Manual ZTE ZXA10-C300-GPON 20100128 PDF
Manual ZTE ZXA10-C300-GPON 20100128 PDF
Manual ZTE ZXA10-C300-GPON 20100128 PDF
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1 Overview 1
3 Functions6
4 System Architecture..................................................................................................................7
4.1 Product Appearance.................................................................................................................7
4.1.1 IEC 19” Shelf......................................................................................................................7
4.1.2 ETSI 21” Shelf...................................................................................................................9
4.2 Hardware Architecture............................................................................................................12
4.2.1 Overall Architecture..........................................................................................................12
4.2.2 ZXA10 C300 Cards...........................................................................................................14
4.2.3 Main Control Card (SCXL/SCXM).....................................................................................16
4.2.4 GPON CO Card (GTGO/GTGQ).......................................................................................18
4.2.5 10GE Optical Interface Card (XUTQ)................................................................................20
4.2.6 GE/FE Interface Card (GUFQ/GUTQ/GUSQ)...................................................................21
4.2.7 PTP Ethernet Interface Card (FTGH)................................................................................22
4.2.8 TDM Circuit Emulation Interface Card (CTBB/CTTB).......................................................23
4.2.9 Circuit Emulation Card STM-1/STM-4 (CTL4) Interface Card...........................................25
4.2.10 General Public Interface Card (CICG/CICK)...................................................................26
4.2.11 Power Supply Card (PRWG)..........................................................................................28
4.2.12 Fan Components............................................................................................................28
4.3 Software Architecture..............................................................................................................28
4.3.1 Network Management Subsystem....................................................................................29
4.3.2 Layer-2 Protocol Subsystem.............................................................................................29
4.3.3 Layer-3/4 Protocol Subsystem..........................................................................................29
4.3.4 Database Subsystem........................................................................................................30
4.3.5 System Control Subsystem...............................................................................................30
4.3.6 Service Control Subsystem...............................................................................................30
4.3.7 PONC Subsystem.............................................................................................................30
4.3.8 Bearing Subsystem...........................................................................................................30
4.3.9 Operation and Supporting Subsystem..............................................................................30
4.3.10 BSP Subsystem..............................................................................................................30
ZTE Confidential Proprietary © 2010 ZTE Corporation. All rights reserved. III
ZXA10 C300 Product Description (GPON)
FIGURES
ZXA10 C300 19” Shelf Front Outside View (With 1U Fan Plugging-box)..................................8
ZXA10 C300 21” Shelf Front Outside View (With 1U Fan Plugging-box)................................10
PBX Access.................................................................................................................................64
TABLES
ZTE Confidential Proprietary © 2010 ZTE Corporation. All rights reserved. VII
ZXA10 C300 Product Description (GPON)
Equipment Weight.......................................................................................................................31
Overall Performances.................................................................................................................32
GPON Interface............................................................................................................................39
100/1000BASE-Tx Interface........................................................................................................40
E1 Interface..................................................................................................................................42
T1 Interface43
Working Voltage..........................................................................................................................44
VIII © 2010 ZTE Corporation. All rights reserved. ZTE Confidential Proprietary
ZXA10 C300 Product Description (GPON)
1 Overview
With the social development in recent years, service demands are ever increasing. It
includes narrowband services (voice, TDM, POTS. etc) and broadband services (triple
play, 3D networking gaming, remote education, VoD, IPTV, etc).These value-added
services (VAS) will be new revenue growth points for operators. They are key means for
operators to attract more subscribers, to provide differentiated services, and gain income
growth.
Access layer network provides a platform for various services. With the fast development
of broadband access services in recent years, the demand on access-layer bandwidth is
experiencing sustainable growth. Featuring high-rate transmission with large capacity,
multi-service, optical fiber is the best transmission medium for the access network. The
popularization and application of optical fiber is surely the development trend.
The mainstream development trend currently is to lower the access layer optical node
with copper out/optical in till the users’ homes. The access network, in FTTB, FTTC,
FTTV, FTTH, FTTO application modes, develops rapidly at home and abroad. The FTTX
solution bases on xPON technology complies with the access network topology features
with small-size passive ODN, and excellent adaptability, without electromagnetic and
lightning interference to reduce the equipment fault ratio. The distance that is longer than
20 km from the OLT to the ONU is in line with the construction idea of key central offices
(CO). ZXA10 C300 adopts network management (NM) to simplify the equipment room,
and lower the power supply and maintenance cost by avoiding the active nodes
cascading the network topology. The optical cable has a 50-year service span, which is
longer than copper cable. In the equipment management, xPON has complete remote
equipment status detection, operation maintenance and fault management capability.
On basis of the boundless optical cable bandwidth, xPON can realize the all-service
access and triple-play service.
To meet the operators’ development requirements for GPON technology to provide high-
bandwidth, multiple services, QoS, security with efficiency for the users and to reduce
network CAPEX (cost and planning on equipment and cables) and OPEX (operation and
maintenance cost and services), ZTE launches ZXA10 GPON serial equipment to
provide stable technology and service platform for the access network construction and
service improvement on basis of the thorough comprehension on the network
development. ZXA10 GPON system includes ZXA10 C series CO equipment, F series
CPE, MDU and MTU multi-user access unit equipment, NMS and ODN, etc.
It is a converged all-service optical access platform with large capacity, high density for
the next generation of optical access. It supports GPON, EPON, 10G EPON, PTP, and
the smooth upgrading of NG PON, WDM PON.
The system provides various GPON terminals, including SFU, SBU, MDU, MTU, and
outdoor types. They have various interfaces including 10/100M, 10/100/1000M, xDSL,
WLAN, E1/T1, POTS, RF to meet the access requirements of FTTx networking and
service access.
• All-service access
• All-system blockless switching with the physical bandwidth of 3.2T of the backplane
data bus
• 8 x GPON high-density interface line card, with each shelf supporting 128 x GPON
interfaces
ZXA10 C300 also features once convergence without block, and with high density, large
capacity and satisfies the demand for large-scale implementation of FTTx service.
• 802.1QVLAN,
• VLAN tan/untag, VLAN transparent transmission, VLAN translation, 1:1 VLAN, N:1
VLAN convergence, VLAN priority marking, VLAN filtering, etc.
