Chapter 4 Circuit-Switching Networks

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Synchronous Optical Networks SONET
Advertisements

Synchronous Optical Networks (SONET)
COMT 2201 Carrier Systems, Multiplexing. COMT 2202 Carrier Systems General Overview.
Connection-Oriented Networks – Wissam FAWAZ1 Chapter 2: SONET/SDH and GFP TOPICS –T1/E1 –SONET/SDH - STS 1, STS -3 frames –SONET devices –Self-healing.
Data Communications and Networking
1/28 Chapter 8 Multiplexing. 2/28 Multiplexing  To make efficient use of high-speed telecommunications lines, some form of multiplexing is used  Multiplexing.
Note Bandwidth utilization is the wise use of available bandwidth to achieve specific goals. Efficiency can be achieved by multiplexing; privacy and.
William Stallings Data and Computer Communications 7 th Edition Chapter 8 Multiplexing.
Optical communications & networking - an Overview
SONET. Telephone Networks {Brief History} Digital carrier systems –The hierarchy of digital signals that the telephone network uses. –Trunks and access.
Chapter 4 Circuit-Switching Networks 4.1 Multiplexing 4.2 SONET Transport Networks Circuit Switches The Telephone Network Signaling Traffic and Overload.
CSCI 4550/8556 Computer Networks Comer, Chapter 12: Long Distance Digital Connection Technologies.
McGraw-Hill©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2004 Chapter 6 Multiplexing.
Multiplexing Multiplexing is the set of techniques that allows the simultaneous transmission of multiple signals across a single data link. A Multiplexer.
Synchronous Optical Networks SONET Advanced Computer Networks.
Synchronous Optical Networks (SONET) Advanced Computer Networks.
Data and Computer Communications Eighth Edition by William Stallings Lecture slides by Lawrie Brown Chapter 8 – Multiplexing.
6.1 Chapter 6 Bandwidth Utilization: Multiplexing and Spreading Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
COE 341: Data & Computer Communications (T062) Dr. Marwan Abu-Amara
1 K. Salah Module 3.3: Multiplexing WDM FDM TDM T-1 ADSL.
ECS 152A 6. Multiplexing.
Computer Networks Chapter 4: Transmission systems and the telephone network.
6.1 Chapter 6 Bandwidth Utilization: Multiplexing and Spreading Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
1 ELEN 602 Lecture 7 Review of last lecture –Select Repeat ARQ –Performance of different ARQ schemes Data link layer -- framing –HDLC –PPP.
Module 2.2: ADSL, ISDN, SONET
COE 342: Data & Computer Communications (T042) Dr. Marwan Abu-Amara Chapter 8: Multiplexing.
COE 341: Data & Computer Communications (T061) Dr. Marwan Abu-Amara Chapter 8: Multiplexing.
Synchronous Optical Networks SONET
1 Introduction to Optical Networks. 2 Telecommunications Network Architecture.
Chapter 1: Overview Lecturer: Alias Mohd Telecommunications Department Faculty of Electrical Engineering UTM SET 4573: Data Communication and Switching.
Technique for assuring that a transmitting entity does not overwhelm a receiving entity with data Necessary when data is being sent faster than it.
Transmission Systems and the Telephone Network.
Review: The application layer. –Network Applications see the network as the abstract provided by the transport layer: Logical full mesh among network end-points.
Multiplexing.
10/10/ DSL, CM, SONET - Lin 1 CPET/ECET High Speed Access Digital: DSL, Cable Modem, SONET Data Communications and Networking Fall 2004 Professor.
1 William Stallings Data and Computer Communications 7 th Edition Chapter 8 Multiplexing.
Chapter 11 - Long-Distance Digital Connection Technologies Introduction Digital telephony Digitizing voice Example Sampling parameters Synchronous communication.
CSCI 465 D ata Communications and Networks Lecture 12 Martin van Bommel CSCI 465 Data Communications & Networks 1.
ATM over SONET~Kavitha Sriraman1 ATM Over SONET By: Kavitha Sriraman, CEPE, Dept of ECE, Drexel University,
Physical Layer Dr. Sanjay P. Ahuja, Ph.D. Fidelity National Financial Distinguished Professor of CIS School of Computing, UNF.
Fiber-Optic Network Architectures. OSI & Layer Model This Course.
1 William Stallings Data and Computer Communications 7 th Edition Chapter 8 Multiplexing.
CIS 321 – Data Communications & Networking Chapter 8 – Multiplexing.
1 SONET/SDH. 2 T1/E1 Time division multiplexing Allows a link to be utilized simultaneously by many users.
Data Communications, Kwangwoon University
Chapter 4 Circuit-Switching Networks
Computer Networks Chapter 6 - Multiplexing. Spring 2006Computer Networks2 Multiplexing  The term “multiplexing” is used whenever it is necessary to share.
6.1 Chapter 6 Bandwidth Utilization: Multiplexing and Spreading Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Chapter 6 Multiplexing.
SONET is used as a WAN. ANSI standard – SONET ITU-T standard – SDH Both are fundamentally similar and compatible.
Chapter 6 Bandwidth Utilization Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Data Comm. & Networks Instructor: Ibrahim Tariq Lecture 3.
Multiplexing.
Leon-Garcia & Widjaja: Communication Networks Copyright ©2000 The McGraw Hill Companies Transmission Systems and the Telephone Network Chapter 4 in Leon.
Chapter 4 Circuit-Switching Networks Multiplexing.
Network Communications Chapter 17
1 Protection in SONET Path layer protection scheme: operate on individual connections Line layer protection scheme: operate on the entire set of connections.
Chapter 9 Using Telephone and Cable Networks for Data Transmission.
Introduction to Communication Lecture (07) 1. Bandwidth utilization Bandwidth utilization is the wise use of available bandwidth to achieve specific goals.
6.1 Chapter 6 Bandwidth Utilization: Multiplexing and Spreading Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
SONET. Introduction SONET SONET - S ynchronous O ptical NET work (North America) It is used as a transport network to carry loads from WANs. SONET was.
NET 3710 PCM.
Bandwidth Utilization: Multiplexing and Spreading
4.3 Multiplexing Outlines FDM TDM.
Chapter 4 Circuit-Switching Networks
Chapter 4 Circuit-Switching Networks
Optical Layer Protection Schemes
Optical communications & networking - an Overview
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 4 Circuit-Switching Networks Multiplexing SONET

