CONVERGED OPTICAL NETWORKS FOR VIDEO AND DATA
DISTRIBUTION IN HOSPITALITY ENVIRONMENTS
Iñigo Artundo, David García-Roger, Beatriz Ortega and Jose Capmany
Optical and Quantum Communications Group, iTEAM, Universidad Politécnica de Valencia (UPV)
Camino de Vera s/n, 46022 Valencia, Spain
Keywords: Optical Networks, In-building Hospitality Networks, IPTV, Plastic Optical Fiber, Radio-over-Fiber.
Abstract: Current hospitality networks are already lagging behind in terms of broadband adoption and high-speed
online offered services, and they might not be able to cope with the increasing bandwidth demands required
to distribute high-definition video traffic. We propose the use of a converged optical network adapted to the
specific needs of the hospitality environment, providing a low-cost and low-power solution based on a
combination of silica and plastic optical fiber wiring, together with radio-over-fiber techniques for wireless
access. We use detailed full-system simulations to analyze the validity of such infrastructure to provide a
unified, pervasive and future-proof all-optical solution.
1 INTRODUCTION
The recent growth of demand for higher bandwidth
in hospitality buildings (hotels, hospital, residences,
etc.) comes from the exploding connectivity of
devices and systems sharing data, the high-tech
customization of guestroom technology (video
streaming to TV and other devices, on-demand
movies, high-speed Internet access, online gaming,
voice-over-IP and videoconferencing, e-commerce
and billing of the resort's services), and the
increasingly pervasive mobile access to information
(Cisco, 2009). Moreover, remote guest/staff control
of room temperature and lighting (including energy
management policies), electronic door locks, or
other hotel services will only add to the number of
connected and managed devices. Emerging
technologies will strongly affect network
performance and medium/long-term strategies to
meet guest demands while still providing consistent
quality of service and experience (Inge, 2009).
The deployment of mixed physical technologies
on the network infrastructure (coaxial, Cat.5e/6,
phone wire) results in large capital equipment
installation and maintenance costs. Moreover, the
common electrical cabling used poses limitations in
diameter, weight, terminations and
electromagnetical interference. One growing
approach to simplify network design, installation
and management costs is the use of converged
networks, both wired and wireless, using a single
cable for backbone and in-room wiring, to carry all
communications for guestrooms as well as for staff
systems. Here, the larger bandwidth of fiber over
copper links becomes evident in high-density
hospitality buildings, where user aggregation
reduces installation and operation costs; moreover,
recent developments on Plastic Optical Fiber (POF)
(Nespola, 2010) and Radio-over-Fiber (RoF)
transmission allow for low-cost and competitive
converged all-optical architectures (Gomes, 2009).
In this paper, we study future requirements in
hospitality environments to introduce high-definition
video services through converged optical networks.
In Section 2 we identify the design boundaries of
such scenario through a statistical analysis of TV
channel blocking and Section 3 proposes a future-
proof fiber-based optical architecture that provides
wired and wireless services, and the limitations on
the span of such network are thoroughly described.
Finally, Section 4 introduces full-system simulations
of this architecture to analyze network response over
intensive video traffic, depending on the floor
distribution capacity. This allows the exploration of
the concept of flexible optical resource allocation to
cope with temporal limitations and cover specific
hospitality services in a dynamic way.
139
Artundo I., García-Roger D., Ortega B. and Capmany J. (2010).
CONVERGED OPTICAL NETWORKS FOR VIDEO AND DATA DISTRIBUTION IN HOSPITALITY ENVIRONMENTS.
In Proceedings of the International Conference on Data Communication Networking and Optical Communication Systems, pages 139-145
DOI: 10.5220/0002988601390145
Copyright
c
SciTePress
Table 1: Bandwidth requirements to support hospitality HD IPTV.
External WAN
Maximum
bitrate (Mb/s)
Average Throughput
HDTV channels
(6 Mb/s/ch)
Full HDTV channels
(12 Mb/s/ch)
(Mb/s) %
ADSL 8.2 8* 97.5% 1 0
ADSL2+ 24.6 21.8* 88.6% 2 1
VDSL2 250 68* 27.2% 11 5
Gigabit Ethernet/GEPON 1000 941.5 94.1% 156 78
GPON 2500 2488 99.5% 414 207
10Gigabit GPON/ 10GEPON 10000 9415 94.1% 1569 784
In-building LAN
Fast Ethernet 100 94.2 94.1% 16 7
Gigabit Ethernet 1000 941.5 94.1% 156 78
WiFi 802.11g 54 ~10-22 18-40% 1-3 0-1
WiFi 802.11n (2.4/5 Ghz)
300/
600
~65-260/
~135-540
21-86%/
22-90%
10-43/
22-90
5-21/
11-45
* Obtained from empirical measurements over 2500 m. (Kagklis, 2005). VDSL2 average is calculated theoretically for this same distance.