• Perfect controllable multicast function with the unique in-built ZTE multicast
management and control modules
• Various user authentication mode to meet the operators’ demand for high-quality
IPTV
• 1PPS + TOD
• IEEE 1588 V2
• Synchronization Ethernet
• Triple churning
• User/port isolation
• Port binding
• L2/L3 ACL
• The key parts of the system, including the main control card, the power card, the
management card, work in active/standby mode or in redundant mode.
• Fully distributed power supply, and independent power module for each card ensure
the liability.
• Fault isolation, alarm and performance monitoring, various loop control function and
PON connection view
• Simplified NMS and unified platform management like other ZTE network
equipment
• Various northbound interfaces to implement the electrical flow and uniform plan of
the whole-network resource.
3 Functions
The GPON system includes: optical line terminal equipment OLT, passive splitter, optical
network unit (ONU), integrated NMS, etc. Its networking model is shown in .
It provides complete function features, including VLAN, QoS, multicast, security to meet
the access and convergence requirements for HIS service, VoIP service, TDM service,
IPTV service, and CATV service in the various application scenarios of FTTH, FTTB,
FTTC, and FTTO.
4 System Architecture
The 19” shelf can be placed on ZTE general 21” rack 21D03H22, or 19D03H22 standard
rack. Generally, each rack can be configured with two C300s.
19” shelf has 21 slots: Slot 0 and 1 for power supply cards, Slot 10 and 11 for main
control cards, Slot 18 for public interface cards, Slot 19 and 20 for uplink cards. The
other 14 slots are for service cards, which supports GPON/EPON/10 G EPON/PTP/TDM
line cards. Its appearance is shown in 4.1.1.
Figure 2 ZXA10 C300 19” Shelf Front Outside View (With 1U Fan Plugging-box)
Fan
0 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
Power Supply
Uplink Card
Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
1 20
Power Supply
Uplink Card
Card
It is 9U high from Slot 2 to Slot 9, from Slot 12 to Slot 17, with the card width of 22.5
mm. Any type of PON card, TDM and PTP line cards can be inserted in this area.
It is 9U high on Slot 10 and 11, with the card width of 25 mm for SCXL/SCXM main
control cards.
It is 9U high on Slot 18, with the card width of 22.5 mm for CICG/CICLK public
interface cards.
It is 4.5U high on Slot 19 and 20, with the card width of 25 mm for Ethernet uplink
cards.
• Fan area
It is 1U high and 19 inches wide. It cools the system with forced air in exhausting
mode. The fan adjusts its rotation rate according to the temperature to lower the
noise and prolong the service life of the equipment.
4.1.1lists the card types that C300 IEC 19” shelf slots supports.
To improve the system liability, the system can configure two main control cards to work
in 1:1 mode.
21” shelf has 23 slots: Slot 0 and 1 for power supply cards, Slot 10 and 11 for main
control cards, Slot 20 for public interface cards, Slot 21 and 22 for uplink cards. The
other 16 slots are for service cards, which supports GPON/EPON/10 G EPON/PTP/TDM
line cards. Its appearance is shown in 4.1.2.
Figure 4 ZXA10 C300 21” Shelf Front Outside View (With 1U Fan Plugging-box)
Fan
0 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21
Power Supply
Uplink Card
Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
Service Card
1 22
Power Supply
Uplink Card
Card
It is 9U high from Slot 2 to Slot 9, from Slot 12 to Slot 17, with the card width of 22.5
mm. Any type of PON card, TDM and PTP line cards can be inserted in this area.
It is 9U high on Slot 10 and 11, with the card width of 25 mm for SCXL/SCXM main
control cards.
It is 9U high on Slot 20, with the card width of 22.5 mm for CICG/CICLK public
interface cards.
It is 4.5U high on Slot 21 and 22, with the card width of 25 mm for Ethernet uplink
cards.
• Fan area
It is 1U high and 21 inches wide. It cools the system with forced air in exhausting
mode. The fan adjusts its rotation rate according to the temperature to lower the
-noise and prolong the service life of the equipment.
4.1.2lists the card types that C300 ETSI 21” shelf slots supports.
To improve the system liability, the system can configure two main control cards to work
in 1:1 mode.
ZXA10 C300 connects each component (card) of the system together on the backplane.
Each service signal, clock signal and control signal from the respective line card centering
on the main control card, and are sent to the destination line cards after they are
processed on the main control card. The cards are mainly the main control card, GPON
service card, EPON service card, Ethernet interface card, TDM interface card (in CES
mode), PTP Ethernet interface, power card, public interface card. The main control card
consists of a system control module, a data switching module, a TDM switching module,
and a clock module.
EPON Card
Data Switch
Module
TDM/STM -N Interface
Clock Module Card (CES)
• IP data bus: the n x 10GE/GE data bus completes the service data interconnection
in the system and connects the switching core together with the line cards.
• Clock bus: it provides a clock necessary for the running of each functional card.
• Control bus: it provides a communication channel between the main control card
and each line card to complete the management, and control of the whole system.
ZXA10 C300 cards are: main control cards (SCXL/SCXM), GPON line cards
(GTGO/GTGQ), Ethernet uplink cards (XUTQ/GUFQ/GUSQ), PTP Ethernet interface
card (FTGH), circuit emulation cards (CTBB/CTTB/CTLA), general public interface cards
(CICG/CICK), power card (PRWG), backplanes (MWEA/MWIA), fan components as
listed in 4.2.2.
The card principle and functions are described in the following sections.
Data Bus
Switching Module
Management and
Management and Control Control Bus
Management
Interface Module
Clock Bus
Clock Module
Backplane Bus
− Switching capacities of 800 Gbit/s for SCXL, and 400 Gbit/s for SCXM
− 802.1Q VLAN with the maximum of 4 K VLANs with the VLAN ID ranging 1 -
4094
− IP/MAC anti-spoofing
− Dynamic routing protocols including RIP v1/v2, OSPF v2, IS-IS, BGP etc
− IGMP v1/v2/v3
− DHCP relay/server
• Management and control module: it includes the control software and protocol
processing software, inter-card communication module, overhead processing,
switching chip of T network and Ethernet, and the CPU. It provides forcible version
downloading for each line card and resetting interfaces, detection information of
cards available for hardware and software, the system fan detection and control
function for the system.
