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V100R002C00
Hardware Description
Issue 04
Date 2010-08-28
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Notice
The purchased products, services and features are stipulated by the contract made between Huawei and the
customer. All or part of the products, services and features described in this document may not be within the
purchase scope or the usage scope. Unless otherwise specified in the contract, all statements, information,
and recommendations in this document are provided "AS IS" without warranties, guarantees or representations
of any kind, either express or implied.
The information in this document is subject to change without notice. Every effort has been made in the
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Website: http://www.huawei.com
Email: support@huawei.com
Related Versions
The following table lists the product versions related to this document.
Intended Audience
This document describes the equipment structure, chassis structure, and board classification.
This document also describes each board of these classes in details.
This document helps you get the detailed information about the equipment hardware.
Symbol Conventions
The symbols that may be found in this document are defined as follows.
Symbol Description
Symbol Description
GUI Conventions
The GUI conventions that may be found in this document are defined as follows.
Convention Description
Change History
Updates between document versions are cumulative. Therefore, the latest document version
contains all updates made to previous versions.
Boards
Others
Others
This document is used to be Chapter 9 of the OptiX PTN 910 Product Description. For the
V100R002C00 version, this part is separated as an independent document.
Boards
Filler Panel
Adds the description of the functions and features of the filler panel.
Adds the description of the pluggable optical modules used by the equipment.
Adds the description of various fibers and cables used by the equipment.
Others
Contents
3 Filler Panel...................................................................................................................................3-1
3.1 Functions and Features....................................................................................................................................3-2
3.2 Appearance and Valid Slots............................................................................................................................3-2
A Safety Labels.............................................................................................................................A-1
B Indicators....................................................................................................................................B-1
C Power Consumption and Weight..........................................................................................C-1
D Board Configuration Parameters..........................................................................................D-1
E Glossary.......................................................................................................................................E-1
Figures
Tables
Table 2-1 Boards supported by the OptiX PTN 910 and their valid slots............................................................2-3
Table 2-2 Functions and Features of the CXPA/CXPB.......................................................................................2-6
Table 2-3 Types and usage of the interfaces on the CXPA/CXPB....................................................................2-12
Table 2-4 Pins of the ETH/OAM interface........................................................................................................2-13
Table 2-5 Pins of the CLK1/TOD1 and CLK2/TOD2 interface........................................................................2-14
Table 2-6 Pins of the EXT/F1 interface..............................................................................................................2-15
Table 2-7 Pins of the PHONE interface.............................................................................................................2-16
Table 2-8 Pins of the ALMI/ALMO interface....................................................................................................2-16
Table 2-9 Pins of the FE1-FE4 interfaces..........................................................................................................2-16
Table 2-10 Pins of the Anea 96 interface...........................................................................................................2-17
Table 2-11 Specifications of FE electrical interfaces.........................................................................................2-18
Table 2-12 Specifications of E1 interfaces.........................................................................................................2-19
Table 2-13 Functions and features of the CXPG/CXPH....................................................................................2-20
Table 2-14 Interfaces on the CXPG/CXPH........................................................................................................2-25
Table 2-15 Pins of the ETH/OAM interface......................................................................................................2-26
Table 2-16 Pins of the CLK1/TOD1 and CLK2/TOD2 interfaces.....................................................................2-27
Table 2-17 Pins of the PHONE interface...........................................................................................................2-28
Table 2-18 Pins of the FE1 interface to FE4 interface.......................................................................................2-28
Table 2-19 Pins of the GE optical interfaces......................................................................................................2-29
Table 2-20 Pins of the Anea 96 interface...........................................................................................................2-29
Table 2-21 Specifications of the FE electrical interface.....................................................................................2-31
Table 2-22 Technical specifications of the GE optical interface........................................................................2-31
Table 2-23 Wavelength allocation of 1000BASE-CWDM optical interfaces and related optical module code
.............................................................................................................................................................................2-33
Table 2-24 Wavelength allocation of 1000BASE-BX optical interfaces and related optical module code.......2-33
Table 2-25 Specifications of the E1 interface.....................................................................................................2-33
Table 2-26 Functions and features of the EF8T.................................................................................................2-34
Table 2-27 Types and usage of interfaces on the EF8T.....................................................................................2-37
Table 2-28 Pins of the RJ-45 connector of the EF8T.........................................................................................2-38
Table 2-29 Specifications of interfaces on the EF8T.........................................................................................2-38
Table 2-30 Functions and features of the EF8F.................................................................................................2-39
Table 2-31 Interfaces of the EF8F......................................................................................................................2-42
Table 2-32 Performance specifications of the FE optical interface....................................................................2-43
Table 2-33 Wavelength allocation of 100BASE-BX optical interfaces and related optical module code.........2-44
1 Chassis
The dimensions of the OptiX PTN 910 are 442 mm (width) x 220 mm (depth) x 1 U (height, 1
U = 44.45 mm).
