233 research outputs found

    Fast synchronization 3R burst-mode receivers for passive optical networks

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    This paper gives a tutorial overview on high speed burst-mode receiver (BM-RX) requirements, specific for time division multiplexing passive optical networks, and design issues of such BM-RXs as well as their advanced design techniques. It focuses on how to design BM-RXs with short burst overhead for fast synchronization. We present design principles and circuit architectures of various types of burst-mode transimpedance amplifiers, burst-mode limiting amplifiers and burst-mode clock and data recovery circuits. The recent development of 10 Gb/s BM-RXs is highlighted also including dual-rate operation for coexistence with deployed PONs and on-chip auto reset generation to eliminate external timing-critical control signals provided by a PON medium access control. Finally sub-system integration and state-of-the-art system performance for 10 Gb/s PONs are reviewed

    Reliable and Low-Latency Fronthaul for Tactile Internet Applications

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    With the emergence of Cloud-RAN as one of the dominant architectural solutions for next-generation mobile networks, the reliability and latency on the fronthaul (FH) segment become critical performance metrics for applications such as the Tactile Internet. Ensuring FH performance is further complicated by the switch from point-to-point dedicated FH links to packet-based multi-hop FH networks. This change is largely justified by the fact that packet-based fronthauling allows the deployment of FH networks on the existing Ethernet infrastructure. This paper proposes to improve reliability and latency of packet-based fronthauling by means of multi-path diversity and erasure coding of the MAC frames transported by the FH network. Under a probabilistic model that assumes a single service, the average latency required to obtain reliable FH transport and the reliability-latency trade-off are first investigated. The analytical results are then validated and complemented by a numerical study that accounts for the coexistence of enhanced Mobile BroadBand (eMBB) and Ultra-Reliable Low-Latency (URLLC) services in 5G networks by comparing orthogonal and non-orthogonal sharing of FH resources.Comment: 11pages, 13 figures, 3 bio photo

    Ethernet - a survey on its fields of application

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    During the last decades, Ethernet progressively became the most widely used local area networking (LAN) technology. Apart from LAN installations, Ethernet became also attractive for many other fields of application, ranging from industry to avionics, telecommunication, and multimedia. The expanded application of this technology is mainly due to its significant assets like reduced cost, backward-compatibility, flexibility, and expandability. However, this new trend raises some problems concerning the services of the protocol and the requirements for each application. Therefore, specific adaptations prove essential to integrate this communication technology in each field of application. Our primary objective is to show how Ethernet has been enhanced to comply with the specific requirements of several application fields, particularly in transport, embedded and multimedia contexts. The paper first describes the common Ethernet LAN technology and highlights its main features. It reviews the most important specific Ethernet versions with respect to each application field’s requirements. Finally, we compare these different fields of application and we particularly focus on the fundamental concepts and the quality of service capabilities of each proposal

    Contributions towards softwarization and energy saving in passive optical networks

