocol packets. In manual aggregation, the aggregation of ports is manually specified by the administrator. On the OptiX PTN 1900, multiple physical Ethernet ports can be bundled as one logical port. With the port bundling technology, the transmission bandwidth between two equipment can be increased without a hardware expansion, and the link reliability is also improved. After the setting of an LAG, the equipment automatically enables the load sharing among the physical ports that are bundled as a logical port. When one physical port fails, and if the load sharing is enabled, the traffic on the faulty port is automatically shared by other physical ports. When the faulty port recovers, the traffic is reallocated to ensure that the load is shared among all ports. After the setting of an LAG, if the non loading sharing mode is adopted, only one member link has traffic and the other member links are in the standby state. In fact, this provides a hot standby scheme. When the active member link fails, the system activates one of the standby member links to shield the link failure.
Static Aggregation The static aggregation of links requires the LACP protocol. In static aggregation, the automatic maintenance of aggregated ports is realized through the exchange of protocol packets. The administrator, however, is still responsible for creating an LAG and adding member links into the LAG. Furthermore, the LACP protocol cannot change the configuration information of the administrator. The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the LACP protocol that complies with IEEE 802.3ad. By exchanging LACP packets, two interconnected equipment negotiate which ports can be used to forward data, and thus determine whether an egress port is in the selected or standby state. The LACP protocol maintains the link state according to the port state. When aggregation conditions change, the link aggregation is automatically adjusted or dismantled. Among the member links of an LAG, the load sharing or non load sharing modes can function based on ports, MAC addresses, IP addresses, or MPLS labels.
6.2.4 Ethernet Spanning Tree Protection The multiple spanning tree protocol (MSTP) can be used to prevent a loop. Using an algorithm, the MSTP blocks redundant paths so that the loop network can be trimmed as a tree network. In this case, the proliferation and endless cycling of packets, which can cause a broadcast storm, is prevented in the loop network. The major difference between the MSTP and STP/RSTP protocols is that the MSTP protocol can forward data based on VLAN ID and thus realizes the load balancing. The MSTP supported by the equipment is compliant with IEEE 802.1s, and is compatible with the STP and RSTP. For the difference between the MSTP and the STP/RSTP, see Table 5-4. The MSTP adopts the concepts of region and instance. The MSTP divides a switching network into different regions as required. Multiple independent spanning trees are generated in each region. Each spanning tree is referred to as a multiple spanning tree instance (MSTI), and each region is referred to as an MST region. The MSTP determines the mapping relations between 6-10
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
6 Protection
VLANs and MSTIs by setting a VLAN mapping table (that is, a VLAN and MSTI mapping relation table). Each instance is mapped to one VLAN or a group of VLANs. NOTE
l
Instance: Equipment that runs the MSTP may have multiple spanning trees at the same time. Each spanning tree is referred to as a multiple spanning tree instance. In this way, these spanning trees can be distinguished.
l
Region: A region refers to a group of interconnected switching equipment that have the same VLANto-instance mapping relations.
Bridge protocol data units (BPDUs) that carry region and instance information are transmitted among equipment. According to the BPDU information, the equipment determines whether it belongs to a specific region. Several spanning tree instances can be run within a region, and only one spanning tree can be run among regions. Figure 6-5 shows a switching network that has multiple VLANs. Figure 6-5 Switching network with multiple VLANs NE1 ROOT
10, 20
10, 20, 30
NE2 ROOT
NE5
20, 30
10, 30
10, 30 30
NE3
20
NE4
10
ROOT
After the MSTP begins running, each VLAN has an independent MST. See Figure 6-6.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
6-11
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
6 Protection
Figure 6-6 Network topology after the MSTP begins running NE1 ROOT
NE1
ROOT NE2
NE5
NE2
NE5
NE3
NE4
NE3
NE4
VLAN 10
VLAN 20
NE1
NE2
NE3
NE5
ROOT
NE4
VLAN 30
As each instance is mapped to one VLAN or a group of VLANs, the MSTP can forward data based on VLAN packets and thus realizes the load balancing for VLAN data. In this case, a perfect integration of the RSTP and VLAN is achieved.
6.2.5 LMSP Protection In the LMSP protection, the protection path protects the service that is transported in the working path. When the working path is faulty, the service is switched to the protection path. The LMSP protection includes the 1+1 LMSP, 1:1 LMSP and 1:N (2≤N≤7) LMSP. The 1+1 protection adopts the dual fed and selective receiving mechanism, and the 1:1/1:N protection adopts the single fed and single receiving mechanism. These protection schemes are mainly used for the channelized STM-1 port, the ATM STM-1 port and the POS port. The 1:N LMSP is supported by the AFO1 board.
LMSP 1+1 Protection Figure 6-7 shows the LMSP 1+1 protection supported by the equipment.
6-12
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
6 Protection
Figure 6-7 LMSP 1+1 protection Service detection point
Service detection point Working path Processing board
Processing board
Cross-connect
Cross-connect
Processing board
Processing board Protection path
The LMSP 1+1 protection adopts the dual fed and selective receiving mechanism for services. When the working path is faulty, the receive end selects the service from the protection path. In this way, the service switching is realized. l
Detection method: The LOS alarm, LOF alarm, MS_AIS alarm, or B2_SD, B2_EXC are detected at the physical layer.
l
Switching process: The receive end selects the service according to the line state.
LMSP 1:1/1:N Protection Figure 6-8 shows the LMSP 1:1/1:N protection supported by the equipment.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
6-13
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
6 Protection
Figure 6-8 LMSP 1:1/1:N protection Service detection point
Working path
Service detection point
Processing board
Processing board
Cross-connect
Cross-connect
Processing board
Processing board Protection path
In the LMSP 1:1/1:N protection, the service is transported in the working path. When the working path is faulty, the service is switched to the protection path. The single fed and single receiving mechanism is used for the service. The APS protocol information is transported through the protection path. The equipment at the two ends exchanges the protocol state information and the switching state information. According to the protocol state and switching state, the equipment at the two ends performs the service switching. l
Detection method: The LOS alarm, LOF alarm, MS_AIS alarm, or B2_SD, B2_EXC are detected at the physical layer.
l
Switching process: After a negotiation using the APS protocol, the transmit end switches the service to the protection path, and the receive end selects the service from the protection path.
Protection Parameters Table 6-5 lists the parameters of the LMSP protection.
6-14
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
6 Protection
Table 6-5 LMSP protection parameters Switching Type
Revertive Mode
Switching Protocol
Switching Time
Switching Delay Time
Default WTR Time
1+1 singleended switching
Nonrevertive
Not required
≤ 50 ms
0s to 10s (0s by default)
-
1+1 dualended switching
Nonrevertive
APS
≤ 50 ms
0s to 10s (0s by default)
-
1+1 singleended switching
Revertive
Not required
≤ 50 ms
0s to 10s (0s by default)
300s
1+1 dualended switching
Revertive
APS
≤ 50 ms
0s to 10s (0s by default)
300s
1:1 dualended switching
Revertive
APS
≤ 50 ms
0s to 10s (0s by default)
300s
1:N dualended switching
Revertive
APS
≤ 50 ms
0s to 10s (0s by default)
300s
Any of the following conditions triggers the switching: l
The board has a failure.
l
The board is in a cold reset.
l
A switching command is manually issued.
l
The physical link is faulty.
6.2.6 Packet E1 ML-PPP Protection Multilink PPP (ML-PPP) indicates that several PPP channels are bundled to increase the bandwidth, to share the loading and to provide backup. ML-PPP protection indicates that the services at the network side can be transmitted in bundled PPP channels. In this way, the load of the board ports at the network side can be shared and protected. Figure 6-9 shows the packet E1 ML-PPP protection.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
6-15
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
6 Protection
Figure 6-9 Packet E1 ML-PPP protection Service detection point
Service detection point Link
.. .
Processing board Access
Cross-connect
Link
Processing board Cross-connect
Access
After the service signals are accessed, the cross-connect board cross-connects the signals to the processing board, which uses the allocated bundled links to transmit the signals. In this way, the load of board ports at the network side is shared and protected. The links all share the service load and no one is standby. ML-PPP is a intra-board protection scheme. If any link fails, the service load is shared by other links for transmission. l
l
Detection method: –
At the physical layer, the loss of signal and the AIS, RDI state are detected in microseconds.
–
At the link layer, the detection is performed by the ML-PPP protocol in milliseconds.
Switching process: The receive end selects the service according to the link state.
6.2.7 IMA Protection Inverse multiplexing for ATM (IMA) demultiplexes a concentrated flow of ATM cells into multiple lower-rate links, and at the remote end multiplexes these lower-rate links to recover as the same sequence as the original concentrated flow of ATM cells. In this way, multiple lowerrate links are flexibly and conveniently multiplexed. IMA is applicable for transmitting ATM cells through E1 ports and channelized VC12 links. IMA provides a path for ATM cells, but does not process the service types or ATM cells. Hence, IMA transparently transmit signals of the ATM layer and a higher layer. Figure 6-10 shows the IMA transmission. Figure 6-10 IMA transmission Link 1 Link 2 ATM cell flow
Link 3
ATM cell flow
IMA group
6-16
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
6 Protection
In the case of the IMA protection, cells are distributed to other normal links for transport if one link in the IMA group fails. In this case, services are protected.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
6-17
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
7
7 Operation, Administration and Maintenance
Operation, Administration and Maintenance
About This Chapter The OptiX PTN 1900 provides powerful functions of operation, administration and maintenance. 7.1 OAM Capability The boards and functions of the OptiX PTN 1900 are designed according to customer requirements for operation and maintenance. Hence, the equipment provides powerful maintenance capabilities. 7.2 T2000 Network Management System The T2000 is used to manage the OptiX PTN 1900.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
7-1
7 Operation, Administration and Maintenance
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
7.1 OAM Capability The boards and functions of the OptiX PTN 1900 are designed according to customer requirements for operation and maintenance. Hence, the equipment provides powerful maintenance capabilities. 7.1.1 Operation and Configuration Tools Users can use the OptiX iManager T2000 to operate and configure the OptiX PTN 1900. 7.1.2 Monitoring and Maintenance The OptiX PTN 1900 supports several monitoring and maintenance functions. 7.1.3 Diagnosis and Debugging The OptiX PTN 1900 provides the function of diagnosis and debugging of the system hardware and software faults. 7.1.4 Expansion and Upgrade The OptiX PTN 1900 supports capacity expansion by adding new boards or replacing boards, and provides several upgrade schemes.
7.1.1 Operation and Configuration Tools Users can use the OptiX iManager T2000 to operate and configure the OptiX PTN 1900. T2000: Users can use the OptiX iManager T2000 transport network management system (T2000 for short) to perform network level configuration, especially service configuration. The T2000 supports software package loading and collection of information on faults. For details on the T2000, refer to 7.2 T2000 Network Management System.
7.1.2 Monitoring and Maintenance The OptiX PTN 1900 supports several monitoring and maintenance functions. The OptiX PTN 1900 supports the following monitoring and maintenance functions.
7-2
l
Each board has running status and alarm indicators, which are used for the network administrator to locate and handle faults in time.
l
The equipment provides functions such as alarm management and alarm filtering.
l
The equipment supports automatic laser shutdown. (The Ethernet interface does not support this function.)
l
The equipment supports software upgrade without affecting services.
l
The equipment supports in-service backup and loading of the database.
l
The equipment supports restoration of the system configuration from the database.
l
The equipment supports MPLS OAM and Ethernet OAM.
l
The equipment supports the non-stop forwarding (NSF) function.
l
The equipment supports inband management DCN.
l
The T2000 can be used to dynamically monitor the running status, alarms and performance of each NE in the network. Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description l
7 Operation, Administration and Maintenance
The equipment supports package loading and remote loading of the board software and NE software, and provides functions of anti-mistake loading and resuming interrupted file transfer.