The OptiX PTN 910 can be installed in the following scenarios:
l ETSI cabinet (300 mm deep)
l ETSI cabinet (600 mm deep)
l 19 inch cabinet (450 mm deep)
l 19 inch cabinet (600 mm deep)
l Indoor Mini Box (IMB) network box
l APM30/OMB outdoor cabinet
l Open rack
The PTN equipment can be installed indoors or outdoors. The installation must satisfy the
requirement of running environment for equipment. To better satisfy the requirement, you can
install the equipment in an IMB network cabinet or an APM30/OMB outdoor cabinet. Use the
GIE4805S external AC power supply system to provide power to the IMB network box or
outdoor cabinet.
Figure 1-2 shows the slot allocation of the OptiX PTN 910.
2 Boards
Boards of the OptiX PTN 910 include system control, cross-connect and protocol processing
board, interface boards, power supply board, and fan board.
2.1 Overview of Boards
Boards are the key hardware components of the equipment.
2.2 CXPA/CXPB
This section describes the CXPA/CXPB, which is the system control, cross-connect and protocol
processing board, with regard to the version, functions, features, working principle, front panel,
valid slots, and technical specifications.
2.3 CXPG/CXPH
This section describes the CXPG/CXPH, which integrates the control, cross-connect, and
protocol processing units, in terms of the version, functions, features, working principle, front
panel, valid slots, and technical specifications.
2.4 EF8T
This section describes the EF8T, which is an interface board with eight FE electrical interfaces,
with regard to the version, functions, features, working principle, front panel, valid slots, and
technical specifications.
2.5 EF8F
This section describes the EF8F, which is an interface board with eight FE optical interfaces,
with regard to the version, functions, features, working principle, front panel, valid slots, and
technical specifications.
2.6 EG2
This section describes the EG2, which is an interface board with two GE optical interfaces, with
regard to the version, functions, features, working principle, front panel, valid slots, and technical
specifications.
2.7 ML1/ML1A
This section describes the ML1/ML1A, which is a 16 x E1 electrical interface board, with regard
to the version, functions, features, working principle, front panel, valid slots, and technical
specifications.
2.8 CD1
This section describes the CD1, which is a 1 x channelized STM-1 service processing board, in
terms of the version, functions, features, working principle, front panel, valid slots, and technical
specifications.
2.9 ADS2A/ADS2B
This section describes the ADS2A/ADS2B, a 2-channel ADSL service interface board, in terms
of the version, functions, features, working principle, front panel, valid slots, and technical
specifications.
2.10 SHD4
This section describes the SHD4, a 4-channel G.SHDSL service interface board, in terms of the
version, functions, features, working principle, front panel, valid slots, and technical
specifications.
2.11 SHD4I
This section describes the SHD4I, a 4-channel SHDSL service interface board that supports the
IMA mode, in terms of the version, functions, features, working principle, front panel, valid
slots, and technical specifications.
2.12 PIU
This section describes the PIU, a power input unit, in terms of the version, functions, features,
working principle, front panel, valid slots, and technical specifications.
2.13 FAN
This section describes the FAN, a fan board, in terms of the version, functions, features, working
principle, front panel, valid slots, and technical specifications.
Table 2-1 Boards supported by the OptiX PTN 910 and their valid slots
Board Name Board Description Valid Slot
l The CXPG and CXPH each house two slots. Slot 1 and slot 2 house one CXPG or CXPH.
l The second port of the CD1 can be used for only the LMSP protection.
l The ADS2A supports the Annex A mode. The ADS2B supports the Annex B mode.
Board Relations
The OptiX PTN 910 uses different boards to achieve various functions.
Figure 2-1 shows board relations of the OptiX PTN 910.