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    Ths thesis is a result of contributions to optimize and improve the network management systme and power consumption in Passive Optical Network (PON). Passive Optical Network elements such as Optical Line Terminal (OLT) and Optical Network Units (ONUs) are currently managed by inflexible legacy network management systems. Software-Defined Networking (SDN) is a new networking paradigm that improves the operation and management of networks by decoupling control plane from data plane. Currently, network management in PON networks is not always automated nor normalized. One goal of the researchers in optical networking is to improve the programmability, efficiency, and global optimization of network operations, in order to minimize both Capital Expenditure (CAPEX) and Operational Expenditure (OPEX) by reducing the complexity of devices and its operation. Therefore, it makes sense to use an SDN approach in order to manage the passive optical network functionalities and migrating must of the upper layer functions to the SDN controller. Many approaches have already addressed the topic of applying the SDN architecture in PON networks. However; the focus was usually on facilitating the deployment of SDN-based service and so Service Interoperability remains unexplored in detail. The main challenge toward this goal is how to make compatible the synchronous nature of the EPON media access control protocols with the asynchronous architecture of SDN, and in particular, OpenFlow. In our proposed architecture, the OLT is partially virtualized and some of its functionalities are allocated to the core network management system, while the OLT itself is replaced by an OpenFlow switch. A new MultiPoint MAC Control (MPMC) sublayer extension based on the OpenFlow protocol is presented. The OpenFlow switch is extended with synchronous ports to retain the time-critical nature of the EPON network. Our simulation-based results demonstrate the effectiveness of the new architecture, while retaining a similar (or improved) performance in term of delay and throughput when compared to legacy PONs. Nowadays, many researchers are working simultaneously to develop power saving techniques and improves energy efficiency in the PON network, and since the contribution of access networks to the global energy consumption is large, energy efficiency has become an increasingly important requirement in designing access networks. Therefore, energy-saving approaches are being investigated to provide high performance and consume less energy. Several techniques have been proposed to increase energy efficiency in PON networks. Such techniques are related to the centeralized DBA but the advantage of power saving in a distributed DBA remains untouched. We present a distributed energy-efficient Dynamic Bandwidth Allocation (DBA) algorithm for both the upstream and downstream channels of EPON to improve energy efficiency in EPON networks. The proposed algorithm analyzes the queue status of the ONUs and OLT in order to power-off the transmitter and/or receiver of an ONU whenever there is no upstream or downstream traffic. We have been able to combine the advantage of a distributed DBA such as DDSPON (a smaller packet delay, due to the shorter time needed by DDSPON to allocate the transmission slots) and the energy-saving features (that come at a price of longer packet delays due to the fact that switching off the transmitters make the packet queues grow). Our proposed DBA algorithm minimizes the ONU energy consumption across a wide range of network loads, while maintaining at an acceptable level the penalty introduced in terms of channel utilization and packet delay.Las contribuciones de esta tesis se centran en mejorar el sistema de gestión de red y el consumo de energía en redes de acceso ópticas pasivas (PON). Los elementos de las redes PON, como el terminal de línea óptica (OLT) y las unidades de red ópticas (ONU), se gestionan actualmente mediante sistemas poco flexibles. El nuevo paradigma de redes definidas por software (SDN) mejora la gestión de redes al desacoplar el plano de control del plano de datos. Actualmente, la gestión de redes PON no está automatizada ni normalizada. Uno de los objetivos de los investigadores en redes ópticas es mejorar la programabilidad, la eficiencia y la optimización global de las operaciones de red, con el fin de minimizar tanto el gasto de capital (CAPEX) como el gasto operativo (OPEX) al reducir la complejidad de los dispositivos y su funcionamiento. Por lo tanto, tiene sentido utilizar un enfoque SDN para gestionar las funciones de red óptica pasiva y migrar algunas de las funciones PON de capas superiores al controlador SDN. Otros investigadores han estudiado esta aproximación. sin embargo; el enfoque generalmente estaba en facilitar la implementación del servicio basado en SDN y, por lo tanto, la interoperabilidad de los servicios permanecía sin ser explorado en detalle. El principal desafío hacia este objetivo es cómo compatibilizar la naturaleza síncrona de los protocolos de control de acceso a medios EPON con la arquitectura asíncrona de SDN y, en particular, OpenFlow. En nuestra propuesta de arquitectura, la OLT se virtualiza parcialmente y algunas de sus funcionalidades se asignan al sistema de gestión de red centralizado, mientras que la OLT se reemplaza por un conmutador OpenFlow. Proponemos una nueva extensión de la subcapa de control múltiple de MAC (MPMC) basada en el protocolo OpenFlow. El conmutador OpenFlow se amplía con puertos síncronos para asegurar la naturaleza de tiempo real de la red EPON. Nuestros resultados basados ¿¿en simulaciones demuestran la efectividad de la nueva arquitectura, al tiempo que se mantiene un rendimiento similar (o mejorado) en términos de retardos y rendimiento en comparación con las PON clásicas. Por otro lado, se están desarrollando técnicas de ahorro de energía y mejora de la eficiencia energética en redes PON, y dado que la contribución de las redes de acceso al consumo total de energía es importante, la eficiencia energética se ha convertido en un requisito cada vez más importante. Se han propuesto varias técnicas por parte de otros autores para aumentar la eficiencia energética en las redes PON, relacionadas con algoritmos DBA (Dynamic Bandwidth Allocation) centralizados, pero las ventaja del ahorro de energía en un DBA distribuido no se ha explorado todavía. Por ello nuestra segunda contiribución es un algoritmo distribuido de asignación dinámica de ancho de banda energéticamente eficiente tanto para los canales ascendentes como descendentes de EPON para mejorar la eficiencia energética en las redes EPON. El algoritmo propuesto analiza el estado de cola de las ONU y la OLT para apagar el transmisor y/o el receptor de una ONU cuando no hay tráfico en sentido ascendente o descendente. Hemos podido combinar la ventaja de un DBA distribuido como DDSPON (que asegura retardos más pequeños, debido al menor tiempo que DDSPON necesita para asignar las ranuras de transmisión) y las características de ahorro de energía (al precio de tener retardos de paquete más grandes debido al hecho de que apagar los transmisores hace que las colas de paquetes crezcan). Nuestro algoritmo de DBA propuesto minimiza el consumo de energía de la ONU en una amplia gama de cargas de red, mientras mantiene a un nivel aceptable la penalización introducida en términos de utilización del canal y retardos