Circuit Switching Networks End-to-end dedicated circuits between clients Client can be a person or equipment (router or switch) Circuit can take different forms Dedicated path for the transfer of electrical current Dedicated time slots for transfer of voice samples Dedicated frames for transfer of Nx51.84 Mbps signals Dedicated wavelengths for transfer of optical signals Circuit switching networks require: Multiplexing & switching of circuits Signaling & control for establishing circuits These are the subjects covered in this chapter

How a network grows A switch provides the network to a cluster of users, e.g. a telephone switch connects a local community Network Access network (b) A multiplexer connects two access networks, e.g. a high speed line connects two switches

A Network Keeps Growing 1* a b A Network of Access Subnetworks d c b a 2 4 (a) Metropolitan network A viewed as Network A of Access Subnetworks 3 A c d Metropolitan (b) National network viewed as Network of Regional Subnetworks (including A) A Very high-speed lines  Network of Regional Subnetworks National & International

Chapter 4 Circuit-Switching Networks Multiplexing

Multiplexing Multiplexing involves the sharing of a transmission channel (resource) by several connections or information flows Channel = 1 wire, 1 optical fiber, or 1 frequency band Significant economies of scale can be achieved by combining many signals into one Fewer wires/pole; fiber replaces thousands of cables Implicit or explicit information is required to demultiplex the information flows. B C A (a) (b) MUX Shared Channel

Frequency-Division Multiplexing Channel divided into frequency slots C f B A Wu (a) Individual signals occupy Wu Hz Guard bands required AM or FM radio stations TV stations in air or cable Analog telephone systems (b) Combined signal fits into channel bandwidth A C B f W

Time-Division Multiplexing High-speed digital channel divided into time slots t A1 A2 3T 0T 6T … B1 B2 C1 C2 Framing required Telephone digital transmission Digital transmission in backbone network (a) Each signal transmits 1 unit every 3T seconds (b) Combined signal transmits 1 unit every T seconds B1 C1 A2 C2 B2 A1 t 0T 1T 2T 3T 4T 5T 6T …

North American Digital Multiplexing Hierarchy 1 24 4 7 6 . Mux DS1 signal, 1.544Mbps DS2 signal, 6.312Mbps DS3 signal, 44.736Mpbs DS4 signal 274.176Mbps 24 DS0 4 DS1 7 DS2 6 DS3 DS0, 64 Kbps channel DS1, 1.544 Mbps channel DS2, 6.312 Mbps channel DS3, 44.736 Mbps channel DS4, 274.176 Mbps channel

