SDH Basics Overview
SDH Basics Overview
Overview
Introduction to PDH
Transport Network
Path and Section
Virtual Containers
Synchronous Transport Module
Protection Rings and Capacity
SDH Multiplexing Structure
PDH Mapping
SDH Bytes
Introduction to PDH
ATM
PSTN
Service
TRANSPORT PLANE
Access
SDH
PBX
Large business
Telephone
The Transport Network
The Transport Network provides an ability to carry
Traffic between the points
Just providing a set of links between Telephone
Sites is not Sufficient. The following are the Key
issues to be considered :
Resilience : The ability of the network to cope
with a loss or failure of a link or node, alternative
routes to be provided
Set up Cost (Investment) : Minimization is
usually required
Services Supported : The network must be able
to carry any services
Future Proof (Upgrade, growth) : The network
must be able to evolve to satisfy new
requirements, without disrupting existing
services
Operation, Administration and Maintenance (OA
& M): The system proposed must integrate into
existing processes and contribute to minimizing
operational costs
Connection Point
Logical Communication Path
Multiplexing
In the early days of Telephony, each telephone
circuit required it’s own set of Copper wires to
connect two Telephones together
As demand increased, this technique became
very expensive and impractical
Multiplexing is a method to combine more than
one Telephone channel onto the same pair of
wires
Telephone Before Telephone
Telephone Telephone
Telephone Telephone
Telephone Telephone
1 Multiplexed Signal
1
30
30
European Standard
30 Telephone lines multiplexed into a 2 Mbps signal
Several Channels transmitted on
one line
Transmission systems that are designed to European standards
combine 30 Telephone Channels to create a multiplexed signal
This allows vendors to make multiplexers that can interwork
This signal is multiplexed using a technique called Time Division
Multiplexing
TDM combines these signals which are in Digital form
This conversion is done using PCM (Sampling, Quantizing,
Encoding)
The transmission speed of this signal is 2.048 Mbps
As far as Transport Networks are concerned the 2 Mbps signal is
the lowest signal that is carried and therefore, forms the building
blocks for higher orders of Multiplexing
Multiplexing Principles
The input signals to the Multiplexer are called Tributaries(Tribs)
The output signal (multiplexed signal) is called the Aggregate
For the tributaries to be multiplexed all tribs must be operating at
exactly the same speed
The speed of the aggregate must be at least the sum of all the trib
speeds, this is because the multiplexer must transmit one byte from
all tribs in the same length of time that it takes to receive one byte
from one tributary
Multiplexing Principles
0 16 31
34
34
8
8
Inflexible : Slow
provision of services
Expensive : Lots of
equipment required 8 8
2
Unreliable
2
64
Kbps
Max Transmission rate
European Bit Rates limited to 565 Mbps
X 32 X4 X4 X4
X4
2 Mbps 8 Mbps 34 140 565
Mbps Mbps Mbps
First Order Second Order Third Order Fourth Order Not Specified by
(E1) (E2) (E3) (E4) CCITT
Transport Network
The equipment used to implement a point to point connection is
called a Terminal Multiplexer or line system
A terminal mux offers fixed connections between end user
termination points
An SDH terminal takes in a number of electrical and optical signals
(tributaries )and transmits them on the line as a single signal
(aggregate)
The tributary signals may be 2,34,45 or 140 Mbps
SDH terminals can also handle synchronous tributaries from other
SDH multiplexers
All the traffic received from the aggregate is terminated by the
terminal mux (hence the name terminal)
1 Fixed Network 1
(Line System)
Mux Mux
63 63
1 to 1
63 to 63