    Contributions towards softwarization and energy saving in passive optical networks

    Get PDF
    Ths thesis is a result of contributions to optimize and improve the network management systme and power consumption in Passive Optical Network (PON). Passive Optical Network elements such as Optical Line Terminal (OLT) and Optical Network Units (ONUs) are currently managed by inflexible legacy network management systems. Software-Defined Networking (SDN) is a new networking paradigm that improves the operation and management of networks by decoupling control plane from data plane. Currently, network management in PON networks is not always automated nor normalized. One goal of the researchers in optical networking is to improve the programmability, efficiency, and global optimization of network operations, in order to minimize both Capital Expenditure (CAPEX) and Operational Expenditure (OPEX) by reducing the complexity of devices and its operation. Therefore, it makes sense to use an SDN approach in order to manage the passive optical network functionalities and migrating must of the upper layer functions to the SDN controller. Many approaches have already addressed the topic of applying the SDN architecture in PON networks. However; the focus was usually on facilitating the deployment of SDN-based service and so Service Interoperability remains unexplored in detail. The main challenge toward this goal is how to make compatible the synchronous nature of the EPON media access control protocols with the asynchronous architecture of SDN, and in particular, OpenFlow. In our proposed architecture, the OLT is partially virtualized and some of its functionalities are allocated to the core network management system, while the OLT itself is replaced by an OpenFlow switch. A new MultiPoint MAC Control (MPMC) sublayer extension based on the OpenFlow protocol is presented. The OpenFlow switch is extended with synchronous ports to retain the time-critical nature of the EPON network. Our simulation-based results demonstrate the effectiveness of the new architecture, while retaining a similar (or improved) performance in term of delay and throughput when compared to legacy PONs. Nowadays, many researchers are working simultaneously to develop power saving techniques and improves energy efficiency in the PON network, and since the contribution of access networks to the global energy consumption is large, energy efficiency has become an increasingly important requirement in designing access networks. Therefore, energy-saving approaches are being investigated to provide high performance and consume less energy. Several techniques have been proposed to increase energy efficiency in PON networks. Such techniques are related to the centeralized DBA but the advantage of power saving in a distributed DBA remains untouched. We present a distributed energy-efficient Dynamic Bandwidth Allocation (DBA) algorithm for both the upstream and downstream channels of EPON to improve energy efficiency in EPON networks. The proposed algorithm analyzes the queue status of the ONUs and OLT in order to power-off the transmitter and/or receiver of an ONU whenever there is no upstream or downstream traffic. We have been able to combine the advantage of a distributed DBA such as DDSPON (a smaller packet delay, due to the shorter time needed by DDSPON to allocate the transmission slots) and the energy-saving features (that come at a price of longer packet delays due to the fact that switching off the transmitters make the packet queues grow). Our proposed DBA algorithm minimizes the ONU energy consumption across a wide range of network loads, while maintaining at an acceptable level the penalty introduced in terms of channel utilization and packet delay.Las