• Clock module: it processes the whole system clock including the clock source
selection, frequency conversion, phase lock, clock allocation, frame header
processing, and timing the whole system.
As GPON central office (CO) card, GTGO can provide eight GPON optical interfaces,
and GTGQ can provide four GPON optical interfaces. The optical interfaces can be
Class B + optical module or Class C+ optical module. Their functional modules are
shown in 4.2.4.
Management
and Control Bus
M anagement and C ontrol M odule
P O N O ptical
Module 1
Data Bus
PO N M A C T M M odule
P O N O ptical
Module n
Clock Bus
C lock Module
Backplane Bus
• Class B + (28db) and Class C + (32db): the card provides four-port or eight-port
GPON interfaces with the upstream rate of 1.244 Gbps and the downstream rate of
2.488 Gbps.
• DHCP option82
• OAM
− DBA
− VLAN retagging
− Priority remarking
Management and
C ontrol B us
Management and Control Module
10G O ptical
Module 1 Data Bus
10G PH Y Module
10G O ptical
Module 4
Backplane Bus
XUTQ card consists of 10GE optical interface module, system management module and
10GE PHY module. Each module has the following features:
• 10GE PHY module: implement XAUI and 10G serial Ethernet interfaces conversion,
8B/10B and 64B/66B coding, clock recovery and frequency doubling.
M anagement
and C ontrol B us
Management and Control Module
G E/FE O ptical
M odule/E lectrical
Interface D ata B us
GE PHY Module
GE/FE Optical
Module /Electrical
Interface
Backplane Bus
• Management and control module: is responsible for card configuration and the
functions including traffic processing and optical module, and detecting the optical
module status.
PTP Ethernet interface card provides sixteen 100Mbps/1000Mbps optical interfaces with
configurable rate. Its panel supports eight PTP optical modules, each of which has two
ports swappable PTP optical interface for PTP networking and application. FTGH
functional modules are shown in 4.2.7.
Management and
Control Bus
Management and Control Module
PTP Optical
Module 1
Data Bus
Switch Module
PTP Optical
Module n
Backplane Bus
FTGH line card consists of switch module, system management module, PTP optical
module. Each module has the following features:
• Switch module: implements PTP optical module and backplane bus conversion,
relative VLAN and Ethernet functions.
• PTP optical module: provides GE/FE optical interfaces to connect PTP equipment.
Management and
Control Bus
Management and Control Module
Channel 1
Clock Bus
Backplane Bus
The card connects with the backplane with the clock bus, the data bus, the management
and control bus. The CTBB/CTTB cards consist of the E1/T1 LIU module, the CES
processing module, and the management and control module. Each module has the
following features:
• CES processing module: completes line clock extraction and recovery. The card
clock at the E1/T1 transmission side can be configured to work in the loop timing
mode, differential timing mode or the self-adaptive clock recovery mode. The modes
can be configured flexibly by the NMS on basis of the application scenario.
− Loop timing mode: uses the clock from the receiving lines as the transmission
clock for E1/T1 interfaces. The mode is applicable to the OLT side.
− Differential timing mode: is applicable to the scenarios where the CES has
public reference clocks at its two ends. In the PON system, the ONU correlates
the OLT clock. Therefore, there is a public clock for reference between the
ONU and the OLT. The reference clock is the OLT system clock source. The
differential clock recovery mode is a default TDM clock recovery mode, which
guarantees the TDM clock transparency, and the stability of clock transmission.
− Self-adaptive clock recovery mode: It does not require public reference clock at
the transmission end and the receiving end. It is often adopted in a large,
complicated data networking bearing TDM service. The adaptive mode is easily
affected by network condition. The service timing calculated according to the
buffer emptiness/fullness introduces bigger jitter and drift value because of
algorithm limitation. This mode can be used at the OLT side or ONU side, but it
is generally used at the ONU side.
• Management and control module: completes the module configuration, control and
management.
The circuit emulation card STM_1/STM-4 (CTL4) card provides two STM-1 optical
interfaces or one STM-4 optical interfaces and STM-1/4 optical interface upstream
function. Its functional modules are shown in 4.2.9.
Management and
Control Bus
Management and Control Module
O ptical
Module/ CES
SD H/SO N ET Processing D ata Bus
Framer Module
O ptical
Module
Clock Bus
Clock Module
Backplane Bus
The card connects the backplane with the clock bus, the data bus, the management bus.
It consists of optical module, SDH/SONET Framer module, CES processing module and
management and control module. Each module has the following features:
− Loop timing mode: uses the clock from the receiving lines as the transmission
clock for E1/T1 interfaces. The mode is applicable to the OLT side.
− Differential timing mode: is applicable to the scenarios where the CES has
public reference clocks at its two ends. In the PON system, the ONU correlates
the OLT clock. Therefore, there is a public clock for reference between the
ONU and the OLT. The reference clock is the OLT system clock source. The
differential clock recovery mode is a default TDM clock recovery mode, which
guarantees the TDM clock transparency, and the stability of clock transmission.
− Self-adaptive clock recovery mode: It does not require public reference clock at
the transmission end and the receiving end. It is often adopted in a large,
complicated data networking bearing TDM service. The adaptive mode is easily
affected by network condition. The service timing calculated according to the
buffer emptiness/fullness introduces bigger jitter and drift value because of
algorithm limitation. This mode can be used at the OLT side or ONU side, but it
is generally used at the ONU side.
• Management and control module: completes the module configuration, control and
management.
Management
and Control Bus
Maintenance
Interface
Management and Control Module
Data Bus
Sensor Interface
Backplane Bus
The card connects the backplane with the clock bus, the data bus, and the management
bus. It consists of the clock input/output interface, management and control module,
clock module and the interface module. Each module has the following features:
• Management and control module: completes the module configuration, control and
management.
• Clock module: completes BITS clock, IEEE1588V2 and 1PPP + TOD clock
processing.
As shown in 4.2.11, ON/OFF controls the power switch, and circuit protection and
filtering provides lightening protection, reverse protection, power filtering, over-voltage,
under-voltage detection.
- 48V - 48 V out
-48 V in Circuit - 48V Circuit Protection
O N/O FF
Provided Sele ction and Filtering
by pane l
Sw itc h
- 48 V in (Provided by ba ckpanel
)
• Power filtering and protection module: includes the functional modules of lightening
protection, reverse connection protection, over-voltage protection, and soft starting
protection.