Terminal Multiplexers
Cross Connect
A simple point to point network does not allow changes to be made
to the way the traffic is delivered between the points, and is
therefore inflexible
A flexible network allows changes to be made to the way the points
are connected and can respond to new connection requests faster
than a fixed network
A cross connect, is a piece of equipment which provides flexible
connections between it’s termination points
1 1
63
63
Point of flexibility
(Cross Connect)
1 X 1
1 to 63
2 to 1
63 63
62 to 63
63 to 2
Add Drop Multiplexer
At each location the signal can get on or get off the Mux
The key difference between a Terminal Mux and an ADM is that the
ADM is equipped with two aggregate units and sufficient cross
connect functionality to cross connect the traffic from one aggregate
port to the other or from an aggregate port to a tributary port
This also enables the signals to be transmitted from the aggregate
in two directions (East & west)
A terminal mux can also be provided with an additional aggregate
unit in order to provide an alternative route for resilience
Terminal Mux Terminal Mux
1 Flexible Network
Add Drop Mux
63
63
X X X
1 62 2 62
X X X
1 62 2 62
Add Drop Multiplexers
Ring Topology
ADM
Line System
Terminal Mux Terminal Mux
Optical Alternate Route
Line System (Point to Point )
• Resilience can be provided by
adding an additional fiber
Transport Plane
Transport Plane can be broken down into different distinct components
Collector Function : At the edge of the network, there is a need to
collect traffic. Collector rings provide the network interface for all
access applications including local exchanges, PABX, Access
Multiplexers etc
Bandwidth Management Function : This tier provides routing,
grooming and consolidation of the traffic between the collector
rings and the high speed backbone.
High Speed Backbone: This tier provides a backbone function
providing reliable high speed transport between geographical
regions and locations
Path and Section
Path and Path overhead
In transmission a path is defined as a circuit joining two nodes that
may pass through a number of intermediate nodes.
In SDH, extra capacity is reserved to carry monitoring and
management information associated with the path
Extra information associated with the path (generated at the
originating termination point and processed at the terminating
termination point) is called the path overhead
This helps to know
The quality of the overall end to end transmission
The existence of the path between two terminating points
Allows one end to communicate to the other end that there is
trouble in the signal received
Path and Path overhead
Path
A path is an end to end circuit
helps to
Sections
Container is a defined.
Virtual Container Path Overhead
size and designed to
= Signal + POH -Path Trace
carry a specific signal
-Error Monitoring
Path Overhead -Far End Error
-VC Composition
VC
Information stays with the path (ie end to end circuit control)
Nesting of VCs
A VC can contain other VCs but only nested two deep
Largest container is designed to carry all smaller containers
Smaller containers cannot be put inside intermediate sized
containers prior to being put into the largest container
Virtual Containers
VC Nesting
Path Overhead
34 Mbps VC 3 3 x VC -3 VC - 4 VC 3 VC 3 VC 3
VC Packaging
VCn and PDH Rates
The smallest container is for a
2 Mbps signal
There is no container for the Bit Rate PDH Europe SDH
34 M E3 VC 3
8M E2
2M E1 VC 12
64 K E0
Synchronous Transport Module
(STM)
Several VCs are placed in and carried by a STM
VC – 4s are carried
VC – 4 in a Transport Module
POH STM - n
(VC – 4
Or
n x VC -4 )
Section
Overhead
Payload
STM -4 = 4 x STM-1
When higher bit rates are required, the STM-1 is multiplexed up to an STM-4.