contribuciones de esta tesis se centran en mejorar el sistema de gestión de red y el consumo de energía en redes de acceso ópticas pasivas (PON). Los elementos de las redes PON, como el terminal de línea óptica (OLT) y las unidades de red ópticas (ONU), se gestionan actualmente mediante sistemas poco flexibles. El nuevo paradigma de redes definidas por software (SDN) mejora la gestión de redes al desacoplar el plano de control del plano de datos. Actualmente, la gestión de redes PON no está automatizada ni normalizada. Uno de los objetivos de los investigadores en redes ópticas es mejorar la programabilidad, la eficiencia y la optimización global de las operaciones de red, con el fin de minimizar tanto el gasto de capital (CAPEX) como el gasto operativo (OPEX) al reducir la complejidad de los dispositivos y su funcionamiento. Por lo tanto, tiene sentido utilizar un enfoque SDN para gestionar las funciones de red óptica pasiva y migrar algunas de las funciones PON de capas superiores al controlador SDN. Otros investigadores han estudiado esta aproximación. sin embargo; el enfoque generalmente estaba en facilitar la implementación del servicio basado en SDN y, por lo tanto, la interoperabilidad de los servicios permanecía sin ser explorado en detalle. El principal desafío hacia este objetivo es cómo compatibilizar la naturaleza síncrona de los protocolos de control de acceso a medios EPON con la arquitectura asíncrona de SDN y, en particular, OpenFlow. En nuestra propuesta de arquitectura, la OLT se virtualiza parcialmente y algunas de sus funcionalidades se asignan al sistema de gestión de red centralizado, mientras que la OLT se reemplaza por un conmutador OpenFlow. Proponemos una nueva extensión de la subcapa de control múltiple de MAC (MPMC) basada en el protocolo OpenFlow. El conmutador OpenFlow se amplía con puertos síncronos para asegurar la naturaleza de tiempo real de la red EPON. Nuestros resultados basados ¿¿en simulaciones demuestran la efectividad de la nueva arquitectura, al tiempo que se mantiene un rendimiento similar (o mejorado) en términos de retardos y rendimiento en comparación con las PON clásicas. Por otro lado, se están desarrollando técnicas de ahorro de energía y mejora de la eficiencia energética en redes PON, y dado que la contribución de las redes de acceso al consumo total de energía es importante, la eficiencia energética se ha convertido en un requisito cada vez más importante. Se han propuesto varias técnicas por parte de otros autores para aumentar la eficiencia energética en las redes PON, relacionadas con algoritmos DBA (Dynamic Bandwidth Allocation) centralizados, pero las ventaja del ahorro de energía en un DBA distribuido no se ha explorado todavía. Por ello nuestra segunda contiribución es un algoritmo distribuido de asignación dinámica de ancho de banda energéticamente eficiente tanto para los canales ascendentes como descendentes de EPON para mejorar la eficiencia energética en las redes EPON. El algoritmo propuesto analiza el estado de cola de las ONU y la OLT para apagar el transmisor y/o el receptor de una ONU cuando no hay tráfico en sentido ascendente o descendente. Hemos podido combinar la ventaja de un DBA distribuido como DDSPON (que asegura retardos más pequeños, debido al menor tiempo que DDSPON necesita para asignar las ranuras de transmisión) y las características de ahorro de energía (al precio de tener retardos de paquete más grandes debido al hecho de que apagar los transmisores hace que las colas de paquetes crezcan). Nuestro algoritmo de DBA propuesto minimiza el consumo de energía de la ONU en una amplia gama de cargas de red, mientras mantiene a un nivel aceptable la penalización introducida en términos de utilización del canal y retardos.Postprint (published version