Network side
User side GE
Control and EF8F
FE GE
EF8F management EF8T
module
FE GE
EF8T EG2
GE E1
EG2 Service ML1/ML1A
E1
processing
ML1/ML1A and
Channelized ADSL2+
forwarding ADS2
STM-1
CD1 module SHD4/ G.SHDSL
FE SHD4I
Channelized STM-1
CD1
E1 Clock module FE
GE E1
CXPA/CXPB/CXPG/CXPH GE
-48 V DC/-60 V DC
Power Heat
module dissipation
-48 V DC/-60 V DC
PIU module FAN
NOTE
Only the CXPA/CXPB supports the NM cascading interface, transparent data interface, and alarm interface.
The GE signal can be accessed from the front panel of only the CXPG/CXPH.
2.2 CXPA/CXPB
This section describes the CXPA/CXPB, which is the system control, cross-connect and protocol
processing board, with regard to the version, functions, features, working principle, front panel,
valid slots, and technical specifications.
NOTE
The matched impedance of the E1 service interface on the CXPA is 75 ohms and the matched impedance
of the E1 interface on the CXPB is 120 ohms. The CXPA and CXPB have the same functions and features,
except for the impedance of the E1 service interfaces.
2.2.1 Version Description
The functional version of the CXPA/CXPB is TNC1.
2.2.2 Functions and Features
The CXPA/CXPB accesses and processes 4 x FE electrical signals and 16 x E1 signals, grooms
services, performs the system control, processes the system clock, and provides auxiliary
interfaces.
Fractional E1 Supports the CES services and IMA services at 64 kbit/s level.
Maximum number of E1 16
links or 64kbit/s level serial
ports in each IMA group
The packet loading time of the CES service can be set. The
encapsulation buffer time ranges from 0.125 ms to 3 ms, and
the step value is 0.125 ms.
PW OAM Supported
BFD Supports BFD with a period of 3.3 ms, 10 ms, 20 ms, 50 ms,
100 ms, or 1 s.
Figure 2-2 Block diagram for the working principle of the CXPA/CXPB
Backplane
Orderwire Transparent
signals data signals
Management bus
Control module Interface boards
Management bus
4 x FE electrical signals
Service
grooming and Service bus
16 x E1 signals Interface boards
processing
module
3.3 V
Interface boards
Power 12 V
Working power FAN
Each module on the board supply -48 V/-60 V
PIU
module
-48 V/-60 V
PIU
Control Module
This module performs the following functions:
l Provides two interfaces for input and output of the external clock/time.
l Provides one NM serial interface or NM Ethernet interface for communication with the
NMS, management and queries of the equipment.
l Provides one alarm input/output interface to input three channels of alarms and output one
channel of alarms.
l Provides one orderwire interface.
l Provides one extended network port or 64 kbit/s synchronous data port. The extended
network port is used to realize the cascading of Huawei equipment. The 64 kbit/s
synchronous data port, which is compliant with ITU-T G.703, is used to transparently
transmit other NM data.
NOTE
Clock Module
This module performs the following functions:
l Provides the system clock signals and processes the clock signals from the service boards
and the external clock/time interfaces.
l Provides the working clock for each module on the CXPA/CXPB.
l Supports the synchronous Ethernet and the SSM protocol.
l Supports the IEEE 1588V2 protocol.
Indicator
The following indicators are present on the front panel of the CXPA/CXPB:
l STAT indicator, red, green, or orange, which indicates the working status
l PROG indicator, red or green, which indicates the running status of the program
l SYNC indicator, red or green, which indicates the clock synchronization status
l SRV indicator, red, green, or orange, which indicates the service status
l CRIT indicator, red, which indicates critical alarms
l MAJ indicator, orange, which indicates major alarms
l MIN indicator, yellow, which indicates minor alarms
l LINK indicator, green, which indicates the port connection status
l ACT indicator, yellow, which indicates the data transceiving status of the port
NOTE
The LINK and ACT indicators, which are present above ETH/OAM, EXT/F1, and FE service interface,
indicate the connection status of the Ethernet interface.
Button
The following buttons are present on the front panel of the CXPA/CXPB:
l RST button, which is used for warm reset of the board. When you press the RST button
and then release it, the board is reset (warm).
l CF RCV button, which is used to restore the configuration data from the CF card. When
you press the CF RCV button for 5 seconds, the equipment automatically restores the
configuration data from the CF card.
l LAMP button, which is used to test the indicators. When you press the LAMP button,
except the LINK indicators on the ADS2A/ADS2B and the FE service port indicators on
the EF8T/EF8F/CXPA/CXPB all the board indicators on the NE are on.