7.1.3 Diagnosis and Debugging The OptiX PTN 1900 provides the function of diagnosis and debugging of the system hardware and software faults. The OptiX PTN 1900 uses the following network connectivity test schemes to provide the diagnosis and debugging functions. l
l
MPLS layer connectivity test scheme: –
LSP Ping
–
PW CVVC Ping
–
TraceRoute
–
MPLS OAM
ETH layer connectivity test scheme: –
Loopback (LB) test
–
Link trace (LT) test
–
Continuity check (CC)
7.1.4 Expansion and Upgrade The OptiX PTN 1900 supports capacity expansion by adding new boards or replacing boards, and provides several upgrade schemes. The OptiX PTN 1900 supports insertion of new boards and replacement of boards for expansion. For the upgrade of the OptiX PTN 1900, working and protection CXP boards should be used. The working/protection backup ensures that no services are interrupted during the upgrade. The OptiX PTN 1900 supports anti-mistake software loading and version rollback in the case of upgrade failure. The upgrade process is reversible. NOTE
Rollback indicates that the original software version and service configuration can be recovered in the case of upgrade failure. The new software covers the original software only after the upgrade succeeds.
7.2 T2000 Network Management System The T2000 is used to manage the OptiX PTN 1900. In compliance with ITU-T Recommendations, the T2000 applies the standard management information model and object-oriented management technology. The T2000 exchanges information with the NE software through the communication module, to implement monitoring and management over the network equipment. The T2000 software runs on a workstation or a PC. The T2000 enables the user not only to operate and maintain transmission equipment, but also to manage the transmission network. The T2000 software has the following management functions. Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
7-3
7 Operation, Administration and Maintenance
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
Alarm and Performance Management The T2000 realizes the following alarm management functions: real-time collection, prompting, filtering, browsing, acknowledgement, check, clearing, counting, alarm insertion, alarm correlation analysis, and fault diagnosis. l
Automatically reports alarms and performs alarm consistency check.
l
Checks and deletes alarms.
l
Clears and filters current or history alarms of an NE, and filters abnormal performance events.
l
Stores the alarm data.
Configuration Management The configuration management function enables users to configure and manage interfaces, clock, services, tunnels, protection and NE time. l
Creates or deletes network entities.
l
Creates or changes fibers.
l
Sets or modifies NE attributes, and delivers configuration.
l
Configures interface attributes.
l
Configures tunnels and protection.
l
Configures OAM.
l
Configures services.
l
Configures clock sources.
l
Uploads configuration data or checks data consistency.
l
Checks NE information.
Maintenance Management For the maintenance management, several schemes are provided to help maintenance personnel to locate and clear equipment faults. l
Sets loopback.
l
Sets the NE timing synchronization scheme.
l
Resets boards or NE software.
l
Sets automatic laser shutdown. (The Ethernet interface does not support this function.)
l
Starts performance monitoring.
l
Backs up the NE database.
Security Management The T2000 can use several schemes to manage the NE security.
7-4
l
NE user management.
l
NE login management.
l
NE login lockout. Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description l
NE setting lockout.
l
NE user group management.
l
NE security parameters.
l
NE security log.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
7 Operation, Administration and Maintenance
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
7-5
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
8
8 Security Management
Security Management
About This Chapter The T2000 uses many schemes to manage the security of the OptiX PTN 1900 NE. The NE security management takes effect on the basis of the reasonable planning. 8.1 Authentication Management Considering the security, only the legal user can log in to the NE after authentication. 8.2 Authorization Management Proper authority assignment to different NE users can ensure the successful operations performed by each user and the security of the NE system. 8.3 Network Security Management Safe data transmission between the T2000 and NEs is the prerequisite for the T2000 to effectively manage the NEs. 8.4 System Security Management Considering the security, the system provides some security policies, which must be executed forcibly. 8.5 NE Security Log Management The NE security logs record the operations performed by all the NE users and the operation results. By querying these logs, the administrator can trace and review the operations. 8.6 Syslog Management The system log service (Syslog service) is used for the security management on an NE. For unified control by maintenance engineers, all types of information are transmitted to the log server in the format complying with the system log (Syslog) protocol.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
8-1
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
8 Security Management
8.1 Authentication Management Considering the security, only the legal user can log in to the NE after authentication. l
NE login management: You can successfully log in to the NE only by entering a valid user name and a valid password.
l
NE user switching: On a client, only one user is allowed to operate the NE each time. For this reason, if multiple users intend to operate the same NE simultaneously, they need to be switched to ensure that the data is unique.
l
Forcibly making other users exit from the NE: To avoid errors caused by simultaneous configuration by multiple users, or to prevent other users from illegally logging in to the NE, one user can forcibly make other users who are at lower level exit from the NE.
l
NE login locking: After the locking function is enabled, a user whose level is lower than that of the current user is not allowed to log in to the NE.
l
NE setting locking: You can lock the settings of functional modules of the NE to prevent other users from operating the locked modules.
l
Query the online NE users.
8.2 Authorization Management Proper authority assignment to different NE users can ensure the successful operations performed by each user and the security of the NE system. l
l
NE user management: –
According to the operation authorities, NE users are divided into five levels, which involve monitoring level, operation level, maintenance level, system level, and debugging level in an ascending order.
–
According to the T2000, NE users are classified into LCT NE users, EMS NE users, CMD NE users, and general NE users.
–
Create NE users, assign authorities, or specify a user flag.
–
Modify the user name, change the password, modify the operation authority, or change the user flag.
–
Delete NE users.
NE user group management: –
According to the operation authority, by default, NE user groups are divided into administrator group, super administrator group, operator group, monitoring personnel group, and maintenance personnel group.
–
Modify the group of a user.
8.3 Network Security Management Safe data transmission between the T2000 and NEs is the prerequisite for the T2000 to effectively manage the NEs. l
8-2
Set the ACL rule to filter the received IP packets, control the data traffic in the network, and to avoid malicious attack. According to the system security level, the ACL rule is divided into basic ACL and advanced ACL. Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
l
8 Security Management
–
For an NE that requires lower security level, you can set the basic ACL rule only to check the source address of the IP packets.
–
For an NE that requires higher security level, you can set the advanced ACL rule. In this case, the NE checks the source address, sink address, source port, sink port, and protocol type of the received IP packets.
–
If both the advanced and the basic ACL rules are available, the NE adopts the advanced ACL rule to check the packets.
–
Query the ACL rule.
–
Modify the ACL rule.
–
Delete the ACL rule.
An NE can access the T2000 by using any of the following methods: –
Access over the Ethernet port (ETH port and EXT port). By default, an NE connects to the T2000 over the Ethernet port.
–
Access through the serial interface.
l
Control the access to NEs by using LCT: If the T2000-LCT needs to be used to manage NEs, you can enable the LCT access authority allowed by the NE on the T2000.
l
When the T2000 communicates with an NE, confidential data (such as user name and password) is encrypted.
8.4 System Security Management Considering the security, the system provides some security policies, which must be executed forcibly. l
Query or set the Warning Screen information of the NE.
l
Query and set the Warning Screen switch of the NE to decide whether to report an alarm after a user logs in to the NE.
l
Query or set the earliest expiry time and the latest expiry time of the password.
l
Query or set the maximum number of illegal login attempts.
l
Query or set the maximum number of overdue password attempts.
l
Query or set the password uniqueness.
8.5 NE Security Log Management The NE security logs record the operations performed by all the NE users and the operation results. By querying these logs, the administrator can trace and review the operations. l
Query the security logs of the NE.
l
Set forwarding NE logs to the Syslog Server.
8.6 Syslog Management The system log service (Syslog service) is used for the security management on an NE. For unified control by maintenance engineers, all types of information are transmitted to the log server in the format complying with the system log (Syslog) protocol. The OptiX PTN 1900 supports: Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
8-3
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
8 Security Management l
Enabling and disabling of Syslog protocol
l
Setting of Syslog protocol transmit modes: UDP (by default) and TCP
l
Adding and deletion of Syslog servers
l
Coexisting of multiple Syslog servers and the sending of logs to multiple servers at the same time
l
Reporting of alarms upon the communication disconnection between the Syslog server and the NE
Figure 8-1 shows how the Syslog protocol is transmitted in a network. To ensure the security of system logs, make sure that at least two system log servers are available in a network. Normally, IP protocol is used for the communication between the NE and the system log servers. The communication between NEs can be realized through several methods, for example, ECC mode or IP over DCC mode. Figure 8-1 Schematic diagram of Syslog protocol transmitting NE B NE A (client)
NE C (client)
NMS TCP/IP
DCN Syslog server B
Real time security log NE D Syslog server A
NOTE
Normally, a system log server is a workstation or server that is dedicated to storing the system logs of all NEs in a network. A forwarding gateway NE receives the system logs of other NEs and forwards the logs to the system log server. In Figure 8-1, NE A and NE C are forwarding gateway NEs.
When IP protocol is adopted on each NE for communication, every NE can directly communicate with the two system log servers through the IP protocol. Hence, configure the IP addresses and port numbers on the NE, and the system is able to transmit the NE logs to the two Syslog servers through the auto addressing function of IP protocol. No forwarding gateway NE is required. When DCN mode is adopted on each NE for communication, the NE that does not directly connect to the Syslog servers cannot communicate with the servers. The logs of the NE must be transmitted to a gateway NE that directly communicates with the Syslog servers through DCN. Then, the logs are forwarded to the Syslog servers by the gateway NE. Hence, the forwarding gateway NE must be configured, for example, configure NE A as the forwarding gateway NE for NE D.
8-4
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
9
9 Networking Application
Networking Application
About This Chapter The OptiX PTN 1900 is mainly used at the access layer of a MAN to transport packet and TDM services. The equipment can be used to transport mobile services, private line services and broadband services. 9.1 Application of the Equipment for Mobile Services The OptiX PTN 1900 is used at the radio access network (RAN) layer of the mobile network. In other words, the OptiX PTN 1900 is used in the transport network between base stations and base station controllers. 9.2 Application of the OptiX PTN 1900 for the L2VPN Service The OptiX PTN 1900 can transport E-Line services and E-LAN services. The L2VPN supports fast service delivery, end-to-end OAM, and reliable protection. 9.3 Offload Solution During service transmission between the NodeB and RNC for 3G mobile communication, the PTN equipment can divert the high speed downlink packet access (HSDPA) service from the services. The HSDPA service then can be carried by a low-cost network that accesses and forwards packets, such as an ADSL network. In this way, the transmission cost is reduced and the competitiveness of operators is enhanced.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
9-1
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
9 Networking Application
9.1 Application of the Equipment for Mobile Services The OptiX PTN 1900 is used at the radio access network (RAN) layer of the mobile network. In other words, the OptiX PTN 1900 is used in the transport network between base stations and base station controllers. The OptiX PTN 1900 provides several types of interfaces (Ethernet, POS, ATM, channelized STM-1, and E1) to access and carry packet services. Besides, the equipment uses the native TDM scheme to carry TDM E1 and ATM E1 services at the base station side. Table 9-1 shows the application of the OptiX PTN 1900 for the mobile service. Table 9-1 Application of the OptiX PTN 1900 for the mobile service
9-2
Item
Description
Service accessing
Figure 9-1 shows how to access the E1 services from base transceiver stations (BTS).
Application mode
Packet mode
Networking scheme
Figure 9-2 shows how to access the IMA E1 services from base stations.
Figure 9-3 shows how to access the FE services from base stations.
Tree, ring, mesh
Tree, ring, mesh
Tree, ring, mesh
Service type
Channelized E1, Fractional E1, STM-1
IMA E1, ATM STM-1
FE, GE
Networking interface
GE, ML-PPP E1, POS
GE, ML-PPP E1, POS
GE
Protection
MPLS Tunnel 1+1/1:1, FRR, LMSP
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
Item
Description
Service scenario
l
Transport of CES (PWE3) E1 emulation service
l
Emulation of E1 services, which are placed into the channelized STM-1 at the convergence point and then transported to the base station controller (BSC).