Network Management
Database Subsystem
PONC Subs ystem
Subsystem
L ayer- 2 Sw itch Protocol Subsyste m
Be aring Subsyste m
BSP Subsystem
The network management subsystem includes CLI, SNMP proxy, SUB agent and SNMP
PROXY modules. They have the following functions respectively:
• The CLI module implements management on serial port and remote Telnet
command lines.
The layer-2 protocol subsystem includes STP/MSTP protocol, link aggregation control
protocol (LACP), internet group management protocol (IGMP) snooping (v1/v2/v3), MAC
address management, VLAN management, priority management, IEEE802.3x traffic
control, etc.
The layer-3/4 protocol subsystem includes TCP/IP, UDP, ARP, IP, ICMP, static routing,
access control list (ACL) rules of TCP/IP protocol stack.
• Cabinet
• Shelf
• PON interface
• ODN
• VLAN management
− STP/RSTP/MSTP
• Link aggregation
• Layer-2 multicast
− IGMP v1/v2/v3
• Layer-2 ACL
• User location
• OAM
5.3.3 IP Features
• Layer-3 ACL
• RIP v1/v2
• OSPR v2
• IGMP v1/v2
• IS-IS
• BGP
• DHCP relay/server
• Standards compliance:
• Clock mode
− Differential modes
− Self-adaptive mode
− 1PPS + TOD
− IEEE 1588 v2
• Alarm
• Performance statistics
• Maintenance
• Protection
• Ethernet feature
− Multi-queue scheduling:
Strict priority
Round robin
− SLA based on classification, SLA parameters include CIR, PIR, EIR, MBS
− Classification standard:
− DBA: DBA allocates time slot to T-CONT according to Bwmap to ensure high
priority T-CONT.
• Multicast
− The OLT supports IGMP snooping/proxy, and 256 multicast VLANs. Each
channel packet can support 1024 channels.
• IPTV service
− Channel access control (CAC): creates, edits, deletes channels and packets to
control users’ authority to access multicast channels.
− Channel preview (PRV): maintains and previews a control list. It controls the
preview times, duration for each preview, intervals between previews.
− Call detail record (CDR): provides the basic access information of users, such
as access time, leaving time, access status (preview or not), and interfaces to
transmit CDR information to the SMS module.
− Data encryption: The OLT adopts corresponding key and algorithm to encrypt
and transmit each frame of downstream data. Only the specific ONU can
decrypt it.
− User isolation: If the PTP function is not activated, the upstream data of some
ONU cannot be forwarded to other ONUs.
− IP anti-spoofing
− Anti-DOS attack
• OMCI
− MIB management
ANI management
UNI management
Connection management
Traffic management
− Basic services
• ONU management
− Configuration management
Equipment configuration
Connection configuration
UNI management
− Alarm management
− Performance management
− Maintenance management
• Standard clock input and output interface, 1PPS + TOD, IEEE 1588 v2 and
synchronization Ethernet interface
• Various environment monitoring serial port, and RJ-45 connector: connects the
environment monitoring module with the dedicated cable to collect various
environment information from the environment monitoring module, including
temperature, humidity, power voltage, smog for management and maintenance.
Attribute Description
Each OLT can provide 40 EPON
Interface numbers
interfaces. Each system
Upstream rate: 2.488 Gbps
Interface rate
Downstream rate: 1.244 Gbps
The maximum logical
60 km
distance
The maximum differential
20 km
distance
Cable type Optical fiber
Downstream frequency bandwidth:
Downstream wavelength
1490 nm
Upstream frequency bandwidth: 1310
Upstream wavelength
nm
CATV wavelength 1550 nm
Attribute Description
Interface type LC/PC
100 Mbps
Interface rate
1000 Mbps
The maximum
15 km
transmission distance
Standard compliance ITU-T G.957
Downstream: 1490 nm
Centre wavelength
Upstream: 1310 nm
Transmission optical
- 9 dBm to 3 dBm
power
Optical extinction ratio > 9 dB
The maximum receiving
-3 dBm
sensitivity value
Attribute Description
Interface type RJ-45 (TPI)
Interface rate Full-duplex 100/1000 Mbps
The maximum transmission
100 m
rate
Standard compliance IEEE 802.3u
Cable types Type 5 twisted-pair cables
Attributes Descriptions
Interface type LC
Interface rate 1000 Mbps
9/125 μm single-mode optical fiber,
the transmission distance can be
Selected cables and the
configured to up to 10/40/80 km
maximum transmission rate
according to different optical
modules.
Standard compliance IEEE 802.3z
Centre wavelength 1310 nm, 1550 nm (80 km)
-9.5 dBm (10 km), -2 dBm (40 km), 0
Transmission optical power
dBm (80 km)
Extinction ratio 9 dB
The maximum receiving -20 dBm (10 km), -22 dBm (40/80
sensitivity value km)
Attribute Description
Interface type LC
Interface rate 1000 Mbps
Cables used and the 62.5/125μm multi-mode optical fiber
maximum transmission rate with the transmission distance of 275
m
50/125μm multi-mode optical fiber
Attribute Description
with the transmission distance of 550
m
Suitable standard IEEE 802.3z
Centre wavelength 850 nm
Transmission optical power -9.5 dBm
Extinction ratio 9 dB
The maximum receiving
-17 dBm
sensitivity value
Attribute Description
Interface type LC
10.3125Gbit/s (LAN) or 9.953 Gbit/s
Interface rate
(WAN)
Selected cables 9/125 μm single-mode optical fiber
The maximum transmission
10 km
rate
Standard compliance IEEE 802.3-2005
Centre Wavelength 1310 nm
Transmission optical power -6 dBm
Optical extinction ratio 6 dB
The maximum receiving
-14.4 dBm
sensitivity value
Attribute Description
Interface type LC
10.3125Gbit/s (LAN) or 9.953 Gbit/s
Interface rate
(WAN)
Selected cables 50 μm multi-mode optical fiber
The maximum transmission
300 m
rate
Standard compliant IEEE 802.3-2005
Centre Wavelength 850 nm
Transmission optical power -7.3 dBm
Attribute Description
Attribute Description
Interface type LC
10.3125Gbit/s (LAN) or 9.953 Gbit/s
Interface rate
(WAN)
Cables used 9/125 μm single-mode optical fiber
The maximum transmission
40 km
rate
Standard compliance IEEE 802.3-2005
Centre Wavelength 1550 nm
Transmission optical power -1 dBm
Optical extinction ratio 8.2 dB
The maximum receiving
-14 dBm
sensitivity value
5.4.7 E1 Interface
5.4.7lists E1 interface indices:
Table 15 E1 Interface
Attribute Description
E1 (in compliant with ITU G.703
Interface type
specifications)
Interface rate 2.048 Mbps
Selected cable and the
maximum transmission 9/125 μm single-mode optical fiber
distance
Resistance 120 Ω
In compliant with ITU G.823
Jittering and drifting
specifications.