Interface
Table 2-3 lists the types and usage of the interfaces on the CXPA/CXPB.
ETH/ RJ-45 10M/100M interface for NM For details, see For details, see
OAM network port or NM serial port Table 2-4. 5.5
Management
Cables.
CLK1/ RJ-45 External clock/time input/ For details, see For details, see
TOD1 output interface Table 2-5. 5.6 Clock
Cables.
CLK2/ RJ-45 External clock/time input/
TOD2 output interface
PHONE RJ-45 Orderwire interface For details, see For details, see
Table 2-7. 5.5
Management
Cables.
ALMI/ RJ-45 3 x alarm inputs and 1 x alarm For details, see For details, see
ALMO output interface Table 2-8. 5.7 Alarm
Input/Output
Cables.
FE1 - FE4 RJ-45 Input/output interface for FE For details, see For details, see
electrical signals Table 2-9. 5.4.1 Ethernet
Cables.
E1 (1 - 16) Anea 96 E1 service input/output For details, see For details, see
interface Table 2-10 5.4.2 75-Ohm
16 x E1
Cablesand
5.4.3 120-
Ohm 16 x E1
Cables.
NOTE
The FE1 to FE4 interfaces, ETH/OAM interface and EXT/F1 interface support auto-adaptation to a
straight-through network cable or a crossover network cable.
The matched impedance of the E1 service interface on the CXPA is 75 ohms and the matched impedance
of the E1 interface on the CXPB is 120 ohms.
The PHONE interface is reserved for later use.
7 Undefined
1-3 Undefined
4 RING
87654321 5 TIP
6-8 Undefined
1 Alarm input 1
4 Alarm input 3
4 Undefined
5 Undefined
7 Undefined
8 Undefined
1 Rx1 25 Tx1
2 26
3 Rx2 27 Tx2
4 28
5 Rx3 29 Tx3
6 30
7 Rx4 31 Tx4
8 32
9 Rx5 33 Tx5
10 34
11 Rx6 35 Tx6
12 36
13 Rx7 37 Tx7
14 38
15 Rx8 39 Tx8
16 40
17 Rx9 41 Tx9
18 42
19 R x 10 43 T x 10
20 44
21 R x 11 45 T x 11
22 46
23 R x 12 47 T x 12
24 48
49 R x 13 73 T x 13
50 74
51 R x 14 75 T x 14
52 76
53 R x 15 77 T x 15
54 78
55 R x 16 79 T x 16
56 80
You can use the U2000 to set the following parameter for the CXPA/CXPB:
l Ethernet interface
l PDH interface
l Environment monitor interface
l External time interface
l Phase-locked source output by External clock
Interface Specifications
The interface specifications of the CXPA/CXPB are as follows:
Item Specification
Other Specifications
Other specifications of the CXPA/CXPB are as follows:
l Board dimensions (mm): 20.32 (H) x 226.00 (D) x 388.40 (W)
l Weight (kg): 1.25
l Power consumption (W): 43.9
2.3 CXPG/CXPH
This section describes the CXPG/CXPH, which integrates the control, cross-connect, and
protocol processing units, in terms of the version, functions, features, working principle, front
panel, valid slots, and technical specifications.
NOTE
The matched impedance of the E1 service interface on the CXPG is 75 ohms and that on the CXPH is 120
ohms. The CXPG and CXPH have the same functions and features, except for the impedance of the
interfaces.
Fractional E1 Supports the CES services and IMA services at 64 kibt/s level.
Maximum number of E1 16
links or 64kbit/s serial ports
in each IMA group
The packet loading time of the CES service can be set. The
encapsulation buffer time ranges from 0.125 ms to 3 ms, and
the step value is 0.125 ms.
PW OAM Supported
BFD Supports BFD with a period of 3.3 ms, 10 ms, 20 ms, 50 ms,
100 ms, or 1s.
Figure 2-4 Block diagram for the working principle of the CXPG/CXPH
NMS
signal
Orderwire
signal Control and Management bus
communication Interface boards
module
Management
bus
2 x GE signals
Service
4 x FE electrical signals grooming and Service bus
Interface boards
processing
16 x E1 signals
module
3.3 V
Interface boards
Working power 12 V
Each module supply Power
FAN
on the board supply -48 V/-60 V
module PIU
-48 V/-60 V
PIU
l Provides two interfaces for inputting and outputting the external clock/time.
l Provides one NM serial port or NM network port for communicating with the NMS,
managing the equipment, and querying the equipment.
l Provides one orderwire interface.