2 PREVIOUS WORKS
Previous works have attempted to measure the
impact of technological investment in hotels (Sigala,
2004), reaching the conclusion that there is a
significant productivity impact when the exploitation
of the network and its integration with the
infrastructure are strategically optimized, with
architectures adapted to the business and its
operations.
Similar converged optical architectures have
been proposed recently but mostly for generic in-
building scenarios. For example, (Xu, 2010)
examines the transmission of uncompressed High-
Definition TV (HDTV) under Ethernet passive
optical networks (EPON) making use of the
polarization diversity technique to improve reception
sensitivity and increase the anti-interference capacity
of the in-building wireless transmissions. (Walker,
2009) showcases a 600 Mb/s radio-over-fiber
architecture able to integrate simultaneously Ultra-
Wide-Band (UWB), wireless and WiMax signals
over 1 km of silica fibre using reflective electro-
absorption transceivers, and similarly, (Jia, 2009)
proposes multi-band generation and transmission of
all these wireless signals through photonic frequency
tripling, demonstrating a testbed able to deliver
uncompressed 1.485 Gb/s HDTV video signals over
silica fiber and air links.
Regarding the use of plastic fiber for RoF
transmission, it has been already demonstrated in
(Guillory, 2009) on a home level, with a network
delivering various signals (Ethernet, digital
terrestrial or satellite TV, wireless) on graded-index
POF, and very high bit rates - up to 16 Gb/s - have
been achieved by using techniques such as
orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (Yu,
2008).
However, none of the architectures reviewed to
date addresses the specifics of the hospitality
networks, nor tries to provide a complete optical
solution for the complex structured cabling systems
commonly used in these commercial infrastructures.
3 FUTURE VIDEO BANDWIDTH
REQUIREMENTS
In hospitality installations, IP television (IPTV)
networks are quickly substituting traditional RF
video systems due to its lower installation and
maintenance costs, and the possibility to integrate
other interactive hospitality services (Held, 2006).
IPTV systems use a single type of data connection
for television, data and telephony services,
benefiting from the use of a single set of cabling.
They commonly receive TV channels from either
cable television or satellite connections, and they
may also introduce receiver antennas to get free
local broadcast channels. A key feature for the
upgrading of hospitality TV systems to have IPTV
capability is the use of a hybrid solution that can
combine simulcast television content (analogue and
digital distribution) with multicast and unicast IPTV
channels.
However, high-definition IPTV distribution faces
specific challenges in the hospitality scenario. The
number of channels that must be available to guests
tends to be higher than in residential deployments, as
overcoming geographic boundaries is critical for
DCNET 2010 - International Conference on Data Communication Networking
140
travelers. Video-on-Demand (VoD) is highly
promoted, as it offers relatively high margins
(a)
(b)
Figure 1: Channel blocking probability for (a) K = 200
HD-MPEG4 channels, and (b) K = 44 large bitrate (e.g.
3DTV) channels.
and is a large part of the hospitality TV service
revenues, but it puts an additional demand on
temporal extra bandwidth requests. In Table 1,
bandwidth demands for the distribution of high-
definition IPTV channels are shown, not considering
any additional type of traffic. Channel encoding is
considered to be MPEG4/H.264 HiP (1280x720 or
1920x1080) at 24 frames per second. It is obvious
that there is a clear limitation when using current
hospitality deployments, consisting of different
Digital Subscriber Lines (xDSL) to the building and
Fast Ethernet or wireless in-door access, and will
even become worse when extra video streams like
security cameras or higher bitrate video services,
like 3D TV (up to 24 Mb/s) are also included.
To analyze the designs boundaries of a common
hospitality video distribution network, we will first
focus on calculating the blocking probabilities for
each TV channel under a xDSL-driven IPTV
installation. Using the models proposed by (Lu,
2007), the blocking probability B(i) for channel i
will be given by Equation 1, with B
Proc
the blocking
probability due to limited processing capability of a
Digital Subscriber Line Access Multiplexer
(DSLAM), and B
Link
(i) the blocking probability due
to insufficient link capacity from a DSLAM to an
edge router:
() (1 ) ()
Proc Proc Link
B
iB B Bi=+
(1)
0
(1)!
(1)!!
(1)!