9 Networking Application
l
At the access point, the IMA E1 group is terminated and PWE3 emulation is performed to the ATM services in the group.
l
The Ethernet services from FE interfaces are converged to GE interfaces on the basis of Layer 2 switching or VLAN.
l
At the convergence point, the equipment encapsulates the ATM services emulated in the PWE3 scheme into nonchannelized STM-1, and then transmits them to the radio network controller (RNC).
l
When Layer 2 switching is used for convergence of services from FE interfaces to GE interfaces, services between base stations are isolated.
NOTE
Channelized E1: The same service is configured for the 32 timeslots of an E1 signal. Fractional E1: Different services are configured for the 32 timeslots of an E1 signal.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
9-3
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
9 Networking Application
Figure 9-1 Networking application of the OptiX PTN 1900 for transport of mobile services (E1 service between the base station and equipment) E1
GE/POS/ ML-PPP
GE/POS/ ML-PPP STM-1
E1 GE/POS/ ML-PPP
GE/POS/ ML-PPP
GE/POS/ ML-PPP E1
9-4
STM-1
GE/POS/ ML-PPP
OptiX PTN 3900
BTS
OptiX PTN 1900
BSC
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
9 Networking Application
Figure 9-2 Networking application of the OptiX PTN 1900 for transport of mobile services (IMA E1 service between the base station and equipment) IMA E1
GE/POS/ ML-PPP
GE/POS/ ML-PPP IMA E1
IMA E1 GE/POS/ ML-PPP
GE/POS/ ML-PPP
GE/POS/ ML-PPP
ATM STM-1
GE/POS/ ML-PPP IMA E1
OptiX PTN 3900
OptiX PTN 1900
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
NodeB RNC
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
9-5
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
9 Networking Application
Figure 9-3 Networking application of the OptiX PTN 1900 for transport of mobile services (FE service between the base station and equipment) FE
GE/POS/ ML-PPP
GE/POS/ ML-PPP GE
FE GE/POS/ ML-PPP
GE/POS/ ML-PPP
GE/POS/ ML-PPP FE
FE
GE/POS/ ML-PPP
OptiX PTN 3900
NodeB
OptiX PTN 1900
RNC
9.2 Application of the OptiX PTN 1900 for the L2VPN Service The OptiX PTN 1900 can transport E-Line services and E-LAN services. The L2VPN supports fast service delivery, end-to-end OAM, and reliable protection. 9.2.1 Transport of the E-Line Service The OptiX PTN 1900 provides the L2 E-Line service. 9.2.2 Transport of the E-LAN Service The OptiX PTN 1900 provides the L2 E-LAN service.
9.2.1 Transport of the E-Line Service The OptiX PTN 1900 provides the L2 E-Line service. As shown in Figure 9-4, the OptiX PTN 1900 provides the E-Line service.
9-6
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
9 Networking Application
Figure 9-4 Networking Application of the E-Line Service FE GE E-Line Protection Path OptiX PTN 3900
OptiX PTN 1900
CE
Table 9-2 Application of the OptiX PTN 1900 for the E-Line service Item
Description
Application mode
Packet service
Networking scheme
Chain, mesh
Service type
GE, FE
Networking interface
GE
Protection
l
MPLS Tunnel 1+1/1:1 protection
l
MPLS FRR/RR protection
l
LAG protection for UNI ports
l
TE function supported by interconnecting MPLS tunnels at the network side
l
The PTN equipment provides the E-Line service. The equipment accesses user services from GE or FE interfaces and then transparently transmits these services. In addition, the equipment provides DiffServ/HQoS service.
l
The equipment supports the traffic statistics counting based on port or service (PW, Tunnel).
l
The equipment provides the Ethernet OAM function (IEEE 802.1ag, IEEE 802.3ah) and MPLS OAM function (ITU-T Y.1711).
Service scenario
9.2.2 Transport of the E-LAN Service The OptiX PTN 1900 provides the L2 E-LAN service. As shown in Figure 9-5, the OptiX PTN 1900 provides the E-LAN service. Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
9-7
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
9 Networking Application
Figure 9-5 Networking Application of the E-LAN Service
FE GE E-LAN
OptiX PTN 3900
OptiX PTN 1900
CE
Table 9-3 Application of the OptiX PTN 1900 for the E-LAN service
9-8
Item
Description
Application mode
Packet service
Networking scheme
Mesh
Service type
GE, FE
Networking interface
GE
Protection
l
MPLS Tunnel 1+1/1:1 protection
l
MPLS FRR/RR protection
l
LAG protection for UNI ports
l
TE function provided by interconnecting MPLS tunnels at the network side
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
9 Networking Application
Item
Description
Service scenario
l
The equipment provides E-LAN services, services stipulated in L2VPN/ IEEE 802.1ad/IEEE 802.1ah, and DiffServ/HQoS service.
l
The equipment supports the traffic statistics counting based on port or service (PW, Tunnel).
l
The equipment provides the Ethernet OAM function (IEEE 802.1ag, IEEE 802.3ah) and MPLS-OAM function (ITU-T Y.1711).
l
The equipment supports interconnection to the user STP/RSTP/MSTP.
l
The equipment supports L2 multicast, and L2 broadcast suppression.
l
The equipment supports isolation of user data.
l
The equipment supports ACL, DOS-attack prevention and access authentication.
9.3 Offload Solution During service transmission between the NodeB and RNC for 3G mobile communication, the PTN equipment can divert the high speed downlink packet access (HSDPA) service from the services. The HSDPA service then can be carried by a low-cost network that accesses and forwards packets, such as an ADSL network. In this way, the transmission cost is reduced and the competitiveness of operators is enhanced.
Overview of the Offload Solution The HSDPA technology greatly increases the data service rate for 3G mobile communication. In addition, Iub interfaces (the interfaces between the NodeB and the RNC) require more and more transmission bandwidth. To reduce the transmission cost and ensure the QoS of important services, the PTN equipment provides a complete offload solution. As shown in Figure 9-6, the services sent by the NodeB are accessed to the OptiX PTN 1900 at the access node, through the IMA E1. The OptiX PTN 3900 at the convergence node, is connected to the RNC through the ATM STM-1 interface. The service flow at Iub interfaces can be classified into the signaling flow, R99 flow and HSDPA flow by VPI/VCI. l
The OptiX PTN 1900 at the access node uses the IMA E1 to transport the signaling flow and R99 flow to the OptiX PTN 3900 at the convergence node.
l
The OptiX PTN 1900 at the access node encapsulates the HSDPA flow and sends the encapsulated flow to the ADSL modem through an FE interface. The flow then travels through the ADSL network and finally arrives at the OptiX PTN 3900 at the convergence node.
According to the forwarding schemes used by the ADSL network, the offload solution can be used on the following three scenarios. l
ATM-forwarding-based ADSL network
l
ETH-forwarding-based ADSL network
l
IP-forwarding-based ADSL network
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
9-9
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
9 Networking Application
Figure 9-6 Offload solution
Wholesale ADSL network
HSDPA flow
R99 flow
Leased line
NodeB
OptiX PTN 1900
ADSL modem
RNC
OptiX PTN 3900
Application in an ATM-Forwarding-Based ADSL Network For the accessed HSDPA service, the OptiX PTN 1900 at the access node supports three encapsulation schemes. l
MPLS Tunnel used: ATM/PWE3/PW label/MPLS label/ETH, as shown in Figure 9-7.
l
IP Tunnel used: ATM/PWE3/PW label/IP/ETH, as shown in Figure 9-8.
l
GRE Tunnel used: ATM/PWE3/PW label/GRE/IP/ETH, as shown in Figure 9-9.
Figure 9-7 Application in an ATM-forwarding-based ADSL network (MPLS Tunnel used)
ATM PWE3 PW Label MPLS Label Ethernet
ADSL modem
ATM PWE3 PW Label MPLS Label Ethernet AAL5 ATM ADSL
ATM Network DSLAM
ATM PWE3 PW Label MPLS Label Ethernet AAL5 ATM STM-1 ATM STM-1
NodeB
9-10
ATM E1/STM-1
OptiX PTN 1900 ATM E1
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
OptiX PTN 3900
RNC
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
9 Networking Application
Figure 9-8 Application in an ATM-forwarding-based ADSL network (IP Tunnel used)
ATM PWE3 PW Label IP Ethernet
ADSL modem
ATM PWE3 PW Label IP Ethernet AAL5 ATM ADSL
ATM Network DSLAM
ATM PWE3 PW Label IP Ethernet AAL5 ATM STM-1 ATM STM-1
NodeB
ATM E1/STM-1
OptiX PTN 1900
OptiX PTN 3900
ATM E1
RNC
Figure 9-9 Application in an ATM-forwarding-based ADSL network (GRE Tunnel used)
ATM PWE3 PW Label GRE IP Ethernet
ADSL modem
ATM PWE3 PW Label GRE IP Ethernet AAL5 ATM ADSL
ATM Network DSLAM
ATM PWE3 PW Label GRE IP Ethernet ATM STM-1
NodeB
ATM E1/STM-1
OptiX PTN 1900 ATM E1
OptiX PTN 3900
RNC
The ADSL modem can work in either the bridge or the router mode. l
When working in the bridge mode, the ADSL modem performs EoA encapsulation to the accessed FE services. The OptiX PTN 1900 at the access node can use either the MPLS Tunnel or the IP Tunnel and GRE Tunnel.
l
When working in the router mode, the ADSL modem performs IPoA encapsulation to the accessed FE services. the OptiX PTN 1900 at the access node can use the IP Tunnel and GRE Tunnel.
Services forwarded through the ADSL network are finally converged to the OptiX PTN 3900 at the convergence node through the STM-1 interface. The OptiX PTN 3900 at the convergence node then rearranges the data packets that carry the HSDPA services, and forwards the data packets along with the signaling and R99 services to the RNC. The RNC forwards the services to different service networks according to service types. In this way, the HSDPA service can be forwarded in the wireless access and transport network in an end-to-end manner.
Application in an ETH-Forwarding-Based ADSL Network For such application, the ADSL network realizes Layer 2 forwarding of Ethernet packets according to frame headers. In this way, the MPLS tunnel can be used to transport the HSDPA service, as shown in Figure 9-10.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
9-11
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
9 Networking Application
Figure 9-10 Application in an ETH-forwarding-based ADSL network
ATM PWE3 PW Label MPLS Label Ethernet
ADSL modem
ATM PWE3 PW Label MPLS Label Ethernet AAL5 ATM ADSL
ETH Network DSLAM
ATM PWE3 PW Label MPLS Label Ethernet ATM STM-1
NodeB
ATM E1/STM-1
OptiX PTN 1900
OptiX PTN 3900
ATM E1
RNC
Application in an IP-Forwarding-Based ADSL Network For such application, the ADSL network forwards the IP packets according to the IP headers. Hence, the IP tunnel or GRE tunnel is required to carry packets, as shown in Figure 9-11 and Figure 9-12. Figure 9-11 Application in an IP-forwarding-based ADSL network (IP tunnel used)
ATM PWE3 PW Label IP Ethernet
ADSL modem
ATM PWE3 PW Label IP Ethernet AAL5 ATM ADSL
IP Network DSLAM
ATM PWE3 PW Label IP Ethernet ATM STM-1
NodeB
ATM E1/STM-1
OptiX PTN 1900
OptiX PTN 3900
ATM E1
RNC
Figure 9-12 Application in an IP-forwarding-based ADSL network (GRE tunnel used)
ATM PWE3 PW Label GRE IP Ethernet
ADSL modem
ATM PWE3 PW Label GRE IP Ethernet AAL5 ATM ADSL
IP Network DSLAM
ATM PWE3 PW Label GRE IP Ethernet ATM STM-1
NodeB
9-12
ATM E1/STM-1
OptiX PTN 1900 ATM E1
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
OptiX PTN 3900
RNC
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10
10 Technical Specifications
Technical Specifications
About This Chapter The technical specifications of the OptiX PTN 1900 are related to several items. 10.1 System Specifications The system specifications of the OptiX PTN 1900 cover the specifications of the cabinets and the subrack. 10.2 System Performance The OptiX PTN 1900 have different performance specifications for different performance items. 10.3 Technical Specifications of Boards Technical specifications of boards cover specifications of interfaces, dimensions, weight and power consumption of boards. 10.4 Laser Class Lasers are of Class 1 according to the value of the output optical power. 10.5 Specifications of Clock Interfaces Clock interfaces of the OptiX PTN 1900 and synchronization performance of the equipment comply with related ITU-T standards. 10.6 Reliability Specifications Reliability specifications of the OptiX PTN 1900 cover system usability, system mean annual failure rate, MTTR system mean repair time and MTBF system mean fault interval. 10.7 EMC Performance Specifications EMC performance specifications of the OptiX PTN 1900 comply with ETSI EN 300 386 V1.3.3. 10.8 Safety Certification The OptiX PTN 1900 is awarded with several safety certificates. 10.9 Environment Requirements The OptiX PTN 1900 requires proper environment for storage, transportation and operation. This section describes the environment specifications for storage, transportation and operation separately.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
10-1
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10 Technical Specifications
10.1 System Specifications The system specifications of the OptiX PTN 1900 cover the specifications of the cabinets and the subrack. The OptiX PTN 1900 can be installed in an ETSI cabinet. Table 10-1 lists the specifications of the ETSI cabinets. Table 10-1 Specifications of the cabinets for the OptiX PTN 1900 subrack Cabinet type
Dimensions (mm)
Weight (kg)
300 mm deep ETSI cabinet (T63)
600 (width) x 300 (depth) x 2200 (height)
60
300 mm deep ETSI cabinet (N63E)
600 (width) x 300 (depth) x 2000 (height)
42
600 (width) x 300 (depth) x 2200 (height)
45
NOTE H
D
W
The OptiX PTN 1900 can be installed in a third-party 19-inch cabinet.