5.4.8 T1 Interface
5.4.8lists T1 interface indices:
Table 16 T1 Interface
Attribute Description
E1 (in compliant with ITU G.703
Interface type
specification)
Interface rate 2.048 Mbps
Selected cable and the
Twisted-pair cables (120 Ω) with the
maximum transmission
transmission distance 50 m
distance
Resistance 120 Ω
In compliant with ITU G.823
Jittering and drifting
specifications.
Attribute Description
Interface type SFP
Interface rate 155.520 Mbps
Selected cables Optical fiber
Standard compliance ITU G.703/G.957/G.783/G.813/G.825
Optical interface wavelength
1310 nm/1550 nm
range
The maximum transmission
76 km (1310 nm), 96 km (1550 nm)
distance
Transmission optical power -15 to -8 dBm
The maximum receiving
-28 dB
sensitivity value
The minimum overload point -8 dBm
The maximum optical
1 dBm
channel cost
Attribute Description
Interface type SFP
Interface rate 622.08 Mbps
Attribute Description
Selected cables Optical fiber
Standard compliance ITU G.703/G.957/G.783/G.813/G.825
Optical interface wavelength
1310 nm/1550 nm
range
The maximum transmission
76 km (1310 nm), 96 km (1550 nm)
distance
-15 to -8 dBm (short-distance optical
Transmission optical power module), -2 dBm to + 2 dBm (medium
and long-distance optical module)
The maximum receiving
-28 dB
sensitivity value
The minimum overload point -8 dBm
The maximum optical
1 dBm
channel cost
Parameter Index
The maximum full < 1400 W (21” shelf)
configuration power
consumption (GPON) < 1250 W (19” shelf)
Erro: Origem da referência não encontradalists the cards power consumption indices:
• Climate Environment
Item Range
Temperature -40 ℃ to 70 ℃
Temperature change rate ≤1 ℃/min
Related humidity 5% - 95%
Air pressure 70 kPa - 106 kPa
Item Range
Solar radiation ≤ 1120 W/m²
• Waterproofing Requirements
On-site storing requirements for customers: The equipment must be stored indoors.
Make sure the ground must be dry, and no water will leak to the equipment box. The
equipment must be stored away from the area where automatic fire-fighting facilities,
heating devices are installed to avoid leakage.
• Biological Environment:
• Air Cleanliness
− Chemical active substances density must meet the requirements listed in 5.6.1.
Note:
• Mechanical Stress
Note:
− Static loading: It is the pressure that the equipment with package can bear from
the above according to the pile mode as specified.
• Climate Environment
Item Range
Temperature -40 ℃ to 70 ℃
Rate of temperature change ≤ 3 ℃/min
Related humidity 5% - 95%
Air pressure 70 kPa - 106 kPa
Solar radiation ≤ 1120 W/m²
Heat radiation ≤ 600 W/m²
Item Range
Wind speed ≤ 30 m/s
• Waterproofing Requirements
− Necessary measures must be taken on the transport tool to keep the packing
boxes off rain.
• Biological Environment:
• Air Cleanliness
− Chemical active substances density must meet the requirements listed in 5.6.2.
• Mechanical Stress
• Climate Environment
Item Range
-5 ℃ to 45 ℃ ( long term), -25 ℃ to
Temperature
55 ℃ (short term)
Rate of temperature change ≤ 3 ℃/min
Related humidity 5% - 95%
Altitude ≤ 4000 m
Air pressure 70 kPa - 106 kPa
Solar radiation ≤ 700 W/m²
Heat radiation ≤ 600 W/m²
Wind speed ≤ 5 m/s
Note:
• Biological Environment:
• Air Cleanliness
− Chemical active substances density must meet the requirements listed in 5.6.3.
• Mechanical stress
applicable to the access of some newly-built residential areas, villas, business buildings,
and to the improvement of the old transmission system, to the base transmission, to the
improvement of the original access equipment.
ZXA10 C300 GPON system is one of the solutions for access layer in F3G architecture.
It combines F3G concept, which is inseparable from F3G. ZTE total solutions for access
layer based on F3G are shown in 5.6.3.
As for network networking, the solutions including MSAN/MSAG, xDSL, EPON, GPON
can be flexibly selected to network independently or together with others. For example,
the MSAN/MSAG or DSLAM provides xPON card mixed insertion; 9806H provides
GPON/EPON interfaces for upstream as MDU, and xPON terminals SFU/SBU combines
with Ethernet switch to network together with other ZTE equipment, including IAD, Home
Gateway (HG).
• The development of high bandwidth data and internet access service, VoIP service,
IPTV, CATV service and L2 VPN service
• Integrating ZTE integrated access products to provide all-round FTTx solutions for
customers
According to different optical fiber reaching positions and ONU deployment positions,
broadband optical access network has the following typical application modes as defined
in Generic Requirements of Broadband Optical Access Network formulated by Chinese
communication industry, as shown in Erro: Origem da referência não encontrada:
• FTTH (Fiber To The Home): uses optical fiber transmission media to connect the
communication CO to a home. The leading-in optical fiber is exclusively for the
family.
• FTTO (Fiber To The Office): uses optical fiber transmission media to connect the
communication CO to a company or an office. The leading-in optical fiber is
exclusively for the company or the office only. The equipment or network behind the
ONU/ONT is managed by the user.
• FTTB/C (Fiber To The Building/Curb): replaces the copper cables to the traditional
distribution point (DP) with optical fibers, and uses other media to connect the
ONUs, which are deployed in the DP, to users.