(1)!!
n
DSLAM
Proc
n
h
DSLAM
h
s
snn
B
s
shh
ρ
ρ
=
−−
=
−−
(2)
() (1 ()) ()
Link Engset
B
iPiBi=−
(3)
In these equations, s corresponds to the number of
users per DSLAM, n is the channel replication
capabilities of the DSLAM, and ρ
DSLAM
is the ratio
between guest arrivals and departures to the
DSLAM, according to a Poisson distribution.
1
() 1
() ()
ii
Engset Engset
Pi
eB ieB i
ρρ
=−
−⋅+
(4)
1
0
1
0
0
1
!
()
1
!
K
m
kk
k
ii
m
z
Engset
K
j
kk
k
m
ii
j
z
j
qpz
d
qpz
mdz
Bi
qpz
d
qpz
jdz
=
=
=
=
=
⎡⎤
+
⎢⎥
+
⎣⎦
=
⎡⎤
+
⎢⎥
+
⎣⎦
(5)
P(i) represents the probability of channel i to be
‘on’, as shown in Equation 4, with ρ
i
as the ratio
between guest arrivals and departures to channel i.
B
Engset
(i) described in Equation (5) is the probability
that the link from the DSLAM to the edge router is
consumed by m channels other than the requested
channel i. If we consider C as the link capacity
coming into the building, and C
0
the channel bitrate
(depending on the compression coding), we can
calculate how many m = C/C
0
of the K offered
channels can be transmitted simultaneously to N
guests using M DSLAMs in peak usage hours, which
normally correspond to a 41% guests connected
between 16:00 and 22:00 (SKO, 2008). We will
consider a single DSLAM for 180 guests. Channel
switching rates are distributed with decreasing
exponential popularity, according to a realistic
distribution (SKO, 2008).
We will consider a non-blocking situation when
B(i) < 10
-8
for all popular channels. Video bitrates
depend on the encoding, 3 Mb/s for SDTV using
MPEG2 or 1.6 Mb/s with MPEG4, and 12 Mb/s and
6 Mb/s accordingly for HDTV. In this case, the
minimum non-blocking number of channel
replications per DSLAM would be n = 65, although
we will consider a more realistic value of n = 120.
Table 2 shows the maximum available channels and
CONVERGED OPTICAL NETWORKS FOR VIDEO AND DATA DISTRIBUTION IN HOSPITALITY
ENVIRONMENTS
141
(a) (b)
Figure 2: (a) Converged optical network architecture, and (b) building elevation and floor plans.
Table 2: Maximum available channels and minimum
incoming link capacity.
TV Channel
bitrate (C
0
)
K
Max
for
C=1000 Mb/s
C
Min
for K=500 ch
1.6 Mb/s 674 ch 750 Mb/s
3 Mb/s 357 ch 1410 Mb/s
6 Mb/s 174 ch 2830 Mb/s
12 Mb/s 85 ch 5560 Mb/s
minimum incoming link capacity for different IPTV
channel bitrates.
If we set the link capacity to C = 1 Gb/s, there is
a clear limitation on the number of non-blocking
HDTV channels that can be available. Considering a
future offer in the order of 500 channels, the link
capacity quickly scales up over the gigabit range due
to fragmented channel viewing, limiting the use of
traditional coax or twisted pair approaches. Figure 1
shows (a) the channel blocking probability for the
same scenario in the case of 200 HDTV channels at
6 Mb/s bitrate, and (b) a future scenario with much
larger bitrate channels (e.g. 3DTV) at 24 Mb/s
bitrate. It can be clearly seen that only the two most
popular channels are absolutely blocking free, and as
channel popularity decreases (higher channel index),
blocking can raise even four orders of magnitude.
For a higher bitrate, blocking due to channel
capacity can happen even for the most popular
channels. When reducing n to 60 processing
limitations quickly appear at the DSLAM for all
channels alike.
If we now consider a Gigabit Passive Optical
Network (GPON) link capacity of C = 2.5 Gb/s,
when using HD-MPEG4 encoding we would be able
to access 446 channels in a non-blocking way for
this same scenario. In case of having wireless IPTV
distribution, with links up to C = 600 Mb/s, we
could transmit blocking-free only 103 channels. Of
course, the number of channels will be reduced in a
real implementation depending on bandwidth
reservations for management and other extra
services.
4 CONVERGED OPTICAL
CABLING
The proposed optical architecture, shown in Figure
2a, consists of a router that connects to the external
service/content providers through and optical access
network, either Fiber-to-the-Building GPON or
EPON connection. The building backbone from the
basement router to the different floors is done
through single mode fiber (SMF), and floor
distribution is done through step-index plastic
optical fiber (SI-POF), as shown in Figure 2a.