NOTE
Clock Module
This module performs the following functions:
l Provides the system clock signals and processes the clock signals from the service boards
and the external clock/time interfaces.
l Provides the working clock for each module on the CXPG/CXPH.
l Supports the synchronous Ethernet and the SSM protocol.
l Supports the IEEE 1588V2 protocol.
l Supports the 1588 ACR clock.
Figure 2-5 Appearances of the front panel of the CXPG and CXPH
Indicators
The following indicators are present on the front panel of the CXPG/CXPH:
l STAT indicator, red, green, or orange, which indicates the working status
l PROG indicator, red or green, which indicates the running status of the program
l SYNC indicator, red or green, which indicates the clock synchronization status
l SRV indicator, red, green, or orange, which indicates the service status
l L/A1 and L/A2 indicators, orange or green, which indicate the connection status of the port
l CRIT indicator, red, which indicates critical alarms
l MAJ indicator, orange, which indicates major alarms
l MIN indicator, yellow, which indicates minor alarms
l LINK indicator, green, which indicates the port connection status
l ACT indicator, yellow, which indicates the data transceiving status of the port
NOTE
Above the ETH/OAM and four FE service interfaces, five pairs of LINK and ACT indicators are present,
which indicate the connection status of the Ethernet interface.
Buttons
The following buttons are present on the front panel of the CXPG/CXPH:
l RST button, which is used for warm reset of the board. When you press the RST button
and then release it, the board is reset (warm).
l CF RCV button, which is used to restore the configuration data from the CF card. When
you hold down the CF RCV button for five seconds, the equipment automatically restores
the configuration data from the CF card.
l LAMP button, which is used to test the indicators. When you press the LAMP button,
except the LINK indicators on the ADS2A/ADS2B, the FE service port indicators on the
EF8T/EF8F/CXPG/CXPH, and the L/A indicators on the CXPG/CXPH, all the board
indicators on the NE are on.
Interfaces
Table 2-14 lists the types and usage of the interfaces on the CXPG/CXPH.
ETH/ RJ-45 10M/100M interface for NM For details, see For details, see
OAM network port or NM serial Table 2-15. 5.5
port Management
Cables.
CLK1/ RJ-45 External time/clock input/ For details, see For details, see
TOD1 output interface Table 2-16. 5.6 Clock
CLK2/ Cables.
TOD2
PHONE RJ-45 Orderwire interface For details, see For details, see
Table 2-17. 5.5
Management
Cables.
FE1 to RJ-45 Input/output interface for FE For details, see For details, see
FE4 electrical signals Table 2-18. 5.4.1 Ethernet
Cables.
OUT1 LC Input/output interface for GE For details, see For details, see
IN1, optical signals Table 2-19. 5.1.1 Fiber
OUT2 Types.
IN2
7 Unspecified
Table 2-16 lists the pins of the CLK1/TOD1 and CLK2/TOD2 interfaces.
NOTE
The CLK1/TOD1 and CLK2/TOD2 interfaces can be configured so that they can work in one of the
preceding five working modes.
1 to 3 Unspecified
4 RING
87654321 5 TIP
6 to 8 Unspecified
Table 2-18 lists the pins of the FE1 interface to FE4 interface.
4 Undefined
5 Undefined
7 Undefined
8 Undefined
Table 2-19 list the pins of the OUT1 IN1 and OUT2 IN2 interfaces.
1 Rx1 25 Tx1
2 26
3 Rx2 27 Tx2
4 28
5 Rx3 29 Tx3
6 30
7 Rx4 31 Tx4
8 32
9 Rx5 33 Tx5
10 34
11 Rx6 35 Tx6
12 36
13 Rx7 37 Tx7
14 38
15 Rx8 39 Tx8
16 40
17 Rx9 41 Tx9
18 42
19 R x 10 43 T x 10
20 44
21 R x 11 45 T x 11
22 46
23 R x 12 47 T x 12
24 48
49 R x 13 73 T x 13
50 74
51 R x 14 75 T x 14
52 76
53 R x 15 77 T x 15
54 78
55 R x 16 79 T x 16
56 80
You can use the U2000 to set the following parameters for the CXPG/CXPH:
l Ethernet interface
l PDH interface
l External time interface
l Phase-locked source output by External clock
Interface Specifications
The interface specifications of the CXPG are as follows:
FE electrical interface
Item Specification
Item Specification
Working 770 to 860 1270 to 1360 1260 to 1360 1500 to 1580 For details, see For details, see
wavelength wavelength wavelength
range (nm) allocation of allocation of
1000BASE- 1000BASE-
CWDM BX optical
optical interfaces and
interfaces and related optical
related optical module code.
module code.
