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Optical Networks
Author 1 Vinaykumar Tatti final yr BE SJMIT Chitradurga Karnataka
[email protected]
Author 2 Pavankumar D MTech Ubdtce davangere karnataka
[email protected]
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Optical Networks
OVERVIEW
Packet-Switching in Today’s Optical Network
Routing and transmission are the basic functions required to move packets
through a network. In today’s network, the packet routing and transmission problems
are designed to be handled separately.
A router moves randomly arriving packets through the network by directing
them from its multiple inputs to outputs and transmitting them on a link to the next
router. The router uses information carried with arriving packets (e.g., Packet type,
priority) to forward them from its input to outputs ports as efficiently as possible with
minimal packet loss and disruption to the packet flow. This Process of merging
multiple random input packet streams onto common outputs is called statistical
multiplexing.
In smaller networks, the link between routers can be made directly using
Ethernet; however, in the higher capacity networks, transmission systems between
routers employ synchronous transport framing techniques
like synchronous optical network(SONET), packet over SONET(POS). This added
layer of framing simplifies transmission between routers. The transport layer that
connects routers can be designed to handle the packets synchronously or
asynchronously.
FIBRE CAPACITY
• Copper wires & single-modes fibres
• Multi-mode Optical fibres
RESTORTION CAPABILITY
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realize the multicast function. Throughout this process, the contents that first entered
the core network (e.g., the IP packet header and payload) are not passed through
electronics and are
kept intact until the packet exits the core optical network through the outlet node
where the optical label is removed and the original packet is handed back to the
electronic routing hardware the same as it is entered the core network. The functions–
label replacement, packet regeneration and wavelength conversion – are handled in
the optical domain using optical signal processing technique.
Fig. 2 depicts the physical network elements connected by fiber links and the
packet routing and forwarding hierarchy. IP packets are generated at the electronic
routing layer and processed in an adaptation layer that “encapsulates” IP packets with
an optical label without modifying the original packet structure. The adaptation layer
also shifts the packet and label to a new wavelength specified by local routing tables.
An optical multiplexing layer multiplexes labeled packets onto a shared fiber medium.
Several optical multiplexing approaches may be used including insertion directly onto
an available WDM channel, packet compression through optical time division
multiplexing or time interleaving through optical time division multiplexing. This
technique is not limited to IP packets and other packet or cell structures like ATM
may also be routed. Once inside the core network, core routers or AOLS sub-nets
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perform routing and forwarding functions. The routing function computes a new label
and wavelength from an internal routing table given the current label, current
wavelength, and fiber port. The routing tables (at egress and core routers) are
generated by converting IP addresses into smaller pairs of labels and wavelengths and
distribute them across the networks. The forwarding involves swapping the original
label with the new label and physically converting the labeled packet to the new
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wavelength.
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Here optically labeled packets at the input have majority of the input optical
power directed to the upper photonic packet processing plane and small portion of the
optical power is directed to the lower electronic label processing plane. The photonic
plane handles optical data regeneration, optical label removal, optical label rewriting,
and packet rate wavelength switching. The lower electronic plane recovers the label
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into electronic memory and uses lookup tables and other digital logic to determine the
new optical label and the new optical wavelength of the outgoing packet. The
electronic plane sets the new optical label and wavelength in the upper photonic
plane. A static fiber delay is used at the photonic plane input to match the processing
delay differences between the two planes.
The method of coding the label onto a packet impacts the channel bandwidth
efficiency, and the transmission quality of the packet and label. Two approaches to
optical label coding are the
Fixed rate serial label and the
Optical subcarrier multiplexed label.
Figure 4: Optical Label coding Techniques (a) Serial Coding (b) Optical
Subcarrier multiplexed coding
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With serial coding, a fixed bit rate label is multiplexed at the head of the IP
packet with the two separated by an optical guard-band (OGB) as shown in Fig. 4(a).
The OGB is use to facilitate label removal and reinsertion without static packet
buffering and to accommodate finite switching times of optical switching and
wavelength conversion. The bit-serial label is encoded on the same optical
wavelength as the IP packet and is encoded as a baseband signal.
For optical subcarrier multiplexed labels, a baseband label is modulated
onto a RF subcarrier and then multiplexed with the IP packet on the same wavelength
as shown in Fig. 4(b).
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Here, IP routers are attached to an optical core network, and connected to their
peers over dynamically established switched lightpaths. The optical core itself is
incapable of processing individual IP packets. The interaction between the IP routers
and the optical core is over a well-defined signaling and routing interface, known as
the user-network interface (UNI).
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network may consist of switches from multiple vendors, with each subnetwork
containing switches from a single vendor. Each subnetwork is assumed to be mesh-
connected. The interaction between subnetworks is over a well-defined signaling and
routing interface, known as the network-network interface (NNI).
The following interconnection models are possible for IP over optical networks:
The peer model: Under this model, the IP and optical networks are treated
together as a single integrated network managed and traffic engineered in a
unified manner. In this regard, the OXCs (optical cross connects) are treated
just like any other router as far as the control plane is concerned. Thus, from a
routing and signaling point of view, there is no distinction between the UNI,
the NNI, and any other router-to-router interface. A single routing protocol
instance runs over both the IP and optical domains. The advantage of the peer
model is that it allows seamless interconnection of IP and optical networks; its
drawback is that it requires routing information specific to optical networks to
be known to routers
The overlay model: Under this model, the IP network routing, topology
distribution, and signaling protocols are independent of the corresponding
protocols in the optical network. The advantage of the overlay model is that it
is the most practical for near-term deployment; its drawback is that it requires
the creation and management of IP routing adjacencies over the optical
network.
The interdomain model: Under this model, there are actually separate routing
instances in the IP and optical domains, but information from one routing
instance is passed through the other routing instance. For example, external IP
addresses could be carried by the optical routing protocols to allow
reachability information to be passed to IP clients. The interdomain model
combines the best of the peer and overlay interconnection models; it is
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relatively easy to deploy compared to the peer model in the near term, but
does not require the management of IP routing adjacencies over the optical
Routing Approaches
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Biomedical
Diagnostic tool.
Patient monitioring
Military
Navigation
RADAR and SONAR processing.
Conclusion
Economic impact.
Carrier’s ability to new services.
Offer efficient traffic aggregation and finer service granularity
Increased bandwidth
Greater reliability.
Faster service provision
Scalability
More flexible.
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REFERENCES
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