Wireless access will be provided by a Distributed
Antenna System (DAS), consisting of multiple
Remote Antenna Units (RAUs) capable of
transporting frequencies from 800 to 2500 MHz,
including 2.5G/3G mobile and 802.11/16 wireless
signals, through the SMF backbone.
To study the feasibility of such optical
infrastructure, a transmission analysis is done first.
Maximum floor link lengths will be mainly limited
by the high transmission loss of SI-POF. The design
boundaries then will be given by the transmission
losses for a generic building geometry, as shown in
Figure 2b. Here, M corresponds to the number of
floors with rooms, N the number of rooms per
corridor side, C the number of corridor sides, H the
floor height, L the room length, W the room width,
and L
0
the initial length from the floor switch to the
first room (considered to be always 4 m). In each
floor, a double SI-POF cable will be installed to
DCNET 2010 - International Conference on Data Communication Networking
142
Figure 3: POF transmission losses depending on the room length, width and number of rooms per corridor.
each room to provide two wall plugs (for data access
and an IPTV device). The basic floor distribution
includes a central hallway with connections to
security video-cameras and RAUs.
The transmission losses for SI-POF are
considered to be L
T
= 0.16 dB/m at 650 nm, and
0.09 dB/m at 510 nm. High-quality POF connectors
(EM-RJ, SMI) introduce a loss L
C
= 0.75 dB and
tight bends (around 5 mm radius) can introduce
losses of L
B
= 1.5 dB per bend. Therefore, the
maximum distance for any floor link will be given
by Equation 6, the minimum transmission losses for
the longest POF link calculated by Equation 7, and
the power margin for each POF link given by
Equation 8, with P
T
and P
R
the transmitter and
receiver power respectively, in dBm:
(6)
(7)
(8)
Considering a link with a standard Light Emitting
Diode (LED) with a transmitted power of P
T
= -3
dBm and a PIN photoreceiver with a sensitivity of
P
R
= -19 dBm, two connectors (1.5 dB) and six tight
bends (9 dB), the maximum transmission loss per
link would be 5.5 dB.
Figure 3 shows the link transmission loss for
different room configurations. Up to 30 m
2
room
sizes, the POF links will be able to span up to 5
rooms in each corridor side without significant
power loss. This would be enough to cover an
average hotel with 20 rooms per floor (N = 5, C = 4).
If using green LEDs, their lower attenuation would
allow extending the reach to more than 10 rooms per
corridor side. For the backbone RoF transmission, as
the bandwidth of SI-POF is limited to only 500
MHz·Km, either SMF or GI-POF with bandwidth of
2500 MHz·Km, would be needed. Maximum link
lengths in this case, considering full building span,
would be D
RoF_Max
= (M+3)·H, and considering the
same power budget, for an average hotel floor height
of 4 m, this would mean a maximum GI-POF link
span of 12 floors. For longer heights, silica fiber
links with lower losses would be mandatory for
keeping the power budget.
5 HOSPITALITY DATA TRAFFIC
To study future network demands of hospitality
environments under this converged optical
architecture, we have simulated the whole
infrastructure presented in Section 3 under
OPNET™ Modeler.
An average 4-floor hospitality resort is
considered, with 45 rooms per floor plus 45 staff
computers making a total of 225 users while in full
occupancy. This distribution mirrors a typical
medium size hotel or a small hospital. The main
building backbone is modeled to be 100 m SMF
links running Gigabit Ethernet, and floor distribution
is done through POF to wall plugs and through the
RAUs for the wireless access. Average POF link
lengths range from 6 to 50 m, and are considered to
run Gigabit Ethernet, although Fast Ethernet links
have been modeled as well for comparison.
Guest and staff users and devices have been
profiled daily in time following future application
usage distributions (ALPHA, 2008), and several
services have been included in the analysis as shown
in Table 3 and Figure 4. Application duration and
their repetition rate are modeled through uniform
and exponential distributions, and guest profiles are
modeled under a low (0.5), medium (1) and high (2)
usage factor over these values, with application and
guest start times modeled through the OPNET
Random Number Generators (PRNG), based on the
operating system's
random() implementation. We
++=
4
·
0_
C
WNLD
MaxPOF
BCTMaxPOFMin
LLLDL ++= ·
_
RMinT
PLPPM =
CONVERGED OPTICAL NETWORKS FOR VIDEO AND DATA DISTRIBUTION IN HOSPITALITY
ENVIRONMENTS
143
performed daytime simulations to see the dynamic
evolution of traffic as users connect their devices
into the network, and to obtain peak bandwidth
demands, which will be dominated by the heavy
video traffic. As daily TV usage begins early in the
Figure 4: Guest profile definition.
