Presentation from SIEPON Seminar on 20 April in Czech Republic, sponsored by IEEE-SA & CAG. Opinions presented by the speakers in this presentation are their own, and not necessarily those of their employers or of IEEE.
2. Services Landscape
Examples
User Type Data Voice Video
HSD
SMB Cell Backhaul
Cloud
SFU
Computing
MDU/MTU E‐Line/E‐LAN
VoIP
Everyone wants everything! IPTV
Simple to say, but a complex problem to solve.
4/20/2012 IEEE 1904.1 SIEPON Seminar, Prague 2
3. EPON Architecture
Central Customer
PON
Office Premise
Optical Splitters
EPON
ONU
EPON
OLT
EPON
ONU
EPON
ONU
EPON can cost effectively provide access for any and all
users within fiber reach.
What about providing varied services?
4/20/2012 IEEE 1904.1 SIEPON Seminar, Prague 3
5. SIEPON’s QoS Mandate
Address the previously stated
problem: create a comprehensive and
flexible QoS architecture using
EPON transport that simultaneously
enables vendor interoperability.
This starts with defining service
parameters we can use as metrics to
ensure the service requirements (and
operator SLAs) are met:
CIR/CBS
PIR/PBS Throughput
parameters
EIR/EBS
Frame Delay (FD)
Frame Delay Variation (FDV)
Frame Loss Ratio (FLR)
4/20/2012 IEEE 1904.1 SIEPON Seminar, Prague 5
6. EPON Service Paths (ESPs)
ESPs can be:
Upstream
Downstream
@ ONU
@ OLT
One LLID
Many LLIDs
ULTIMATE FLEXIBILITY!
Reference: Figure 6‐1, IEEE P1904.1, draft D2.3
4/20/2012 IEEE 1904.1 SIEPON Seminar, Prague 6
7. Distributed vs. Centralized Intelligence
Distributed Centralized
Suited for: Suited for:
MDUs with multiple customers on a SFU or SMB with single customers with
single ONU multiple services on a single ONU
Reducing overhead and resources at MTUs with business services needing
OLT strict QoS control
4/20/2012 IEEE 1904.1 SIEPON Seminar, Prague 7
8. Queue Service Discipline (QSD)
(a) Threshold‐first
Prevents starvation, improves quality of
“Best Effort Traffic”
Typically used in high bandwidth systems
with small numbers of users
(b) Priority‐first
Improves quality of higher priority traffic,
but cannot prevent starvation
Typically used in bandwidth‐limited
systems with large numbers of users
(c) Strict Priority
Improves quality of the highest priority
traffic
Used only when this highest priority
traffic must be ensured at all costs
4/20/2012 IEEE 1904.1 SIEPON Seminar, Prague 8
9. Final Thoughts
Everyone wants everything!
QoS architecture must be flexible
SIEPON introduces ESPs and defines service parameters to
control QoS portions of ESPs
Flexibility of ESP allows for proper treatment of service for
different user types
Flexibility of QSD allows for proper treatment of service for
different service types
Everyone gets everything!
4/20/2012 IEEE 1904.1 SIEPON Seminar, Prague 9