Table 10-2 lists the specifications of the OptiX PTN 1900 subrack. Table 10-2 Specifications of the OptiX PTN 1900 subrack Item
Specification
Dimensions (mm)
436 (width) x 295 (depth) x 221 (height)
Weight (kg)
Empty subrack: 7 (no boards or air filter housed) Fully configured subrack: 17.2
Power consumption (W, with typical configuration)
l
Typical configuration I: Power consumption: 260 Configuration: 1 x FANA + 1 x FANB + 1 x ETFC + 2 x MD1 + 1 x EFG2 + 2 x TN72CXP + 2 x L75 + 2 x PIU
l
Typical configuration II: Power consumption: 160 Configuration: 1 x FANA + 1 x FANB + 1 x MD1 + 1 x EFG2 + 1 x EFF8 + 1 x TN72CXP + 1 x L75 + 2 x PIU
10-2
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
Item
Specification
Power consumption (W, with maximum configuration)
450 (without microwave feature)
Voltage range (V, DC)
-38.4 to -57.6 (-48 V power supply)
10 Technical Specifications
700 (with microwave feature)
-48.0 to -72.0 (-60 V power supply)
10.2 System Performance The OptiX PTN 1900 have different performance specifications for different performance items. Table 10-3 lists the system performance specifications of the OptiX PTN 1900. Table 10-3 System performance specifications
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Item
Performance Specifications
FRR protection time for TE tunnel
When less than 256 tunnels are switched at the same time, the FRR protection time is less than 50 ms.
MPLS Tunnel 1 +1/1:1 protection switching time
The protection switching time is less than 50 ms.
LAG protection switching time
l
When links fail bidirectionally, the LAG protection switching time is less than 500 ms.
l
When links fail unidirectional, the LAG protection switching time is less than 3.5s.
Switching performance of the CXP
When the board is removed or manually switched, the service is not affected.
Maximum interval for consecutive switching of the active and standby CXP
l
Typical configuration (static configuration): ≤ 5 minutes
l
Typical configuration (dynamic signaling enabled): ≤ 15 minutes
l
Maximum configuration (static configuration): ≤ 10 minutes
l
Maximum configuration (dynamic signaling enabled): ≤ 20 minutes
MSTP topology converging time
In the case of a link failure, the switching time is less than 1s when conditions are available for fast reconfiguration, and less than 30s when conditions are unavailable for fast reconfiguration.
Maximum number of routing neighbors
256
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
10-3
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10 Technical Specifications
10-4
Item
Performance Specifications
Maximum number of routes supported by the equipment
20k
Number of supported MPLS Tunnels
1k
Total number of supported IP Tunnels and GRE Tunnels
64
Number of supported Tunnel OAM
512
Number of supported PWs
2k
Number of supported CES services
504
Number of supported ATM services
1k (remote service) and 512 (local service)
Number of supported ATM connections (including VCCs and VPCs)
2k (remote service) and 1k (local service)
Number of supported E-Line services
1k
Number of VSI supported for ELAN
256
Maximum number of virtual ports supported for each VSI
64
Number of supported dynamic MAC addresses
The entire equipment supports 64k dynamic MAC addresses.
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10 Technical Specifications
Item
Performance Specifications
Number of supported static MAC addresses
The entire equipment supports 2k static MAC addresses.
Number of supported VLAN/ VLAN list
16k
Granularity of CAR/Shaping
CAR and Shaping support the minimum granularity of 64 kbit/s
Number of CAR supported by the equipment
Single-bucket CAR: 4k
ARP table capacity
512 static ARP entries for the entire equipment
Number of multicast groups supported by the equipment
The equipment supports a maximum of 512 multicast groups. The equipment supports a maximum of 8k multicast members.
Number of supported APS protection groups
256
Number of supported MLPPP groups
128
Number of supported L3VPN
64
256 dynamic ARP entries for each port
10.3 Technical Specifications of Boards Technical specifications of boards cover specifications of interfaces, dimensions, weight and power consumption of boards. 10.3.1 Technical Specification of the ETFC Specifications of the ETFC board cover the interface specifications, board dimensions, and weight. 10.3.2 Technical Specifications of the EFF8 The technical specifications of the EFF8 include the interface specifications, board dimensions, and weight. 10.3.3 Technical Specification of the EFG2 Specifications of the EFG2 cover specifications of interfaces, board dimensions, and weight. 10.3.4 Technical Specification of the MD1 Specifications of the MD1 board cover board dimensions, and weight. Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
10-5
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10 Technical Specifications
10.3.5 Technical Specification of the CD1 Specifications of the CD1 board cover specifications of interfaces, board dimensions, and weight. 10.3.6 Technical Specification of the AD1 Specifications of the AD1 cover specifications of interfaces, board dimensions, and weight. 10.3.7 Technical Specifications of the AFO1 The technical specifications of the AFO1 cover the interface specifications, board dimensions, and weight. 10.3.8 Technical Specification of the POD41 Specifications of the POD41 board cover specifications of interfaces, board dimensions, and weight. 10.3.9 Technical Specification of the L12 Specifications of the L12 board cover interface specifications, board dimensions, and weight. 10.3.10 Technical Specification of the L75 Specifications of the L75 board cover interface specifications, board dimensions, and weight. 10.3.11 Technical Specification of the TN71CXP Specifications of the TN71CXP board cover board dimensions, and weight. 10.3.12 Technical Specification of the TN72CXP Specifications of the TN72CXP board cover board dimensions, and weight. 10.3.13 Technical Specification of the PIU Specifications of the PIU board cover board dimensions, weight, and input voltage. 10.3.14 Technical Specification of the FANA Specifications of the FANA board cover board dimensions, weight, and working voltage. 10.3.15 Technical Specification of the FANB Specifications of the FANB board cover board dimensions, weight, and working voltage.
10.3.1 Technical Specification of the ETFC Specifications of the ETFC board cover the interface specifications, board dimensions, and weight. Table 10-4 lists the interface specifications of the ETFC. Table 10-4 Interface specifications of the ETFC Item
Specification
Electrical interface rate
10 Mbit/s, 100 Mbit/s
RJ-45 electrical interface specification
Compliant with the IEEE 802.3
Transmit jitter
1.4 ns (peak to peak)
Board dimensions (mm): 261.4 (height) x 156.9 (depth) x 22.0 (width) Weight (kg): 0.55 10-6
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10 Technical Specifications
10.3.2 Technical Specifications of the EFF8 The technical specifications of the EFF8 include the interface specifications, board dimensions, and weight.
Interface Specifications Table 10-5 lists the specifications of the optical interfaces of the EFF8. Table 10-5 Specifications of the interfaces on the EFF8 Item
Specification
Optical interface type
100BASE-FX
100BASE-FX
100BASE-FX
(15 km)
(40 km)
(80 km)
Fiber type
Single-mode
Single-mode
Single-mode
Working wavelength range (nm)
1261 to 1360
1263 to 1360
1480 to 1580
Mean launched optical power (dBm)
-15 to -8
-5 to 0
-5 to 0
Receiver sensitivity (dBm)
-28
-34
-34
Min. overhead point (dBm)
-8
-10
-10
Extinction ratio (dB)
8.2
10
10
Other Specifications Board dimensions (mm): 261.4 (height) x 156.9 (depth) x 22.0 (width) Weight (kg): 0.64
10.3.3 Technical Specification of the EFG2 Specifications of the EFG2 cover specifications of interfaces, board dimensions, and weight. Table 10-6 lists the specifications of interfaces on the EFG2. Table 10-7 lists the wavelengths of colored optical interfaces on the EFG2.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
10-7
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10 Technical Specifications
Table 10-6 Specifications of the interfaces on the EFG2 Item
Specification
Optical interface type
1000BASESX
1000BASELX
1000BASEVX
1000BASEZX
1000BASECWDM
(0.5km)
(10 km)
(40 km)
(80 km)
(40 km)
Fiber type
Multi-mode
Singlemode
Singlemode
Singlemode
Single-mode
Working wavelength range (nm)
770 to 860
1270 to 1355
1270 to 1355
1500 to 1580
For details on wavelength allocation, see Table 10-7.
Mean launched optical power (dBm)
-9.5 to 0
-11 to -3
- 5 to 0
-2 to 5
0 to 5
Receiver sensitivity (dBm)
-17
-19
-22
-22
-19
Min. overhead point (dBm)
0
-3
-3
-3
-3
Extinction ratio (dB)
9
9
9
9
9
Table 10-7 Wavelengths of 1000BASE-CWDM interfaces on the EFG2 No.
Wavelength (nm)
No.
Wavelength (nm)
1
1464.5 to 1477.5
5
1544.5 to 1557.5
2
1484.5 to 1497.5
6
1564.5 to 1577.5
3
1504.5 to 1517.5
7
1584.5 to 1597.5
4
1524.5 to 1537.5
8
1604.5 to 1617.5
Board dimensions (mm): 261.4 (height) x 156.9 (depth) x 22.0 (width) Weight (kg): 0.52
10.3.4 Technical Specification of the MD1 Specifications of the MD1 board cover board dimensions, and weight. Board dimensions (mm): 128.1 (height) x 197.1 (depth) x 25.4 (width) Weight (kg): 0.34 10-8
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10 Technical Specifications
10.3.5 Technical Specification of the CD1 Specifications of the CD1 board cover specifications of interfaces, board dimensions, and weight. Table 10-8 lists the specifications of interfaces on the CD1. Table 10-8 Specifications of interfaces on the CD1 Item
Specification
Nominal bit rate (Mbit/s)
155.52
Optical interface type
S-1.1
L-1.1
L-1.2
(15 km)
(40 km)
(80 km)
Fiber type
Single-mode
Single-mode
Single-mode
Working wavelength range (nm)
1261 to 1360
1263 to 1360
1480 to 1580
Launched optical power (dBm)
-15 to -8
-5 to 0
-5 to 0
Optical receiver sensitivity (dBm)
-28
-34
-34
Minimum overload (dBm)
-8
-10
-10
Extinction ratio (dB)
8.2
10
10
Board dimensions (mm): 128.1 (height) x 197.1 (depth) x 25.4 (width) Weight (kg): 0.34
10.3.6 Technical Specification of the AD1 Specifications of the AD1 cover specifications of interfaces, board dimensions, and weight. Table 10-9 lists the specifications of interfaces on the AD1. Table 10-9 Specifications of interfaces on the AD1 Item
Specification
Nominal bit rate (Mbit/s)
155.52
Optical interface type
S-1.1
L-1.1
L-1.2
(15 km)
(40 km)
(80 km)
Single-mode
Single-mode
Single-mode
Fiber type
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
10-9
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10 Technical Specifications
Item
Specification
Working wavelength range (nm)
1261 to 1360
1263 to 1360
1480 to 1580
Launched optical power (dBm)
-15 to -8
-5 to 0
-5 to 0
Optical receiver sensitivity (dBm)
-28
-34
-34
Minimum overload (dBm)
-8
-10
-10
Extinction ratio (dB)
8.2
10
10
Board dimensions (mm): 128.1 (height) x 197.1 (depth) x 25.4 (width) Weight (kg): 0.35
10.3.7 Technical Specifications of the AFO1 The technical specifications of the AFO1 cover the interface specifications, board dimensions, and weight.