Minimum 0 -3 -3 -3 -9 -3
overload
(dBm)
Minimum 9 9 9 9 8.2 6
extinction
ratio (dB)
Optical 34060286 34060473 34060298 34060360 For details, see For details, see
module code 34060290 34060324 wavelength wavelength
allocation of allocation of
1000BASE- 1000BASE-
CWDM BX optical
optical interfaces and
interfaces and related optical
related optical module code.
module code.
NOTE
For details of the optical module, see 4.2 Optical Module Labels.
Table 2-23 Wavelength allocation of 1000BASE-CWDM optical interfaces and related optical module code
Table 2-24 Wavelength allocation of 1000BASE-BX optical interfaces and related optical module code
Other Specifications
Board dimensions (mm): 20.3 (H) x 226.0 (D) x 388.4 (W)
2.4 EF8T
This section describes the EF8T, which is an interface board with eight FE electrical interfaces,
with regard to the version, functions, features, working principle, front panel, valid slots, and
technical specifications.
Management bus
8 x FE electrical signals Access and Service Control CXP
bus
convergence driver Service bus
module module CXP
Clock signals
Clock signals
Clock Clock signals
CXP
module
NOTE
As shown in Figure 2-6, the CXP on the backplane indicates the system control, cross-connect and protocol
processing board. For OptiX PTN 910, the CXP indicates the CXPA/CXPB/CXPG/CXPH.
Clock Module
This module performs the following functions:
Indicator
The following indicators are present on the front panel of the EF8T:
l STAT indicator, red, green, or orange, which indicates the working status
l SRV indicator, red, green, or orange, which indicates the service status
l LINK indicator, green, which indicates the connection status of the port
l ACT indicator, yellow, which indicates the data transceiving status of the port
NOTE
There are eight LINK indicators and eight ACT indicators. One LINK indicator and one ACT indicator
are present above each FE service interface.
Interface
Table 2-27 lists the types and usage of the interfaces on the EF8T.
FE1 - FE8 RJ-45 Input/output interfaces For details, see For details, see
for FE electrical signals Table 2-28. 5.4.1 Ethernet
Cables.
NOTE
The FE1 to FE8 interfaces support auto-adaptation to a straight-through network cable or a crossover
network cable.
4 Unspecified
5 Unspecified
7 Unspecified
8 Unspecified
RJ-45 electrical interface Complies with IEEE 802.3 and enterprise regulations.
specification
2.5 EF8F
This section describes the EF8F, which is an interface board with eight FE optical interfaces,
with regard to the version, functions, features, working principle, front panel, valid slots, and
technical specifications.
2.5.1 Version Description
The functional version of the EF8F is TND1.
2.5.2 Functions and Features
The EF8F mainly accesses 8 x FE optical signals, and processes the services with the CXPA/
CXPB/CXPG/CXPH.
2.5.3 Working Principle and Signal Flow
The EF8F mainly consists of the access and convergence module, control driver module, clock
module, and power supply module.
2.5.4 Front Panel
On the front panel of the EF8F, there are indicators and interfaces.
2.5.5 Valid Slots
The EF8F can be housed in any of slots 3 - 4 in the slot area.
2.5.6 Board Configuration Reference
You can use the U2000 to set parameters for the EF8F.
2.5.7 Technical Specifications
The technical specifications of the EF8F include the interface specifications, board dimensions,
weight, and power consumption.
Clock signals
NOTE
As shown in Figure 2-8, the CXP on the backplane indicates the system control, cross-connect and protocol
processing board. For OptiX PTN 910, the CXP indicates the CXPA/CXPB/CXPG/CXPH.
Clock Module
This module performs the following functions:
l Provides the working clock for each module on the EF8F.
l Supports the synchronous Ethernet and the SSM protocol.
l Supports the IEEE 1588V2 protocol.
l Supports the 1588 ACR clock.