• FTTCab (Fiber To The Cabinet): replaces the traditional feeder cables with optical
fibers, and uses other media to connect the ONUs, which are deployed in the
cabinet (FP), to users.
In the FTTH network, the ONUs are deployed in the users’ homes or in corridors no
matter in villa areas or in multi-storey residential area, or outdoors. The passive optical
distribution network is deployed between the OLT and the ONU, which consists of
optical splitter and optical fibers in the GPON system. The OLT can be in the CO, or in
the equipment rooms in the residential areas according to the actual situations. FTTH
ONU power supply adopts 220 V family power supply or UPS DC backup.
VoIP mode is recommended for the voice service. It can adopt built-in IAD or external
IAD of the ONU to implement the function.
The ONU Ethernet interface provides broadband network access for users. User
authentication and management suggestion are implemented by BRAs to maintain the
consistency with the existing user management mode according to the existing
application. For data service access, FTTH adopts suitable QoS policy and provides
different QoS guarantee for different services to ensure different bandwidth and service
quality for different services.
The FTTH networking adopts GPON technology for optical access to users, as shown in
6.1.1 and 6.1.1:
In the garden residential area with independent buildings, as the dwellers live together in
each building, it is convenient for laying out optical cables. Therefore, deploying the
splitter in the corridor is the best choice and each building connects the cross connection
box to lower the construction cost and improve the optical fiber utility ratio.
In the villa area, as the dwellers live dispersedly, it is not convenient to layout optical
cables together. Therefore, deploying the splitter directly in the optical cable cross
connection box outdoors is the best choice. The cross connection box is in the middle of
the residential area to shorten the optical fiber layout distance. To save the optical cable
resources, two-layer splitting is usually adopted. Around the equipment room in the
residential area, lay out the backbone optical cable aerially with the cable poles or buried
in the ground. Install a layer-one optical splitting box in a certain distance to cover the
nearby users. Install a layer-two splitting box for the users farther away from the
backbone optical cable. As two-layer splitting is used, and the users live dispersedly,
comparatively small splitting box is usually used in this condition.
The FTTH mode is comparatively suitable for information-based residential areas. As the
information service is quite popular at present, the most residential areas adopt ADSL
access technology. With the popularization of high bandwidth services, such as IPTV,
HDTV, the network of traditional residential areas are to be improved. ZTE GPON optical
access platform bases on the high bandwidth access, provides different levels of FTTH
according to the affordability of first class residential areas, villa areas, and common
residential areas. The access services include voice, digital family, broadband network
accessing (wired and wireless (optional)), IPTV, CATV, and so on. FTTH provides serial
ONU terminals to meet the family users’ demand of various wired and wireless services.
• Uses other media to connect the ONUs to users, such as present metal cables.
In the FTTB system, many users share an ONU for broadband acceleration to meet the
improvement demand of the old city area to save the fiber cores and the upstream data
port resource. The OLT is usually deployed in CO as a convergence and a distribution
point of user services. The uplink network side adopts optical fiber interface, and the
user side adopts ODN to connect the ONU equipment, where the optical signal
terminates. The user side provides copper cables or interfaces for category-5 cables.
The interface types include POTS, ADSL/ADSL2+, VDSL2, Ethernet, E1.
As many users in the residential building share an ONU for broadband acceleration to
meet the improvement demand of the old city area to save the fiber cores and the
upstream data port resource. The OLT is usually deployed in CO as a convergence or in
the equipment room in the residential area. The splitter is usually in the corridor or in the
weak current shaft. The splitting box with the splitter covers the users of several
buildings and a distribution point of user services. If the splitting box has a layer-2 fiber
distribution box, it can only be a fiber splicing and distribution convergence point, but not
a splitting point.
In FTTB network, if the user density is lower, adopt layer-2 splitting mode to save the
backbone optical fiber resources. But the layer-2 splitting mode increases the
consumption, and the maintenance work.
• FTTB + xDSL
ZTE provides medium/small-capacity MDU equipment, such as ZXDSL 9806H and the
integrated equipment of OUT 50 suitable for harsh environment outdoors.
• FTT+LAN
It is recommend to deploy the OLT in the access equipment room in the building as the
broadband users in the business area are usually in clusters, and install a layer-one fiber
distribution box every floor or every two to three floors. The fiber distribution box with a
splitter (usually with the splitting ratio of 1:31, or 1:64) to implement layer one splitting.
When there are more than 32/64 households of users on a floor, install a layer-one fiber
distribution for the floor. When there are fewer than 32/64 households of users on a floor,
share one layer-one fiber distribution box with the floor in the same condition.
The backbone optical fiber is laid out from the OLT through the weak current shaft to the
fiber distribution box. The minimum fiver core capacity is up to the total users in the
building and splitting ratio of the splitter. The optical fiber distribution box connects the
users through user optical fiber, or to the layer-2 fiber distribution box for construction
convenience, then to the users. In this condition, the layer-2 fiber distribution box is only
as a fiber splicing and distribution convergence point, but not as a splitting point.
The main difference between FTTO and FTTH is on the service compositions. FTTO
does not necessarily provide stream service, such as IPTV, but it has definite demand
for dedicated-line service. At present, there are a lot of TDM services.
The information-based government-affair network adopts the FTTO mode, which gives a
great platform for ZTE GPON system to exert its features. ZTE GPON system provides
differentiated communication network for each governmental department with the
following features:
• Centralized management
Enterprise groups are high-value-added users, including the first class business building,
hotels. They require various service types and higher service quality, but they are not
sensitive to the service fee. To successfully develop aggregative subscribers are of vital
importance to improve the operators’ ARPU value. Perfect enterprise information-service
solutions can effectively help the operators to achieve their aim. ZTE GPON platform
boosts the enhancement of enterprise information-based access solutions for the
operators. The aggregative subscribers consist of 3 types: small, medium and large
scale. ZTE GPON platform provides perfect FTTO solution for them with its unique
features as follows:
• Various services: voice, wired and wireless broadband internet access, LAN
interconnection, videoconference, IPTV and the transparent transmission of PBX
access, TDM dedicated-line access
FTTCab is a typical application mode for evolvement from copper cables to optical
access. It has the following features:
• Deploy the access equipment in the cable cabinet beside the road
• Adopt traditional twisted pairs or category-5 cables to connect to each user in the
downstream direction
• The maximum distance between the OLT and the ONU is 20 km.
