3 Concatenation in SONET/SDH
The SONET/SDH structures define a synchronous optical hierarchy with flexibility to
carry many different capacity signals. The payload of the basic signal is structured in
virtual tributaries (VT), in SONET, or tributary units (TU), in SDH, providing in this
way for the transport of lower rate services.
Payloads that exceed the standard payload capacities can be transported using
concatenation. There are two methods of concatenation: contiguous and virtual
concatenation. Contiguous concatenation groups the payload of several signals
forming a payload that is transported as a whole through the network. In virtual
concatenation, the individual payloads associated to a concatenated group are
transported individually through the network. Virtual concatenation requires
concatenation functionality only at the path termination equipment, while contiguous
concatenation requires concatenation functionality at each network element. Virtual
concatenation only requires up-grading the ends of the path, so the up-grade costs are
lower.
Virtual concatenation is defined at two levels: high order and low order. High order
virtual concatenation group the payload of different signals of 51.840 Mbit/s or
155.52 Mbit/s, while low order virtual concatenation group the payload of different
VTs/TUs which have lower rates such as 1.544 Mbit/s, 2.048 Mbit/s, etc. Tab. 2 and
Tab. 3 show the capacity of virtually concatenated tributaries in SDH and SONET
respectively.
Bit rates for LAN services are typically 10 Mbit/s and 100 Mbit/s. Other services,
e.g. ATM cells stream, may vary from a few Mbit/s to several tens of Mbit/s. These
bit rates can be fitted in the virtual concatenated payloads, improving the use of the
bandwidth. Besides, voice and data can be sent using the same transport structure.
Associated with virtual concatenation there is also a new methodology for hitlessly
changing the payload allocated to virtually concatenated SONET/SDH SPEs. This
methodology, called Link Capacity Adjustment Scheme (LCAS), allows to
accommodate the SPE (adding or removing tributaries) to situations like requested
increases or decreases in capacity requirements or link failure conditions [6].
4 Ethernet Over LAPS
LAPS protocol and specification was introduced in ITU-T Recommendation
X.85/Y.1321 (IP over SDH using LAPS) and was defined as a type of HDLC,
including data link service and protocol specification which are used to the network of
IP over SDH [1]. LAPS allows the encapsulation of IPv6, IPv4, PPP and other upper
layer protocols, and is fully compatible with RFC 2615 (PPP over SONET/SDH)
when the address field is set to “11111111”. This protocol provides a point-to-point
unacknowledged connection-less-mode service over SDH.
ITU-T Recommendation X.86 describes how to adapt Ethernet frames to LAPS, so
they can be later transported through SDH networks. The relationship between the
different entities is shown in Fig. 3.
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