This is equivalent to 4 x STM-1 and operates at 622 Mbps. The payload area
Is increased to 4 x VC-4, but still there is only one STM this time it is STM-4
European Bit rates
SDH line Transmission rates are
- 155 Mbps
- 622 Mbps
- 2.5 Gbps
- 10 Gbps
- You can see that the fastest standardized PDH rate is only 140
Mbps
- SDH therefore offers much higher capacity systems than standard
PDH
- Line signals can be electrical or optical
- Electrical signals are used for short distances( eg between
shelves in a rack) for interconnection of equipment on the same
site
- Electrical signals are sent on copper wires, while optical signals
used for longer distances (from 40 Km) require optical fibers
European Bit Rates
10 G STM - 64
2.5 G STM - 16
622 M STM - 4
155 M STM - 1
140 M E4 VC4
34 M E3 VC3
8M E2
2M E1 VC 12
64 K E0
The SDH and SONET Comparison
PDH North
Bit Rate America PDH Europe SDH SONET
Name rate Name rate Container Transport Container Transport
10G STM-64 STS/OC192
2.5G STM-16 STS 48/OC 48
622M STM-4 STS 12/OC 12
467M STS 9/OC 9
155M STM-1 STS 3/OC 3
140M E4 140M VC4
51M STS 1/OC 1
45M DS3/T3 45M
34M E3 34M VC3
8M E2 8M
6M DS2/T2 6M
2M E1 2M VC12
1.5M DS1/T1 1.5M
64K DS0/T0 64K E0 64K
Protection Rings and Capacity
A rings capacity is the maximum number of paths that the ring can
support
A ring’s maximum capacity occurs only when all of the traffic enters
the ring at one node and exits the ring at an adjacent node
VC 12
STM-1 ring
63
VC 12
STM-1 ring
VC 12 63
63
STM-16 Ring
How many fully protected VC4 paths can be set up in the STM-16 ring?
16 Paths
The traffic is sent both ways around the ring, and so in a sense it is
duplicated
The receiver will now be receiving the same signal on two ports
The decision has to be made as to which signal should be selected
to be passed to the tributary port
Initially the decision to select is normally random, and carried out by
a automatic change over switch
When to switch from one port to another, is based on fault reporting
and error detection functions of the multiplexer, and is switched
automatically
Shared Protection Ring
Shared protection is achieved by reserving half the line capacity on
each section for protection
ie 8 STM-1s are allocated for traffic and 8 STM-1s for protection
Re routed Traffic
8
8
STM-16 Ring
8 8
6 Nodes
6 Nodes
Max paths = 48
Max paths = 16
An operator can choose a SP for the capacity advantages that it
provides. This means the operator can obtain :
2. Better Network utilization
3. Capital investment saving
DP Ring – For hubbing traffic (all to the same point) and also the
circuitry is simple, used in collector ring
SP Ring – For uniform Traffic and also the circuitry is complex, used in
backbone ring
SDH Multiplexing Structure
Xn
C4 140M
STM-n AUG AU4 VC4
X3 X1
TUG 3 TU3 VC3
X3
34M
AU3 VC3 C3 45M
X7
X7
X1
TUG 2 6M
TU2 VC2 C2
X3
X4 TU 12 VC12 C12 2M
This Is the basic element of the SDH and comprises a single AUG and
the SOH information.
The STM-1 frame structure comprises an array of 270 columns by 9
rows of 8 bytes (2,430 Bytes)
PDH Mapping
2,430 Bytes
2,358 Bytes 2,349 Bytes
Xn
STM-n AUG AU 4 VC 4 3 x 774 + 2 Columns of stuffing
= 9 Bytes POH
+ 72 Bytes + 9 Bytes
SOH Pointer X3 774 Bytes
X7
2 Mbps
X3 Pointer POH
Mapping Stuff
Multiplexing TU12 VC12 C12
Multiplexing(SDH)
Aligning 36 Bytes 35 Bytes 34 Bytes
STM-1 frame structure
RSOH
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
REI
BIP 2 Signal Label
BIP 2 – Bit interleaved parity
Used to provide an error monitoring function for the VC 12 path
REI – Remote error Indication
Used to communicate detected BIP-2 errors back to the VC12 path originator
RFI – Remote failure indication
Signal Label – Used to indicate payload mapping and equipped status
RDI - Remote Defect Indication
Used to indicate certain detected TU path alarms to the VC 12 path originator
VC-4 POH (HO POH)
J1 = Path Trace
Used to provide a fixed length string which is transmitted repetitively
So that the receiving terminal can verify connection to the intended transmitter
B3 = Path BIP
Provides an error monitoring function for the VC-4 path VC4 Payload
2,349 Bytes
C2 = Signal Label
Used to indicate the composition of the VC4 payloads
K3 = Spare