FTTCab can also specifically select ADSL2+, VDSL2, SHDSL or LAN access mode
according to users’ demands for upstream and downstream bandwidth and the access
nodes distance. For those business users with higher bandwidth requirements, FTTCab
can provide direct optical fiber connection mode.
The CO equipment is deployed in the county-level equipment rooms, but the user-end
equipment is deployed in each administration village. To share the backbone optical
fiber among several administration villages through passive splitter helps to reduce the
optical cable cost and construction cost dramatically. ZTE GPON access solution not
only meets the demand for voice service in rural areas, but also provides broadband
data service, integrated services including CATV, IPTV. The network is simple and
convenient to operate. Therefore, peasants can fully enjoy the completely same services
as the citizens in cities. 6.1.5 shows the specific access mode for the information
construction in rural area.
Administration Village 1
Administration Village 2
Roadside Cabinet
M ultiplexer
Administration Village n
NMS
Roadside Cabinet
Co
pp
er C
ab l
e
Video monitoring system is widely used in the environment of Peace in China. Different
from the common communication services, video monitoring service requires higher
upstream bandwidth, so the common access technology cannot bear this service. While
the GPON technology can provide higher bandwidth, excellent QoS and security
guarantee. GPON system supports multi-level optical splitting and over-30 km access
distance. The network with a backbone optical fiber bus completes the access of several
monitoring points along the fiber, which dramatically enhances the bandwidth and saves
the backbone optical fiber resources. Meanwhile, it provides all-round video monitoring
solution combining with ZTE ZXNVMS4000/3000 video monitoring system. 6.1.7 shows
the specific networking of video monitoring mode through GPON technology.
The internet data services, including surfing on the internet, downloading, online games,
online library, video/voice chatting, remote education/medical service, are accessed
through the LAN interface or WLAN interface of the ONU at the user end first, then are
uplinked to broadband MAN through GE/FE interface after being converged through the
OLT. As the time delay is not so sensitive to the data service, the data service can be
configured with lower service priority.
At present, many operators are still operating the network based on SDH and TDM.
ZXA10 C300 can provide TDM service solution for the existing network to support PBX
or TDM dedicated line service.
To meet the existing TDM service access requirements, especially in some business
applications, including in bank, insurance industries, and the transmission network of the
mobile base, ZTE C300 and the ONU provide PBX and TDM dedicated line solutions
through E1/T1. Its networking is shown in 6.2.2.
E1
PBX
NetNumen ONU
Splitter
E1/STM-1
PSTN
OLT
E1
PBX
ONU
Generally, the ONU provides several E1 interfaces to connect PBX or mobile bases. The
E1 interfaces of the PBX or the mobile bases uplink to the OLT through the ONU. The
ONU and the OLT adopt CES mode to transmit data and voice service between them.
ZXA10 C300 provides several E1/STM-N interfaces to connect MSTP/SDH/PSTN.
The traditional bases are mainly TDM/ATM bases with E1, T1 interfaces. MSTP is the
mainstream base bearing network. As a mobile backhaul access layer, PON converges
the base data to the MSTP convergence layer, as shown in 6.2.3.
BITS
OLT
BTS E1/T1
ONU
In this bearing mode, the ONU side of the PON system adopts the CES circuit emulation
technology including PWE3, MEF8 to access the bases with E1/T1 interfaces. The OLT
side accesses the MSTP network through E1/STM-1 interfaces after terminating CES.
The GSM, WCDMA networks can access BITS clock through OLT, and the ONU
provides stable, high quality clock synchronization for bases through E1/T1 interfaces.
The CDMA and TD-SCDMA networks require the GPS or PON network to provide time
synchronization for bases, the ONU can provide the clock in 1PPS + TOD, or send clock
information to the bases through 1588 message.
With the service development, the services the base bears used to be mainly voice
services but now they are mainly broadband data services. As the service bandwidth
increases greatly, the base bandwidth resources require extension. The ZXA10 PON
system can adopt shunt transmission to respectively provide clock for bases through E1,
and to transmit voice and data services through E1 and FE, as shown in 6.2.3.
Voice Service
MSTP
MSTP
STM-n
E1/T1
GE/10GE
BTS/NodeB FE Splitter GE/10GE SR BSC/RNC
IP Network
Data Service ONU OLT
As the 3G-related technology and standards mature, and the services develop, the
network based on IP evolves continuously, and the packet transmission technology,
standards and industrial chain mature, the transmission MAN construction based on the
packet transmission technology is the important development trend on the basis of the
existing optical fiber network structure. The IP bases have higher-bandwidth interfaces,
excellent statistics multiplexing bandwidth resources and extensibility, which is the base
development direction. The bearing network convergence layer can gradually evolve to
all-IP PTN. ZXA10 C300 provides IEEE 1588 v5 interface, synchronous Ethernet
interface, BITS interface and 1 PPS + TOD interface for time and clock synchronization,
as shown in 6.2.3.
BTS/NodeBFE/GE ONU
eNodeB Splitter GE/10GE CE/PTN BSC/RNC/xGW
1588 OLT
Slave Clock
FE/GE
ONU
BTS/NodeB
eNodeB 1588 Node
As the bases with IP do not have E1/T1 interfaces with clock information, they require
the clock and time synchronization. With the above mentioned PON network clock and
time synchronization mechanism, the ONU can provide the clock and time
synchronization information through 1PPS + TOD, or 1588 message to meet the base
bearing requirements.
ZXA10 C300 adopts VoIP access mode to support voice service. The various user
services connected to the OLT downstream equipment adopts the same bearing
network based on Ethernet with uniform protocols. It is consistent with various protocols
of NGN network, and is able to connect the SS network seamlessly. VoIP calling is
initiated directly from the ONT equipment at the user end, which is in compliant with the
flat principle of NGN construction. VoIP service traffic converges at the OLT, and uplink
to the SS voice platform through FE/GE interface, or goes upstream through the same
physical interface of other services while being isolated from different services logically.
Duo to its uniqueness, the voice service is configured with the highest priority.