Interface Specifications Table 10-10 lists the specifications of interfaces on the AFO1. Table 10-10 Specifications of interfaces on the AFO1
10-10
Item
Specification
Nominal bit rate (Mbit/s)
155.52
Optical interface type
S-1.1
L-1.1
L-1.2
(15 km)
(40 km)
(80 km)
Fiber type
Single-mode
Single-mode
Single-mode
Working wavelength range (nm)
1261 to 1360
1263 to 1360
1480 to 1580
Mean launched optical power (dBm)
- 15 to - 8
- 5 to 0
- 5 to 0
Receiver sensitivity (dBm)
- 28
- 34
- 34
Minimum overhead point (dBm)
-8
- 10
- 10
Extinction ratio (dB)
8.2
10
10
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10 Technical Specifications
Other Specifications Board dimensions (mm): 261.4 (height) x 156.9 (depth) x 22.0 (width) Weight (kg): 0.78
10.3.8 Technical Specification of the POD41 Specifications of the POD41 board cover specifications of interfaces, board dimensions, and weight. Table 10-11 and Table 10-12 list the specifications of interfaces on the POD41. Table 10-11 Specifications of interfaces on the POD41 Item
Specification
Nominal bit rate (kbit/s)
155520
Optical interface type
S-1.1
L-1.1
L-1.2
(15 km)
(40 km)
(80 km)
Working wavelength range (nm)
1261 to 1360
1263 to 1360
1480 to 1580
Fiber type
Single-mode
Single-mode
Single-mode
Launched optical power (dBm)
-15 to -8
-5 to 0
-5 to 0
Optical receiver sensitivity (dBm)
-28
-34
-34
Minimum overload (dBm)
-8
-10
-10
Extinction ratio (dB)
8.2
10
10
Table 10-12 Specifications of interfaces on the POD41
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Item
Specification
Nominal bit rate (kbit/s)
622080
Optical interface type
S-4.1
L-4.1
L-4.2
V-4.2
(15 km)
(40 km)
(80 km)
(100 km)
Fiber type
Single-mode
Single-mode
Single-mode
Single-mode
Working wavelength range (nm)
1261 to 1360
1280 to 1355
1480 to 1580
1480 to 1580
Launched optical power (dBm)
-15 to -8
-3 to 2
-3 to 2
-3 to 2
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
10-11
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10 Technical Specifications
Item
Specification
Optical receiver sensitivity (dBm)
-28
-28
-28
-32
Minimum overload (dBm)
-8
-8
-8
-13
Extinction ratio (dB)
8.2
10
10
10
Board dimensions (mm): 264.1 (height) x 156.9 (depth) x 22.0 (width) Weight (kg): 0.55
10.3.9 Technical Specification of the L12 Specifications of the L12 board cover interface specifications, board dimensions, and weight. Table 10-13 lists the interface specifications of the L12. Table 10-13 Interface specifications of the L12 Item
Specification
Nominal bit rate: (kbit/s)
2048
Code
HDB3
Pulse shape at output port
Compliant with ITU-T G.703
Attenuation of input interface at 1024 kHz frequency point (dB)
0 to 6
Anti-interference capability of input port
Compliant with ITU-T G.703
Input jitter tolerance
Compliant with ITU-T G.823
Output jitter
Compliant with ITU-T G.823
Board dimensions (mm): 261.4 (height) x 156.9 (depth) x 22.0 (width) Weight (kg): 0.38
10.3.10 Technical Specification of the L75 Specifications of the L75 board cover interface specifications, board dimensions, and weight. Table 10-14 lists the interface specifications of the L75.
10-12
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10 Technical Specifications
Table 10-14 Interface specifications of the L75 Item
Specification
Nominal bit rate: (kbit/s)
2048
Code
HDB3
Pulse shape at output port
Compliant with ITU-T G.703
Attenuation of input interface at 1024 kHz frequency point (dB)
0 to 6
Anti-interference capability of input port
Compliant with ITU-T G.703
Input jitter tolerance
Compliant with ITU-T G.823
Output jitter
Compliant with ITU-T G.823
Board dimensions (mm): 261.4 (height) x 156.9 (depth) x 22.0 (width) Weight (kg): 0.38
10.3.11 Technical Specification of the TN71CXP Specifications of the TN71CXP board cover board dimensions, and weight. Board dimensions (mm): 378.0 (height) x 265.3 (depth) x 50.8 (width) Weight (kg): 2.34
10.3.12 Technical Specification of the TN72CXP Specifications of the TN72CXP board cover board dimensions, and weight. Board dimensions (mm): 378.0 (height) x 265.3 (depth) x 50.8 (width) Weight (kg): 2.36
10.3.13 Technical Specification of the PIU Specifications of the PIU board cover board dimensions, weight, and input voltage. Board dimensions (mm): 108.6 (height) x 157.1 (depth) x 55.0 (width) Weight (kg): 0.61 Input voltage range (V DC): -38.4 to -57.6 (-48 V power supply) -48.0 to -72.0 (-60 V power supply)
10.3.14 Technical Specification of the FANA Specifications of the FANA board cover board dimensions, weight, and working voltage. Board dimensions (mm): 111.0 (height) x 148.8 (depth) x 45.4 (width) Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
10-13
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10 Technical Specifications
Weight (kg): 0.6 Working voltage: 12 V
10.3.15 Technical Specification of the FANB Specifications of the FANB board cover board dimensions, weight, and working voltage. Board dimensions (mm): 102.6 (height) x 258.7 (depth) x 44.4 (width) Weight (kg): 0.8 Working voltage: 12 V
10.4 Laser Class Lasers are of Class 1 according to the value of the output optical power.
WARNING Avoid direct eye exposure to the laser beams launched from the optical interface during the installation and maintenance of the fiber. Otherwise, your eyes may be hurt. Table 10-15 shows the laser classes of the boards. Table 10-15 Laser Class Laser Class
Label
Class 1
Board CD1, AD1, EFG2, POD41, EFF8, AFO1
CLASS 1 LASER PRODUCT
10.5 Specifications of Clock Interfaces Clock interfaces of the OptiX PTN 1900 and synchronization performance of the equipment comply with related ITU-T standards.
Clock Interface Types The OptiX PTN 1900 provides external clock input interfaces and clock output interfaces. Table 10-16 lists the details.
10-14
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10 Technical Specifications
Table 10-16 Specifications of clock interfaces of the OptiX PTN 1900 Clock Type
Interface Specification
External clock synchronization source
Two-channel 120-ohm 2048 kbit/s (G.703) or 2048 kHz (G.703) inputs
Synchronization output clock
Two-channel 120-ohm 2048 kbit/s (G.703) or 2048 kHz (G.703) outputs
External time synchronization source
Two-channel DCLS time inputs
Synchronization output time
Two-channel DCLS time outputs
Two-channel 1PPS + time information inputs
Two-channel 1PPS + time information outputs
Timing and Synchronization Performance The timing and synchronization performance of the OptiX PTN 1900 complies with ITU-T G. 813 and G.823. Table 10-17 lists details on the timing and synchronization performance. Table 10-17 Timing and synchronization performance Output Jitter
Output Frequency of the Internal Oscillator in FreeRun Mode
Long-Term Phase Variation (Locked Mode)
Complies with ITU-T G.813 and G.823.
Complies with ITU-T G.813 and G.823.
Complies with ITU-T G. 813 and G.823.
10.6 Reliability Specifications Reliability specifications of the OptiX PTN 1900 cover system usability, system mean annual failure rate, MTTR system mean repair time and MTBF system mean fault interval. Table 10-18 lists the reliability specifications of the OptiX PTN 1900. Table 10-18 Reliability specifications
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Item
Required Specification
System usability
0.9999979: The equipment should not be out of service for more than 1.13 minutes in one year.
System mean annual failure rate
Less than 1.2%
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
10-15
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10 Technical Specifications
Item
Required Specification
MTTR system mean repair time
Two hours
MTBF system mean fault interval
106.33 years
10.7 EMC Performance Specifications EMC performance specifications of the OptiX PTN 1900 comply with ETSI EN 300 386 V1.3.3. The OptiX PTN 1900 complies with the following EMC standards: l
ETSI EN 300 386 1.3.3 (2005-04)
l
ETSI EN 300 132-2 (2003-09)
l
CISPR22 (2003-04)
l
GR-1089 (2006)
l
IEC 61000-4-2 (2001-04)
l
IEC 61000-4-3 (2002-09)
l
IEC 61000-4-4 (1995+A1:2000.11+A2:2001.07)
l
IEC 61000-4-5 (2001-04)
l
IEC 61000-4-6 (2003-05)
l
IEC 61000-4-29 (2000-08)
10.8 Safety Certification The OptiX PTN 1900 is awarded with several safety certificates. Table 10-19 lists the safety certifications that the OptiX PTN 1900 has passed. Table 10-19 Safety certifications that the OptiX PTN 1900 has passed Certification Item
Criteria
Electromagnetic compatibility (EMC)
CISPR22 Class A CISPR24 EN55022 Class A EN50024 ETSI EN 300 386 Class A ETSI ES 201 468 CFR 47 FCC Part 15 Class A ICES 003 Class A AS/NZS CISPR22 Class A GB9254 Class A VCCI Class A
10-16
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10 Technical Specifications
Certification Item
Criteria
Safety
IEC 60950-1 IEC/EN41003 EN 60950-1 UL 60950-1 CSA C22.2 No 60950-1 AS/NZS 60950-1 BS EN 60950-1 IS 13252 GB4943 FDA rules
Laser safety
21 CFR 1040.10 and 1040.11 IEC60825-1 IEC60825-2 EN60825-1 EN60825-2 GB7247 ICNIRP Guideline
Health
1999-519-EC EN 50385 OET Bulletin 65 IEEE Std C95.1 Environment protection
RoHS
10.9 Environment Requirements The OptiX PTN 1900 requires proper environment for storage, transportation and operation. This section describes the environment specifications for storage, transportation and operation separately. 10.9.1 Environment for Storage The OptiX PTN 1900 requires proper environment for storage. 10.9.2 Environment for Transportation The OptiX PTN 1900 requires proper environment for transportation. 10.9.3 Environment for Operation The OptiX PTN 1900 requires proper environment for operation.
10.9.1 Environment for Storage The OptiX PTN 1900 requires proper environment for storage. Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
10-17
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10 Technical Specifications
Climate Table 10-20 lists the climatic requirements of the OptiX PTN 1900 for storage. Table 10-20 Climatic requirements of the OptiX PTN 1900 for storage Item
Specification
Temperature
-40℃ to +70℃
Relative humidity
10% to 100%
Temperature change rate
0.5℃/min
Air flowing speed
≤ 30 m/s
Air pressure
70 kPa to 106 kPa
Solar radiation
≤ 1120 W/m2
Heat radiation
≤ 600 W/m2
Waterproof Requirement Requirement for storing equipment on the customer site: Generally, the equipment must be stored indoors. No water should remain on the floor or leak to the equipment carton. The equipment should be placed away from places where water leakage is possible, such as near the automatic fire-fighting facilities and heating facilities. If the equipment is stored outdoors, the following four conditions are required. l
The carton must be intact.
l
Required rainproof measures must be taken to prevent water from entering the carton.
l
No water is on the ground where the carton is placed.
l
The carton must be free from direct exposure to sunshine.