    An Innovative RAN Architecture for Emerging Heterogeneous Networks: The Road to the 5G Era

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    The global demand for mobile-broadband data services has experienced phenomenal growth over the last few years, driven by the rapid proliferation of smart devices such as smartphones and tablets. This growth is expected to continue unabated as mobile data traffic is predicted to grow anywhere from 20 to 50 times over the next 5 years. Exacerbating the problem is that such unprecedented surge in smartphones usage, which is characterized by frequent short on/off connections and mobility, generates heavy signaling traffic load in the network signaling storms . This consumes a disproportion amount of network resources, compromising network throughput and efficiency, and in extreme cases can cause the Third-Generation (3G) or 4G (long-term evolution (LTE) and LTE-Advanced (LTE-A)) cellular networks to crash. As the conventional approaches of improving the spectral efficiency and/or allocation additional spectrum are fast approaching their theoretical limits, there is a growing consensus that current 3G and 4G (LTE/LTE-A) cellular radio access technologies (RATs) won\u27t be able to meet the anticipated growth in mobile traffic demand. To address these challenges, the wireless industry and standardization bodies have initiated a roadmap for transition from 4G to 5G cellular technology with a key objective to increase capacity by 1000Ã? by 2020 . Even though the technology hasn\u27t been invented yet, the hype around 5G networks has begun to bubble. The emerging consensus is that 5G is not a single technology, but rather a synergistic collection of interworking technical innovations and solutions that collectively address the challenge of traffic growth. The core emerging ingredients that are widely considered the key enabling technologies to realize the envisioned 5G era, listed in the order of importance, are: 1) Heterogeneous networks (HetNets); 2) flexible backhauling; 3) efficient traffic offload techniques; and 4) Self Organizing Networks (SONs). The anticipated solutions delivered by efficient interworking/ integration of these enabling technologies are not simply about throwing more resources and /or spectrum at the challenge. The envisioned solution, however, requires radically different cellular RAN and mobile core architectures that efficiently and cost-effectively deploy and manage radio resources as well as offload mobile traffic from the overloaded core network. The main objective of this thesis is to address the key techno-economics challenges facing the transition from current Fourth-Generation (4G) cellular technology to the 5G era in the context of proposing a novel high-risk revolutionary direction to the design and implementation of the envisioned 5G cellular networks. The ultimate goal is to explore the potential and viability of cost-effectively implementing the 1000x capacity challenge while continuing to provide adequate mobile broadband experience to users. Specifically, this work proposes and devises a novel PON-based HetNet mobile backhaul RAN architecture that: 1) holistically addresses the key techno-economics hurdles facing the implementation of the envisioned 5G cellular technology, specifically, the backhauling and signaling challenges; and 2) enables, for the first time to the best of our knowledge, the support of efficient ground-breaking mobile data and signaling offload techniques, which significantly enhance the performance of both the HetNet-based RAN and LTE-A\u27s core network (Evolved Packet Core (EPC) per 3GPP standard), ensure that core network equipment is used more productively, and moderate the evolving 5G\u27s signaling growth and optimize its impact. To address the backhauling challenge, we propose a cost-effective fiber-based small cell backhaul infrastructure, which leverages existing fibered and powered facilities associated with a PON-based fiber-to-the-Node/Home (FTTN/FTTH)) residential access network. Due to the sharing of existing valuable fiber assets, the proposed PON-based backhaul architecture, in which the small cells are collocated with existing FTTN remote terminals (optical network units (ONUs)), is much more economical than conventional point-to-point (PTP) fiber backhaul designs. A fully distributed ring-based EPON architecture is utilized here as the fiber-based HetNet backhaul. The techno-economics merits of utilizing the proposed PON-based FTTx access HetNet RAN architecture versus that of traditional 4G LTE-A\u27s RAN will be thoroughly examined and quantified. Specifically, we quantify the techno-economics merits of the proposed PON-based HetNet backhaul by comparing its performance versus that of a conventional fiber-based PTP backhaul architecture as a benchmark. It is shown that the purposely selected ring-based PON architecture along with the supporting distributed control plane enable the proposed PON-based FTTx RAN architecture to support several key salient networking features that collectively significantly enhance the overall performance of both the HetNet-based RAN and 4G LTE-A\u27s core (EPC) compared to that of the typical fiber-based PTP backhaul architecture in terms of handoff capability, signaling overhead, overall network throughput and latency, and QoS support. It will also been shown that the proposed HetNet-based RAN architecture is not only capable of providing the typical macro-cell offloading gain (RAN gain) but also can provide ground-breaking EPC offloading gain. The simulation results indicate that the overall capacity of the proposed HetNet scales with the number of deployed small cells, thanks to LTE-A\u27s advanced interference management techniques. For example, if there are 10 deployed outdoor small cells for every macrocell in the network, then the overall capacity will be approximately 10-11x capacity gain over a macro-only network. To reach the 1000x capacity goal, numerous small cells including 3G, 4G, and WiFi (femtos, picos, metros, relays, remote radio heads, distributed antenna systems) need to be deployed indoors and outdoors, at all possible venues (residences and enterprises)

    40 Gbps Access for Metro networks: Implications in terms of Sustainability and Innovation from an LCA Perspective

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    In this work, the implications of new technologies, more specifically the new optical FTTH technologies, are studied both from the functional and non-functional perspectives. In particular, some direct impacts are listed in the form of abandoning non-functional technologies, such as micro-registration, which would be implicitly required for having a functioning operation before arrival the new high-bandwidth access technologies. It is shown that such abandonment of non-functional best practices, which are mainly at the management level of ICT, immediately results in additional consumption and environmental footprint, and also there is a chance that some other new innovations might be 'missed.' Therefore, unconstrained deployment of these access technologies is not aligned with a possible sustainable ICT picture, except if they are regulated. An approach to pricing the best practices, including both functional and non-functional technologies, is proposed in order to develop a regulation and policy framework for a sustainable broadband access.Comment: 10 pages, 6 Tables, 1 Figure. Accepted to be presented at the ICT4S'15 Conferenc
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