POT SIP/H.2
S 48
IAD
Mode
m MDU
PC
Softswitch
IP
POT SIP/H.2 Network
S SIP/H.2 48
48
SIP/H.2
SFU/SB 48
splitter T
PC U OLT
G
E V5/E
1 1
POT SIP/H.2
S 48
PSTN/TD
M
IAD SI
E MTU P
PC ISDN 1
PRI/DDN
− Users’ network access service and IPTV service are implemented through BAS
equipment.
Users’ services are directly connected to IP MAN through the ZXA10 C300 uplink port.
The uplink services include IPTV service from internet access service. All the users’
authentication is connected to the BAS equipment through PPPoE dialing, and then BAS
completes the management on users and access control.
Users can access the IPTV service to conduct operation of relative services only after
the users pass the second authentication of the IPTV service supporting platform.
This mode manages the user through the same account, and requires two
authentications. Its merits are to use the existing IP MAN platform directly, and to adopt
the existing broadband operation system directly for the user management. But its
demerit is that the high-speed internet access service and the IPTV service may
influence each other.
The broadcast IPTV service adopts independent physical/logical port for uplink in this
mode, while the high-speed internet access service and IPTV service on demand share
the same uplink interface. The high-speed internet access service and IPTV service on
demand are isolated from each other through VLAN with different priorities. The specific
network connection is shown in 6.2.5.
− The user accesses the internet service through BAS by the same uplink port as
the IPTV service on demand, and is isolated through VLAN.
− IPTV service on demand without BAS shares the same uplink port the internet
access service, and is isolated through VLAN.
− Broadcast IPTV service without BAS uses the uplink port independently.
The users access the internet through the original mode, and implements PPPoE
authentication and management through BAS. The IPTV users adopt fixed IP or dynamic
IP. The dynamic IP adopts DHCP or PPPOE for authentication and management.
In the above mentioned modes, ZXA10 C300 manages and controls the IPTV service
through CAC, PRV, CDR and multicast management, and distributes the IPTV data flow
reasonably.
The OLT can be placed in the equipment room in the CO or in the residential area.
The OLT in the CO can be maintained conveniently, but it requires to lay out
comparatively more optical fibers from the CO to the residential area, then distribute the
fibers in the residential area. So the optical cable cost is comparatively higher and
construction workload is heavier.
The OLT in the residential area equipment room is closer to the users, and it provides
many optical interfaces for users in the area. Compared with the first mode, it does not
need many optical fibers, which greatly reduces the optical fiber cost and construction
workload.
According to the different ONU positions at the user side, the access mode consists of
FTTH, FTTC, FTTB, etc.
If the terminal device at the ONU side is outdoors, the specific installation position,
protection methods, and power supply should be considered. Its construction and
maintenance are quite complicated.
If the terminal device at the ONU side is indoors, the installation and the maintenance
are the simplest. It is convenient to provide various services for users and is the future
development trend.
In general FTTH application scenarios, the ONUs are installed at the users’ homes. In
this condition, the ONU can be directly placed at users’ home or hung inside the terminal
box. In FTTB, the shared ONU is installed in the lower-voltage box in the corridors and is
connected to the users through category-5 cables or twisted pairs. In FTTC, the ONU is
installed in the equipment room in the residential area and is connected to the users
through twisted pairs.
In theory, the nearer the splitter is to the user, the more optical fiber resources are
saved. But in designing the network, each side should be considered besides the cost of
the related facilities. It is not wise to increase the investment in the corresponding
facilities for saving optical fiber resources.
Therefore, when the users are comparatively clustered, the optical splitter is installed in
the weak current shaft near the users. If there are no enough users, the optical splitter is
installed in the weak current shaft on the ground floor or in the equipment room. Adopts
Two-level Splitting according to the actual requirements, and flexibly set the splitters with
various splitting ratios to provide optical access service for the users around the story.
When the users are comparatively dispersed, such as living in villa areas, the optical
splitters can be flexibly installed in the outdoor cabinets.
The backbone optical fibers are laid out to the fiber distribution box through the weak
current shaft. The minimum fiber core capacity is up to the total users of the building and
splitting ratio of the splitter. The optical fiber distribution box connects the users through
user optical fibers or connects the level-2 fiber distribution box for the convenience of
construction, then reaches the users. The level-2 fiber distribution box is only used as a
convergence point for splice distribution, but not as a splitting point.
If the users there are dispersed, use level-2 splitting mode to save the backbone optical
fiber resources. Deploy a distribution box with a built-in level-1 splitter in the basement
or in the equipment. Users on several floors share an optical fiber distribution box with a
built-in leverl-2 splitter. Level-2 splitting fully saves the optical fiber resources, but it
increases the power loss and the maintenance workload.
To save optical cable resources, level-2 splitting is often adopted: lay out the backbone
optical cable aerially or buried in the ground from the equipment room to the residential
area; then deploy the optical cross connection box with a built-in splitter; then deploy an
optical fiber distribution box with a built-in level-2 splitter every a certain distance to
cover the nearby users. As level-2 splitter is used and the users are quite dispersed,
adopt splitters with smaller splitting ratios.
Glossary
ACL Access Control List
AES Advanced Encryption Standard
Alloc-ID Allocation Identifier
AN Access Network
ANI Access Node Interface
ARC Alarm Report Control
ARP Address Resolution Protocol
ATM Asynchronous Transfer Mode
AVC Attribute Value Change
BAS BAS Broadband Access Server
BSP Board Support Package
BW Bandwidth
CAC Channel Access Control
CAR Committed Access Rate
CATV Community Antenna Television
CDR Call Detail Record
CES Circuit Emulation System
CLI Command Line Interface
COS Class of Service
CRC Cyclic Redundancy Check
CVLAN Customers VLAN
DBA Dynamic Bandwidth Allocation
DBR Deterministic Bit Rate
DBRu Dynamic Bandwidth Report upstream
DSL Digital Subscriber Line
DTMF Dual Tone Multi-Frequency
EDFA Erbium Doped Fiber Amplifier
EMS Element Management System
EPON Ethernet Passive Optical Network
ERP Ethernet Ring Protection
FE Fast Ethernet
FEC Forward Error Correction
FTP File Transfer Protocol
FTTB Fiber to the Building
FTTB/C Fiber to the Building/Curb
FTTBusiness Fiber to the Business
FTTC Fiber to the Curb