Biological Environment l
Avoid multiplication of microbe, such as eumycete and mycete.
l
Keep rodents such as mice away.
l
The air must be free from explosive, electric-conductive, magnetic-conductive or corrosive dust.
l
Table 10-21 lists the density requirements for mechanically active substances during storage.
l
Table 10-22 lists the density requirements for chemically active substances during storage.
Air Cleanness
10-18
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10 Technical Specifications
Table 10-21 Density requirements for mechanically active substances during storage Mechanically Active Substance
Content
Suspending dust
≤ 5.00 mg/m3
Precipitable dust
≤ 20.0 mg/m2·h
Gravel
≤ 300 mg/m3
Table 10-22 Density requirements for chemically active substances during storage Chemically Active Substance
Content
SO2
0.30 mg/m3 to 1.0 mg/m3
H2S
0.1 mg/m3 to 0.5 mg/m3
NOx
0.5 mg/m3 to 1.0 mg/m3
NH3
1.0 mg/m3 to 3.0 mg/m3
Cl2
0.1 mg/m3 to 0.3 mg/m3
HCl
0.1 mg/m3 to 0.5 mg/m3
HF
0.01 mg/m3 to 0.03 mg/m3
O3
0.05 mg/m3 to 0.1 mg/m3
Mechanical Stress Table 10-23 lists the requirements of mechanical stress for storage. Table 10-23 Requirements of mechanical stress for storage Item
Sub-Item
Specification
Random vibration
ASD
-
0.02m2/s3
-
Frequency range
5 Hz to 10 Hz
10 Hz to 50 Hz
50 Hz to 100 Hz
dB/oct
12
-
-12
Axes of vibration
3
10.9.2 Environment for Transportation The OptiX PTN 1900 requires proper environment for transportation. Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
10-19
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10 Technical Specifications
Climate Table 10-24 lists climatic requirements for transportation. Table 10-24 Climatic requirements for transportation Item
Specification
Temperature
-40℃ to +70℃
Relative humidity
5% RH to 95% RH
Temperature change rate
0.5℃/min
Air following speed
≤ 20 m/s
Air pressure
70 kPa to 106 kPa
Solar radiation
≤ 1120 W/m2
Heat radiation
≤ 600 W/m2
Rain
≤ 6 mm/min
Waterproof Requirement The following conditions should be present for transportation. l
The carton must be intact.
l
Required rainproof measures must be taken to the transportation tools to prevent water from entering the carton.
l
No water is on the transportation tools.
Biological Environment l
Avoid multiplication of microbe, such as eumycete and mycete.
l
Keep rodents such as mice away.
l
The air must be free from explosive, electric-conductive, magnetic-conductive or corrosive dust.
l
Table 10-25 lists the density requirements for mechanically active substances during transportation.
l
Table 10-26 lists the density requirements for chemically active substances during transportation.
Air Cleanness
10-20
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10 Technical Specifications
Table 10-25 Density requirements for mechanically active substances during transportation Mechanically Active Substances
Content
Precipitable dust
≤ 3.0 mg/m2·h
Gravel
≤ 100 mg/m3
Table 10-26 Density requirements for chemically active substances during transportation Chemically Active Substance
Content
SO2
≤ 1.0 mg/m3
H2S
≤ 0.5 mg/m3
NOx
≤ 1.0 mg/m3
HCl
≤ 0.5 mg/m3
NH3
≤ 3.0 mg/m3
HF
≤ 0.03 mg/m3
O3
≤ 0.1 mg/m3
Mechanical Stress Table 10-27 lists the requirements of mechanical stress for transportation. Table 10-27 Requirements of mechanical stress for transportation Item
Sub-Item
Specification
Random vibration
ASD
1 m2/s3
-3 dB
Frequency range
5 Hz to 20 Hz
20 Hz to 200Hz
Shock spectrum type I (mass>50kg)
100 m/s2, 11ms, 100 in each direction
Shock spectrum type II (mass≤50kg)
180 m/s2, 6ms, 100 in each direction
Direction of bump
6
Bump
10.9.3 Environment for Operation The OptiX PTN 1900 requires proper environment for operation. Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
10-21
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10 Technical Specifications
Climate Table 10-28 and Table 10-29 list the climatic requirements of the OptiX PTN 1900 for operation. Table 10-28 Temperature and humidity required by the OptiX PTN 1900 for operation Temperature
Relative humidity
Long-term operation
Short-term operation
Long-term operation
0℃ to 50℃
-5℃ to 55℃
5% to 95%
Short-term operation
NOTE The radiation affects the operation of the OptiX PTN 1900.
Table 10-29 Other climatic requirements of the OptiX PTN 1900 for operation Item
Specification
Altitude
≤ 4000 m
Temperature change rate
0.5℃/min
Air following speed
≤ 5 m/s
Air pressure
70 kPa to 106 kPa
Solar radiation
≤ 700 W/m2
Heat radiation
≤ 600 W/m2
Biological Environment l
Avoid multiplication of microbe, such as eumycete and mycete.
l
Keep rodents such as mice away.
l
The air must be free from explosive, electric-conductive, magnetic-conductive or corrosive dust.
l
Table 10-30 lists the density requirements for mechanically active substances during operation.
l
Table 10-31 lists the density requirements for chemically active substances during operation.
Air Cleanness
10-22
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
10 Technical Specifications
Table 10-30 Density requirements for mechanically active substances during operation Mechanically Active Substance
Content
Suspending dust
≤ 0.4 mg/m3
Precipitable dust
≤ 15 mg/m2·h
Gravel
≤ 300 mg/m3
Table 10-31 Density requirements for chemically active substances during operation Chemically Active Substance
Content
SO2
0.30 mg/m3 to 1.0 mg/m3
H2S
0.1 mg/m3 to 0.5 mg/m3
NOx
0.5 mg/m3 to 5.0 mg/m3
NH3
1.0 mg/m3 to 3.0 mg/m3
Cl2
0.1 mg/m3 to 0.3 mg/m3
HCl
0.1 mg/m3 to 0.5 mg/m3
HF
0.01 mg/m3 to 0.03 mg/m3
O3
0.05 mg/m3 to 0.1 mg/m3
Mechanical Stress Table 10-32 lists the requirements of mechanical stress for operation. Table 10-32 Requirement of mechanical stress for operation Item
Sub-Item
Specification
Sinusoidal vibration
Velocity
5 mm/s
-
Acceleration
-
2 m/s2
Frequency range
5 Hz to 62 Hz
62 Hz to 200 Hz
Shock spectrum type II
30 m/s2, 11ms, 3 in each direction
Direction of bump
6
Shock
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
10-23
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
A
A Compliant Standards and Protocols
Compliant Standards and Protocols
Environment Standard Standard or Protocol
Title
ETSI EN 300 019-1
Environmental Engineering (EE) Environmental conditions and environmental tests for telecommunications equipment Classification of environmental conditions
ETSI EN 300 019-2
Environmental Engineering (EE) Environmental conditions and environmental tests for telecommunications equipment Specification of environmental tests
ETSI EN 300 753
Equipment Engineering (EE) Acoustic noise emitted by telecommunications equipment
IEC 60068-1
Environmental testing Part 1: General and guidance
IEC 60068-2
Basic environmental testing procedures Part 2: Tests
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
IEC 600721-1
Classification of environmental conditionsPart 1: Environmental parameters and their severities
IEC 600721-2
Classification of environmental conditionsPart 2: Environmental conditions appearing in nature
IEC 600529
Degrees of protection provided by enclosures (IP Code)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
A-1
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
A Compliant Standards and Protocols
Standard or Protocol
Title
QM333
Specification for environmental testing of electronic equipments for transmission and switching use
GR-63
NEBS Requirements: Physical Protection
GR-63-CORE
NEBS™ Requirements: Physical Protection
Standard or Protocol
Title
EN 55022
Information technology equipment-Radio disturbance characteristics-Limits and methods of measurement
ETSI EN 300 132-2
Equipment Engineering (EE): Power supply interface at the input to telecommunications equipment
EMC Standard
Part 2: Operated by direct current (dc) ETSI EN 300 386
Electromagnetic compatibility and Radio spectrum Matters (ERM) Telecommunication network equipment; ElectroMagnetic Compatibility (EMC) requirements
ETSI ES 201 468
Electromagnetic compatibility and Radio spectrum Matters (ERM) Additional ElectroMagnetic Compatibility (EMC) telecommunications equipment for enhanced availability of service in specific applications
ETSI EN 300 253
Environmental Engineering (EE) Earthing and bonding configuration inside telecommunications centres
A-2
EN 61000-4-29
Electromagnetic compatibility (EMC)Part4-29: Testing and measurement techniques-Voltage dips, shot interruptions and voltage variations on d.c. input power port immunity tests
CISPR22
Information technology equipment-Radio disturbance characteristics-Limits and methods of measurement
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
A Compliant Standards and Protocols
Standard or Protocol
Title
IEC 61000-4-29
Electromagnetic compatibility (EMC)Part4-29: Testing and measurement techniques-Voltage dips, shot interruptions and voltage variations on d.c. input power port immunity tests
ITU-T K.27
Bonding Configurations and Earthing Inside a Telecommunication Building
GR-1089-CORE
Electromagnetic Compatibility and Electrical Safety - Generic Criteria for Network Telecommunications Equipment
IEC 61000-4-5
Electromagnetic compatibility (EMC)- Part 4: Testing and measurement techniques Section 5: Surge immunity test
Safety Compliance Standard Standard or Protocol
Title
IEC/EN/UL 60950-1
Information technology equipment - Safety Part 1: General requirements
IEC/EN 60825-1
Safety of laser products - Part 1: Equipment classification, requirements and user's guide
IEC/EN 60825-2
Safety of laser products - Part 2: Safety of optical fibre communication systems (OFCS)
73/23/EEC
Low voltage directive
21 CFR 1040.10/1040.11
Performance standards for light-emittingproducts
Ethernet Service Standard
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Standard or Protocol
Title
IEEE802.1D
Media access control (MAC) bridges
IEEE802.1Q
Virtual bridged local area networks
IEEE802.1ad
Provider bridges
IEEE802.1ag
Connectivity fault management
IEEE802.1ah
Provider backbone bridges
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
A-3
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
A Compliant Standards and Protocols
Standard or Protocol
Title
IEEE802.3
Carrier sense multiple access with collision detection (CSMA/CD) access method and physical layer specifications
ITU-T G.8012
Ethernet UNI and Ethernet over transport NNI
ITU-T G.1730
Requirements for OAM functions in Ethernet based networks and Ethernet services
ITU-T G.1731
OAM functions and mechanisms for Ethernet based networks
ITU-T G.8031
Ethernet protection switching
ITU-T G.8010
Architecture of Ethernet layer networks
ITU-T G.8021
Characteristics of Ethernet transport network equipment functional blocks
MEF MEF2
Requirements and framework for Ethernet service protection in metro Ethernet networks
MEF MEF4
Metro Ethernet network architecture framework - Part 1: generic framework
L2VPN Standard Standard or Protocol
Title
draft-ietf-l2vpn-oam-req-frmk-05
L2VPN OAM requirements and framework
draft-ietf-l2vpn-signaling-08
Provisioning, autodiscovery, and signaling in L2VPNs
RFC 4664
Framework for layer 2 virtual private networks (L2VPNs)
MPLS Standard
A-4
Standard or Protocol
Title
ITU-T G.8112
Interfaces for the transport MPLS (T-MPLS) hierarchy
ITU-T G.8131
Protection switching for transport MPLS (TMPLS) networks
ITU-T Y.1711
Operation & Maintenance mechanism for MPLS networks
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
A Compliant Standards and Protocols
Standard or Protocol
Title
ITU-T Y.1720
Protection switching for MPLS networks
ITU-T Y.1561
Performance and availability parameters for MPLS networks
ITU-T G.8110
MPLS layer network architecture
ITU-T G.8110.1
Application of MPLS in the transport network
ITU-T G.8121
Characteristics of transport MPLS equipment functional blocks
ITU-T Y.1710
Requirements for OAM functionality for MPLS networks
RFC 2702
Requirements for traffic engineering over MPLS
RFC 2205
Resource Reservation protocol (RSVP)version 1 functional specification
RFC 3031
MPLS architecture
RFC 3469
Framework for multi-protocol label switching (MPLS)-based recovery
RFC 3811
Definitions of textual conventions for multiprotocol label switching (MPLS) management
RFC 3812
Multiprotocol label switching (MPLS) traffic engineering management information base
RFC 3813
Multiprotocol label switching (MPLS) label switching router (LSR) management information base
RFC 3814
Multiprotocol label switching (MPLS) forwarding equivalence class to next hop label forwarding entry (FEC-To-NHLFE) management information base
RFC 4220
Traffic engineering link management information base
RFC 4221