Indicators
The following indicators are present on the front panel of the EF8F:
l STAT indicator, red, green, or orange, which indicates the working status
l SRV indicator, red, green, or orange, which indicates the service status
l LINK1 to LINK8 indicators, green, which indicate the connection status of the port
Interfaces
Eight SFP interfaces are present on the EF8F. Table 2-31 lists the types and usage of the
interfaces.
IN1 - IN8 LC When a two-fiber bidirectional optical For details, see 5.1.1
module is used, this interface is used as Fiber Types.
an input interface for the FE optical
signal.
When a single-fiber bidirectional
optical module is used, this interface is
not used.
You can use the U2000 to set the following parameter for the EF8F:
Ethernet interface
Table 2-32 lists the specifications of the optical interfaces of the EF8F.
Item Specification
Working 1261 to 1360 1263 to 1360 1480 to 1580 For details, see For details, see
wavelength wavelength wavelength
range (nm) allocation of allocation of
100BASE-BX 100BASE-BX
optical optical
interfaces and interfaces and
related optical related optical
module code. module code.
Item Specification
Optical module 34060276 34060281 34060282 For details, see For details, see
code 34060307 34060308 34060309 wavelength wavelength
allocation of allocation of
100BASE-BX 100BASE-BX
optical optical
interfaces and interfaces and
related optical related optical
module code. module code.
NOTE
For details of the optical module, see 4.2 Optical Module Labels.
Table 2-33 Wavelength allocation of 100BASE-BX optical interfaces and related optical module code
Item Local Remote
2.6 EG2
This section describes the EG2, which is an interface board with two GE optical interfaces, with
regard to the version, functions, features, working principle, front panel, valid slots, and technical
specifications.
2.6.1 Version Description
The functional version of the EG2 is TND1.
2.6.2 Functions and Features
The EG2 mainly accesses 2 x GE signals, and processes the services with the CXPA/CXPB/
CXPG/CXPH.
2.6.3 Working Principle and Signal Flow
The EG2 mainly consists of the interface conversion module, control driving module, clock
module, and power supply module.
2.6.4 Front Panel
On the front panel of the EG2, there are indicators and interfaces.
2.6.5 Valid Slots
The EG2 can be housed in any of slots 3 to 4 in the slot area.
2.6.6 Board Configuration Reference
You can use the U2000 to set parameters for the EG2.
2.6.7 Technical Specifications
The technical specifications of the EG2 include the interface specifications, board dimensions,
weight, and power consumption.
Figure 2-10 shows the block diagram for the functions of the EG2.
Management bus
2 x GE signals Interface Service bus Control CXP
conversion driver Service bus
module module CXP
Clock signals
Clock signals
Clock Clock signals
CXP
module
NOTE
As shown in Figure 2-10, the CXP on the backplane indicates the system control, cross-connect and
protocol processing board. For OptiX PTN 910, the CXP indicates the CXPA/CXPB/CXPG/CXPH.
Clock module
This module performs the following functions:
Indicators
The following indicators are present on the front panel of the EG2.
l STAT indicator, red, green, or orange, which indicates the working status
l SRV indicator, red, green, or orange, which indicates the service status
l LINK1 to LINK2 indicators, green, which indicate the connection status of the port
l ACT1 to ACT2 indicators, yellow, which indicate the data transceiving status of the port
Interfaces
Two SFP interfaces are present on the EFG2. Table 2-35 lists the types and usage of the interfaces
on the EG2.
Working 770 to 860 1270 to 1360 1260 to 1360 1500 to 1580 For details, see For details, see
wavelength wavelength wavelength
range (nm) allocation of allocation of
1000BASE- 1000BASE-
CWDM BX optical
optical interfaces and
interfaces and related optical
related optical module code.
module code.
Minimum 0 -3 -3 -3 -9 -3
overload
(dBm)
Minimum 9 9 9 9 8.2 6
extinction
ratio (dB)
Optical 34060286 34060473 34060298 34060360 For details, see For details, see
module code 34060290 34060324 wavelength wavelength
allocation of allocation of
1000BASE- 1000BASE-
CWDM BX optical
optical interfaces and
interfaces and related optical
related optical module code.
module code.
NOTE
For details of the optical module, see 4.2 Optical Module Labels.