CCITT Digital Hierarchy CCITT digital hierarchy based on 30 PCM channels 1 30 4 . Mux 2.048 Mbps 8.448 Mbps 34.368 Mpbs 139.264 Mbps 64 Kbps E1, 2.048 Mbps channel E2, 8.448 Mbps channel E3, 34.368 Mbps channel E4, 139.264 Mbps channel

Wavelength-Division Multiplexing Optical fiber link carries several wavelengths From few (4-8) to many (64-160) wavelengths per fiber Imagine prism combining different colors into single beam Each wavelength carries a high-speed stream Each wavelength can carry different format signal e.g. 1 Gbps, 2.5 Gbps, or 10 Gbps 1 2 m Optical MUX deMUX 2. fiber

Typical U.S. Optical Long-Haul Network

Chapter 4 Circuit-Switching Networks SONET

SONET: Overview Synchronous Optical NETwork North American TDM physical layer standard for optical fiber communications 8000 frames/sec. (Tframe = 125 sec) compatible with North American digital hierarchy Greatly simplifies multiplexing in network backbone Protection & restoration

SONET simplifies multiplexing Pre-SONET multiplexing Remove tributary Insert DEMUX MUX SONET Add-Drop Multiplexing: Allows taking individual channels in and out without full demultiplexing ADM Remove tributary Insert MUX DEMUX

SONET Specifications Defines electrical & optical signal interfaces Multiplexing, Regeneration performed in electrical domain STS – Synchronous Transport Signals defined Very short range (e.g., within a switch) Optical Transmission carried out in optical domain Optical transmitter & receiver OC – Optical Carrier

SONET Electrical Signal SONET & SDH Hierarchy SONET Electrical Signal Optical Signal Bit Rate (Mbps) STS-1 OC-1 51.84 STS-3 OC-3 155.52 STS-9 OC-9 466.56 STS-12 OC-12 622.08 STS-18 OC-18 933.12 STS-24 OC-24 1244.16 STS-36 OC-36 1866.24 STS-48 OC-48 2488.32 STS-192 OC-192 9953.28 STS: Synchronous Transport Signal OC: Optical Channel

SONET ADM Networks ADM Remove tributary Insert MUX DEMUX SONET ADMs: the heart of existing transport networks ADMs interconnected in linear and ring topologies SONET signaling enables fast restoration (within 50 ms) of transport connections

SONET Rings ADMs can be connected in ring topology Clients see logical topology created by tributaries a b c OC-3n (a) (b) Three ADMs connected in physical ring topology Logical fully connected topology

SONET Ring Options 2 vs. 4 Fiber Ring Network Unidirectional vs. bidirectional transmission Path vs. Link protection Spatial capacity re-use & bandwidth efficiency Signaling requirements

Two-Fiber Unidirectional Path Switched Ring Two fibers transmit in opposite directions Unidirectional Working traffic flows clockwise Protection traffic flows counter-clockwise 1+1 like Selector at receiver does path protection switching

UPSR 1 W 4 2 P W = Working Paths P = Protection Paths Each path uses 2x bw P = Protection Paths 3

UPSR path recovery 1 W 4 2 P W = Working line P = Protection line 3

UPSR Properties Low complexity Fast path protection 2 TX, 2 RX Suitable for lower-speed access networks Different delay between W and P path

Four-Fiber Bidirectional Line Switched Ring 1 working fiber pair; 1 protection fiber pair Bidirectional Working traffic & protection traffic use same route in working pair 1:N like Line restoration provided by either: Restoring a failed span Switching the line around the ring

4-BLSR Standby bandwidth is shared 1 Equal delay W P 2 4 Spatial Reuse 3

Span Switching restores failed line BLSR Span Switching 1 W Equal delay P Span Switching restores failed line 2 4 Fault on working links 3

Fault on working and protection BLSR Span Switching 1 W Equal delay P Line Switching restores failed lines 2 4 Fault on working and protection links 3

4-BLSR Properties High complexity: signalling required Fast line protection for restricted distance (1200 km) and number of nodes (16) 4 TX, 4 RX Spatial re-use; higher bandwidth efficiency Good for uniform traffic pattern Suitable for high-speed backbone networks Multiple simultaneous faults can be handled

Backbone Networks consist of Interconnected Rings Interoffice rings Metro ring Regional UPSR OC-12 BLSR OC-48, OC-192 UPSR or BLSR OC-12, OC-48