Multiprotocol label switching (MPLS) management overview
RFC 4377
Operations and management (OAM) requirements for multi-protocol label switched (MPLS) networks
RFC 4378
A framework for multi-protocol label switching (MPLS) operations and management (OAM) Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
A-5
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
A Compliant Standards and Protocols
A-6
Standard or Protocol
Title
RFC 3032
MPLS label stack encoding
RFC 3036
LDP specification
RFC 3037
LDP applicability
RFC 3209
Extensions to RSVP for LSP tunnels
RFC 3210
Applicability statement for extensions to RSVP for LSP tunnels
RFC 3215
LDP state machine
RFC 3443
Time to live (TTL) processing in multiprotocol label switching (MPLS) networks
RFC 3477
Signalling unnumbered links in resource Reservation protocol - traffic engineering (RSVP-TE)
RFC 3478
Graceful restart mechanism for label distribution protocol
RFC 3612
Applicability statement for restart mechanisms for the label distribution protocol (LDP)
RFC 3815
Definitions of managed objects for the multiprotocol label switching(MPLS), label distribution protocol(LDP)
RFC 3936
Procedures for modifying the resource reservation protocol(RSVP)
RFC 4090
Fast reroute extensions to RSVP-TE for LSP tunnels
RFC 4182
Removing a restriction on the use of MPLS explicit NULL
RFC 4201
Link bundling in MPLS traffic engineering (TE)
draft-ietf-mpls-soft-preemption-08
MPLS traffic engineering soft preemption
RFC 3609
Tracing requirements for generic tunnels
RFC 4204
Link management protocol (LMP)
RFC 4327
Link management protocol (LMP) management information base (MIB)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
A Compliant Standards and Protocols
PWE3 Standard Standard or Protocol
Title
RFC 3916
Requirements for pseudo-wire emulation edge-to-edge (PWE3)
RFC 3985
Pseudo wire emulation edge-to-edge (PWE3) architecture
RFC 4197
Requirements for edge-to-edge emulation of time division multiplexed (TDM) circuits over packet switching networks
RFC 4385
Pseudowire emulation edge-to-edge (PWE3) control word for use over an MPLS PSN
RFC 4446
IANA allocations for pseudowire edge to edge emulation (PWE3)
RFC 4447
Pseudowire setup and maintenance using the label distribution Protocol (LDP)
RFC 4448
Encapsulation methods for transport of Ethernet over MPLS networks
RFC 4720
Pseudowire emulation edge-to-edge (PWE3) frame check sequence retention
RFC 4553
Structure-agnostic time division multiplexing (TDM) over packet (SAToP)
draft-ietf-pwe3-cesopsn-07
Structure-aware TDM circuit emulation service over packet switched network (CESoPSN)
draft-ietf-pwe3-vccv-11
Pseudo wire virtual circuit connectivity verification (VCCV)
draft-ietf-pwe3-segmented-pw-03
Segmented pseudo wire
draft-ietf-pwe3-ms-pw-requirements-03
Requirements for inter domain pseudo-wires
draft-ietf-pwe3-ms-pw-arch-02
An architecture for multi-segment pseudo wire emulation edge-to-edge
Layer 2 Protocol Standard
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Standard or Protocol
Title
RFC 4541
Considerations for internet group management protocol (IGMP) and multicast listener discovery (MLD) snooping switches
IEEE 802.3 (Clause43)
Link aggregation
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
A-7
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
A Compliant Standards and Protocols
Standard or Protocol
Title
IEEE 802.1Q (Clause13)
The multiple spanning tree protocol (MSTP)
RFC 0826
Ethernet address resolution protocol
RFC 3046
DHCP relay agent information option
Standard or Protocol
Title
ITU-T Y.1291
An architectural framework for support of quality of service (QoS) in packet networks
MEF MEF10
Ethernet services attributes phase 1
RFC 3289
Management information base for the differentiated services architecture
RFC 3644
Policy quality of service (QoS) Information model
RFC 3670
Information model for describing network device QoS datapath mechanisms
RFC 2212
Specification of guaranteed quality of service
RFC 2474
Definition of the differentiated services field (DS Field) in the IPv4 and IPv6 headers
RFC 2475
An architecture for differentiated services
RFC 2597
Assured forwarding PHB group
RFC 2697
A single rate three color marker
RFC 2698
A two rate three color marker
RFC 3140
Per hop behavior identification codes
RFC 3246
An expedited forwarding PHB (Per-hop behavior)
RFC 3270
Multi-protocol label switching (MPLS) support of differentiated services
RFC 3564
Requirements for support of differentiated services-aware MPLS traffic engineering
RFC 4124
Protocol extensions for support of diffservaware MPLS traffic engineering
RFC 4125
Maximum allocation bandwidth constraints model for diffserv-aware MPLS traffic engineering
QoS Standard
A-8
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
A Compliant Standards and Protocols
Standard or Protocol
Title
RFC 4127
Russian dolls bandwidth constraints model for diffserv-aware MPLS traffic engineering
RFC 4128
Bandwidth constraints models for differentiated services (Diffserv)-aware MPLS traffic engineering
Standard or Protocol
Title
RFC4717
Encapsulation Methods for Transport of Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) over MPLS Networks
RFC4816
Pseudowire Emulation Edge-to-Edge (PWE3) Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) Transparent Cell Transport Service
RFC2684
Multiprotocol Encapsulation over ATM Adaptation Layer 5
ITU-T I.610
B-ISDN operation and maintenance principles and functions
AF-PHY-0086.001
AF-PHY-0086.001 Inverse Multiplexing for ATM Specification Version 1.1
AF-TM-0121.000
Traffic Management Specification
Standard or Protocol
Title
ITU-T G.703
Physical/electrical characteristics of hierarchical digital interfaces
ITU-T G.707
Network node interface for the synchronous digital hierarchy (SDH)
ITU-T G.773
Protocol suites for Q-interfaces for management of transmission systems
ITU-T G.841
Types and characteristics of SDH network protection architectures
ITU-T G.957
Optical interfaces for equipments and systems relating to the synchronous digital hierarchy
ATM Standard
SDH Standard
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
A-9
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
B Glossary
B
Glossary
A ACL
Access control list. A list of sequential instructions that are composed of permit|deny statements. In firewall, the ACL is used on router interfaces so that the router can determine which data packets to receive and which to refuse. In QoS, the ACL is also used for flow classification.
ATM
The asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) is designed to transfer voice, video, and other multimedia data that requires short bursts of large quantities of data that can survive small losses but must be broadcast in real time. ATM uses uniform 53-byte cells. (Each cell has a 5-byte address header and 48 bytes of data.) These short, standardized cells can be processed through a digital ATM switch very quickly, allowing for data transmission speeds surpassing 600 Mbit/s.
aggregation
A collection of objects that makes a whole. An aggregation can be a concrete or conceptual set of whole-part relationships among objects.
B BDI
When detecting a defect, the sink node of a LSP uses backward defect indication (BDI) to inform the upstream end of the LSP of a downstream defect along the return path.
BTS
Base transceiver station. A station used to transport services and signaling through air interfaces. A BTS includes the baseband processing unit, wireless equipment, and antenna.
C
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
B-1
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
B Glossary
CES
Circuit emulation service. A service defined by the ATM Forum to provide a virtual connection that emulates a constant bit rate (CBR) connection with dedicated bandwidth. This specification supports the emulation of existing TDM connections across ATM networks in particular.
colored packet
A packet whose priority is determined by defined colors.
concatenation
A process that combines multiple virtual containers. The combined capacities can be used a single capacity. The concatenation also keeps the integrity of bit sequence.
control plane
A set of communicating entities that are responsible for the establishment of connections including set-up, release, supervision and maintenance. A control plane is supported by a signaling network.
CoS
Class of service (CoS) is a queuing discipline. An algorithm compares fields of packets or CoS tags to classify packets and to assign to queues of differing priority. CoS does not ensure network performance or guarantee priority in delivering packets.
D dual-homing
A network topology in which a device is connected to the network at two independent access points. One point is the primary connection and the other a standby connection that is activated in the event of a failure of the primary connection.
E E-LAN
The Ethernet LAN that provides services through a non-traditional network. The media of an E-LAN is different from the traditional media of a LAN.
E-Line
The Ethernet line that provides the Ethernet private line service, the Ethernet-based Internet access service, and the point-to-point Ethernet VPN service.
E-Tree
The Ethernet multicast service, that is, the point-to-multipoint E-LAN service.
F FDI
B-2
Forward defect indication (FDI) is generated and traced forward to the sink node of the LSP by the node that first detects defects. It includes fields to indicate the nature of the defect and its location. Its primary purpose is to suppress alarms being raised at affected higher level client LSPs and (in turn) their client layers.
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
B Glossary
FEC
Forwarding equivalence class. A term used in multiprotocol label switching (MPLS) to describe a set of packets with similar or identical characteristics which may be forwarded the same way; that is, they may be bound to the same MPLS label.
forwarding plane
Also referred to as the data plane. The forwarding plane is connectionoriented, and can be used in Layer 2 networks such as an ATM network.
frame
A repetitive set of consecutive timeslots constituting a complete cycle of a signal or of another process in which the relative position of each timeslot in the cycle can be identified.
H hop
A network connection between two distant nodes. For Internet operation a hop represents a small step on the route from one main computer to another.
I IGMP snooping
Internet group management protocol snooping. A mechanism used for signaling from the host to the router, in the end network of IP multicast. Through IGMP, the host joins or quits a multicast group, and the router determines whether multicast group members exist in the downstream network segment.
IGP
Interior gateway protocol. A routing protocol that is used within an autonomous system. The IGP runs in small-sized and medium-sized networks. The commonly used IGPs are the routing information protocol (RIP), the interior gateway routing protocol (IGRP), the enhanced IGRP (EIGRP), and the open shortest path first (OSPF).
IMA
Inverse multiplexing for ATM (IMA) demultiplexes a concentrated flow of ATM cells into multiple lower-rate links, and at the remote end multiplexes these lower-rate links to recover the original concentrated flow of ATM cells.
IS-IS
Intermediate system to intermediate system. A protocol used by network devices (routers) to determine the best way to forward datagrams or packets through a packet-based network. It is a dynamic routing protocol designed by ISO.
L
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
L2VPN
Layer 2 virtual private network. A virtual private network realized in the packet switched (IP/MPLS) network by Layer 2 switching technologies.
LAG
Link aggregation group. A group in which multiple links connected to the same equipment are bundled together to increase the bandwidth and improve the link reliability. An LAG can be regarded as one link. Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
B-3
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
B Glossary
LDP
Label distribution protocol. A protocol using which two label switch routers (LSR) exchange label mapping information. The two LSRs are called LDP peers and the exchange of information is bidirectional. LDP is used to build and maintain LSR databases that are used to forward traffic through MPLS networks.
link
A "topological component" that provides transport capacity between two endpoints in different subnetworks via a fixed (that is, inflexible routing) relationship.