Table 3: Application profile definition.
Application
BW
(Mb/s)
Duration (s)
Repetition
(s)
Web browsing* 1-100 Exp(600) Exp(600)
Email 1 Exp(60) Exp(600)
Database access 0.5 Uni(300) Uni(300-
600)
VoIP 0.096 Exp(600) Exp(1800)
Videoconference 4 Exp(600) Exp(7200)
File transfer 100 Exp(300) Exp(1800)
IPTV 6-24 Exp(7200) Exp(21600)
* Includes also video browsing, social networking and immersive online
games and environments.
morning, we can see in Figure 5 the bandwidth
demands per floor, quickly over passing the Fast
Ethernet limit of 100 Mb/s. Making use of Gigabit
Ethernet seems mandatory to avoid congestion if
intensive video traffic (HDTV or high resolution
videoconferencing) is considered. This is specially
important in tele-healthcare applications. The
similarity among floors in the bandwidth traces over
the random statistical variability is due to the
identical guest profiling used per floor to simplify
design and simulation time and future work intends
to add further detail to such guest distribution.
As a way to measure the responsiveness of the
system, we we will use the channel switching time
of the hospitality IPTV system. The channel
switching time (or zapping delay) can be defined as
the time difference between the user asking for a
channel change by pressing a button on the remote
control and the display of the first frame of the
requested channel on the TV screen. In analog TV,
channel change is around 100 ms since it only
involves the receiver tuning to a new carrier
frequency, demodulating the analog signal and
displaying the picture on the screen. IPTV channel
switching times can be higher due to delay factors
(Uzunalioglu, 2009), like digital video
decompression and buffering, IP network related
issues (frame encapsulation, IGMP group joining,
congestion, etc.) and content management (paid
subscription channels, parental filtering, etc.). Fast
switching IPTV systems are expected to have
zapping delays of less than a second. To make our
study more general, we will only consider the
network components of the channel switching delay,
as video codification and content management
greatly depends on the specific IPTV
implementation.
In Figure 6 we see the influence of full HDTV
data streams (12 Mb/s per channel) over the channel
switch requests (the zapping delay). We observe
that, under a gigabit Ethernet network, this value
still falls far from the margin of 125 ms limit for
seamless zapping time, but over slower connections,
delay quickly builds up and can degrade user
experience and congest the remaining data network.
For the same situation, but considering all users
streaming high-definition WebTV video (6.3 Mb/s)
instead of IPTV, or high-definition
videoconferencing (4.3 Mb/s), there would be an
average frame delivery delay of 2.74 ms under a
Fast Ethernet network, or only 0.38 µs under a
Gigabit Ethernet one.
We can conclude that the presented architecture
remains valid for the services evaluated and still
holds enough margins to cope with spikes due to
seasonal trade show attendance or an increase in
holiday travelling. Moreover, dynamic network load
balancing on the optical domain can spread future
demands over all available physical media, avoiding
traffic surges, server bottlenecks, connectivity losses
and downtimes. Considering specially the RoF
distribution system, more wireless and mobile
capacity can be allocated to an area (e.g. conference
hall) during peak times and then re-allocated to other
areas when off-peak (e.g. guestrooms in the
evenings). This obviates the requirement for
allocating permanent capacity, which would be a
waste of resources in cases where traffic loads vary
frequently and by large margins. Future explorations
on the hospitality scenario will include the dynamic
use of different optical wavelengths through
reconfigurable Wavelength Division Multiplexing
(WDM).
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Figure 5: In-building data traffic at morning time.
Figure 6: (a) Channel zapping delay correlated to (b)
bandwidth consumption in a Fast Ethernet POF link.
6 CONCLUSIONS
We have mapped the requirements for high-
definition video distribution on hospitality
environments, identifying bandwidth demands of
more than 5 Gb/s. Thus, fiber emerges as the best
cabling solution, and thus we propose a low-cost and
future-proof converged optical network based on
silica and plastic fiber. Such cabling infrastructure
would be limited to 12 floors with 20 rooms each,
and full network simulations have verified TV
channel switching times of less than 125 ms.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This work was supported by the EC 7th Framework
Program: Architectures for fLexible Photonic Home
and Access networks (ALPHA), ICT CP-IP 212 352,
and OPNET Technologies, Inc. University Research
Program.
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ENVIRONMENTS
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