LSP
Label switch path. An ingress and egress switched path built through a series of LSRs to forward the packets of a particular FEC using a label swapping forwarding mechanism.
LSR
Label switch router. A device located in the core of the network that switches labeled packets according to precomputed switching rules. This device can be a switch or a router.
M MPLS L2VPN
The MPLS L2VPN provides the Layer 2 VPN service based on an MPLS network. In this case, on a uniform MPLS network, the carrier is able to provide Layer 2 VPNs of different media types, such as ATM, FR, VLAN, Ethernet, and PPP.
MPLS OAM
The MPLS OAM provides continuity check for a single LSP, and provides a set of fault detection tools and fault correct mechanisms for MPLS networks. The MPLS OAM and relevant protection switching components implement the detection function for the CR-LSP forwarding plane, and perform the protection switching in 50 ms after a fault occurs. In this way, the impact of a fault can be lowered to the minimum.
MPLS TE tunnel
In the case of reroute deployment, or when traffic needs to be transported through multiple trails, multiple LSP tunnels might be used. In traffic engineering, such a group of LSP tunnels are referred to as TE tunnels. An LSP tunnel of this kind has two identifiers. One is the Tunnel ID carried by the SENDER object, and is used to uniquely define the TE tunnel. The other is the LSP ID carried by the SENDER_TEMPLATE or FILTER_SPEC object.
MSTP
The multiple spanning tree protocol (MSTP) can be used in a loop network. Using an algorithm, the MSTP blocks redundant paths so that the loop network can be trimmed as a tree network. In this case, the proliferation and endless cycling of packets is avoided in the loop network.
multicast
To transmit data to multiple recipients on the network at the same time using one transmission stream to the switches, at which point data are distributed out to the end users on separate lines.
N
B-4
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
NSAP
B Glossary
Network service access point. The point at which the OSI Network Service is made available to a Transport entity. The NSAPs are identified by OSI Network Addresses. The NSAP is a generic standard for a network address consisting of 20 octets. ATM has specified E.164 for public network addressing and the NSAP address structure for private network addresses.
P packet
The information unit at the network layer.
PDU
Packet data unit. The unit that is transported in a local interconnect network (LIN) diagnostic frame. A PDU used for node configuration is a complete message.
POS
Packet over SDH/SONET. A MAN and WAN technology that provides point-to-point data connections. The POS interface uses SDH/SONET as the physical layer protocol, and supports the transport of packet data (such as IP packets) in MAN and WAN.
PW
A pseudo wire is an emulated point-to-point connection over a packet switched network that allows the interconnection of two nodes with any L2 technology.
PWE3
Pseudo wire emulation edge to edge. In a packet switched network (PSN), a Layer 2 service bearing technology that emulates as truly as possible the basic behaviors and characteristics of ATM services, frame relay services, Ethernet services, low speed TDM services, SONET/ SDH services, and other services.
Q QoS
Quality of service. The capability of equipment to provide different levels of quality for different services.
R route
A path for traffic between two designated points.
S switching
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
The process of interconnecting functional units, transmission channels or telecommunication circuits for as long as is required to convey signals.
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
B-5
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
B Glossary
synchronous status message
A message that is used to transmit the quality levels of timing signals on a synchronous timing link. By reading the SSM, a node clock in the SDH network and the synchronization network obtains the upstream clock information. The SSM performs relevant operations (such as tracing, switching, and hold-over) on the clock of the local node, and then transmits the synchronization information of the local node to the downstream.
T traffic engineering
Traffic engineering (TE) encompasses traffic management, capacity management, traffic measurement and modelling, network modelling, and performance analysis.
tunnel
A information transmission channel that is set up between two entities in the application of VPN. A tunnel provides sufficient security to prevent intrusion to the VPN internal information.
V
B-6
V-NNI
A virtual network-network interface (V-NNI) is a network-side interface.
VPLS
Virtual private LAN service. A service that, with the assistance of an IP public network, realizes the interconnection of LANs through a VPN. The VPLS is the extension of a LAN in the IP public network.
VPWS
Virtual Private Wire Service. A virtual private wire service is a pointto-point circuit (link) connecting two customer edge devices. The link is established as a logical through a packet switched network. The CE in the customer network is connected to a PE in the provider network via an attachment circuit. The attachment circuit is either a physical or a logical circuit.
V-UNI
A virtual user-network interface is a client-side interface.
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
C
C Acronyms and Abbreviations
Acronyms and Abbreviations
A ACL
Access Control List
AF
Assured Forwarding
APS
Automatic Protection Switching
ARP
Address Resolution Protocol
ATM
Asynchronous Transfer Mode
ATM PVC
ATM Permanent Virtual Circuit
B BDI
Backward Defect Indicator
BSC
Base Station Controller
BTS
Base Transceiver Station
C CES
Circuit Emulation Service
CSPF
Constraint-based Shortest Path First
CV
Connectivity Verification
CWDM
Coarse Wavelength Division Multiplx
D DCC
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Data Communication Channel
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
C-1
C Acronyms and Abbreviations
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
DCN
Data Communication Network
DWDM
Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing
E E-Aggr
Ethernet Aggregation
E-LAN
Ethernet LAN
E-Line
Ethernet Line
ECC
Embedded Control Channel
EMC
Electromagnetic Compatibility
EPL
Ethernet Private Line
EPLAN
Ethernet Private LAN
ETH-CC
Ethernet Continuity Check
ETH-LB
Ethernet Loopback
ETH-LT
Ethernet Link Trace
ETS
European Telecommunication Standards
ETSI
European Telecommunications Standards Institute
EVPL
Ethernet Virtual Private Line
EVPLAN
Ethernet Virtual Private LAN
F FDI
Forward Defect Indicator
FEC
Forwarding Equivalence Class
FFD
Fast Failure Detection
FRR
Fast Reroute
G
C-2
GCP
GMPLS Control Plane
GE
Gigabit Ethernet
GFP
Generic Framing Procedure
GR
Graceful Restart
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
C Acronyms and Abbreviations
H HA
High Availability
H-QoS
Hierarchical Quality of Service
I IEC
International Electrotechnical Commission
IEEE
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
IGP
Interior Gateway Protocol
IGMP
Internet Group Management Protocol
IGMP Snooping
Internet Group Management Protocol Snooping
IMA
Inverse Multiplexing for ATM
IP
Internet Protocol
IS-IS
Intermediate System to Intermediate System
ITU-T
International Telecommunication Union Telecommunication Standardization Sector
L
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
L2VPN
Layer 2 Virtual Private Network
L3VPN
Layer3 Virtual Private Network
LACP
Link Aggregation Control Protocol
LAG
Link Aggregation Group
LAN
Local Area Network
LDP
Label Distribution Protocol
LMSP
Linear Multiplex Section Protection
LPT
Link State Path Through
LSA
Link State Advertisement
LSP
Label Switch Path
LSR
Label Switch Router
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
C-3
C Acronyms and Abbreviations
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
M MAC
Media Access Control
MEP
Maintenance End Point
MIP
Maintenance Intermediate Point
ML-PPP
Multilink Point-to-Point Protocol
MP
Merge Point
MPLS
Multiprotocol Label Switching
MPLS TE
Multiprotocol Label Switching Traffic Engineering
MSP
Multiplex Section Protection
MSTP
Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol
N NSAP
Network Service Access Point
NSF
Non-Stop Forwarding
O OAM
Operation, Administration and Maintenance
P PDH
Plesiochronous Digital Hierarchy
PE
Provider Edge
PLR
Point of Local Repair
POS
Packet over SDH/SONET
PPP
Point-to-Point Protocol
PTN
Packet Transport Network
PW
Pseudo Wire
Q QoS
C-4
Quality of Service
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
C Acronyms and Abbreviations
R RSTP
Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol
RSVP
Resource Reservation Protocol
S SDH
Synchronous Digital Hierarchy
SLA
Service Level Agreement
STP
Spanning Tree Protocol
T TE
Traffic Engineering
TDM
Time Division Multiplexing
V V-NNI
Virtual Network-Network Interface
V-UNI
Virtual User-Network Interface
VC
Virtual Channel
VCC
Virtual Channel Connection
VCCV
Virtual Circuit Connectivity Verification
VLAN
Virtual Local Area Network
VP
Virtual Path
VPC
Virtual Path Connection
VPLS
Virtual Private LAN Service
VPN
Virtual Private Network
VPWS
Virtual Private Wire Service
W WTR
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
Wait to Restore
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
C-5
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
Index
Index A access capability, 2-3 ACL, 5-22 application E-LAN service, 9-7 E-Line service, 9-6 mobile service, 9-2
B BFD, 5-23
C clock, 2-14 compliant standard list, A-1
D DCN, 2-15 diagnosis and debugging, 7-3
E E-Aggr service, 4-12 E-LAN service, 4-11 E-Line service, 4-11 environment requirement storage, 10-17 Transportation, 10-19 Ethernet OAM, 2-13 expansion and upgrade, 7-3
G GRE tunnel, 5-15
H hardware board, 3-8 slots for boards, 3-9 structure, 3-4 subrack, 3-6 Issue 01 (2009-06-30)
I IGMP Snooping, 5-20 inband DCN, 2-15 interface type service interface, 2-4 IP tunnel, 5-15 IS-IS routing protocol, 5-6
L l3vpn service introduction, 4-16 laser class, 10-14 log security log, 8-3 Syslog, 8-3
M monitoring and maintenance, 7-2 MPLS basic concept, 5-3 equipment feature, 5-5 generation background, 5-3 signaling, 5-14 system structure, 5-5 MPLS OAM, 2-13 MSTP, 5-21
N network application, 1-2 network management system, 7-3 NSF, 2-14
O OAM Ethernet OAM, 2-13 MPLS OAM, 2-13 security management, 8-1 offload solution, 9-9
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
i-1
OptiX PTN 1900 Packet Transport Platform of PTN Series Product Description
Index
operation and configuration tool T2000, 7-2
P protection 1+1 protection for CXP, 6-3 1+1 protection for PIU, 6-4 capability, 2-11 FRR protection, 6-7 IMA, 6-16 LAG protection, 6-9 linear MSP protection, 6-12 ML-PPP protection, 6-15 MPLS Tunnel 1+1 protection, 6-5 MPLS Tunnel 1:1 protection, 6-6 MSTP protection, 6-10 TPS protection, 6-2 protocol IS-IS, 5-6 MSTP, 5-21 PWE3, 5-15
Q QoS CAR, 5-18 congestion management, 5-19 DiffServ, 5-17 flow classification, 5-17 HQoS, 5-19 overview, 2-12 queue scheduling, 5-19 shaping, 5-19
service type, 2-3 service interface type, 2-4 service processing ATM service processing, 4-8 CES service processing, 4-9 Ethernet service processing, 4-7 software architecture, 3-10 board software, 3-13 NE software, 3-12 switching capability, 2-3 system functional modules, 3-2
T technical specification AD1, 10-9 cabinet, 10-2 CD1, 10-9 clock interface, 10-14 CXP, 10-13, 10-13 EFG2, 10-7 EMC, 10-16 FANA, 10-13 FANB, 10-14 L12, 10-12 L75, 10-12 MD1, 10-8 PIU, 10-13 POD41, 10-11 reliability, 10-15 subrack, 10-2 system performance, 10-3
S safety certification, 10-16 security access control, 8-2 ACL, 8-2 authentication, 8-2 authorization, 8-2 network, 8-2 password, 8-3 security log, 8-3 Syslog, 8-3 system, 8-3 user name, 8-3 service ATM service, 4-13 CES service, 4-14 Ethernet service, 4-9 E-Aggr service, 4-12 E-LAN service, 4-11 E-Line service, 4-11 IMA service, 4-13 service model, 4-2 i-2
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Issue 01 (2009-06-30)