Table 2-37 Wavelength allocation of 1000BASE-CWDM optical interfaces and related optical module code
SN Optical module Wavelength (nm) SN Optical Wavelength (nm)
code module code
Table 2-38 Wavelength allocation of 1000BASE-BX optical interfaces and related optical module code
Item Local Remote
2.7 ML1/ML1A
This section describes the ML1/ML1A, which is a 16 x E1 electrical interface board, with regard
to the version, functions, features, working principle, front panel, valid slots, and technical
specifications.
NOTE
The ML1 and ML1A have the same functions and features except for the matched impedance (ML1: 75
ohms E1; ML1A: 120 ohms E1).
Basic functions Accesses and processes 16 x E1 signals and supports the ATM
E1, IMA, CES, and ML-PPP protocols.
Fractional E1 Supports the CES services and IMA services at 64 kbit/s level.
Maximum number of E1 16
links or 64 kbit/s level serial
ports in each IMA group
The packet loading time of the CES service can be set. The
encapsulation buffer time ranges from 0.125 ms to 3 ms, and
the step value is 0.125 ms.
Figure 2-12 Block diagram for the working principle of the ML1/ML1A
Backplane
Service Service
16 x E1 signals Line-side bus bus Backplane Service bus
System-side
processing interface CXP
processing module
module module
Management bus
Serial
management bus
Management bus Control module CXP
NOTE
As shown in Figure 2-12, the CXP on the backplane indicates the system control, cross-connect and
protocol processing board. For OptiX PTN 910, the CXP indicates the CXPA/CXPB/CXPG/CXPH.
In Transmit Direction
The ML1/ML1A first distributes the signals in Ethernet packets from the backplane to different
protocol processing chips according to the service types. The system-side processing module
decapsulates the concatenated services and buffers the services in queues. Then, this module
schedules the egress queues according to the service types, processes and converts the services,
and finally sends the services to the line-side processing module. The line-side processing
module performs coding, dejitter, pulse shaping, and line driving for the services, and finally
sends the services to E1 interfaces.
In Receive Direction
The line processing module performs impedance match, signal equalization, signal level
conversion, clock data recovery, dejitter, and decoding for the accessed E1 signals. Then, the
signals are sent into the system-side processing module, which frames the signals, encapsulates
the IMA, CES, and ML-PPP services in PWE3, and schedules PWs. Finally, this module sends
the signals in Ethernet packets to the backplane interface module.
Control Module
This module controls the reading and writing on the chip, resets the chip, and detects faults in
the chip.When used with the CXPA/CXPB/CXPG/CXPH, this module controls the board.
Clock Module
This module provides various clock signals for the board to operate normally, detects clocks,
and selects the line recovery clock.
Figure 2-14 shows the appearance of the front panel of the ML1A.
Indicators
The following indicators are present on the front panel of the ML1/ML1A:
l STAT indicator, red, green, or orange, which indicates the working status
l SRV indicator, red, green, or orange, which indicates the service status
Interfaces
There is one Anea 96 interface on the front panel of the ML1/ML1A. Table 2-40 lists the type
and usage of the interface. For cables corresponding to the interfaces, see 5.4.2 75-Ohm 16 x
E1 Cablesand 5.4.3 120-Ohm 16 x E1 Cables.
Table 2-40 Type and usage of the interface on the front panel of the ML1
1 Rx1 25 Tx1
2 26
3 Rx2 27 Tx2
4 28
5 Rx3 29 Tx3
6 30
7 Rx4 31 Tx4
8 32
9 Rx5 33 Tx5
10 34
11 Rx6 35 Tx6
12 36
13 Rx7 37 Tx7
14 38
15 Rx8 39 Tx8
16 40
17 Rx9 41 Tx9
18 42
19 R x 10 43 T x 10
20 44
21 R x 11 45 T x 11
22 46
23 R x 12 47 T x 12
24 48
49 R x 13 73 T x 13
50 74
51 R x 14 75 T x 14
52 76
53 R x 15 77 T x 15
54 78
55 R x 16 79 T x 16
56 80
2.8 CD1
This section describes the CD1, which is a 1 x channelized STM-1 service processing board, in
terms of the version, functions, features, working principle, front panel, valid slots, and technical
specifications.
Fractional E1 Supports the CES services and IMA services at 64 kibt/s level.
All the VC-12 timeslots of each CD1 interface support the DCN
function. By default, the DCN function of only the first, seventeenth,
thirty-third, and forty-ninth VC-12 timeslots of each optical interface
can be enabled.
Manually enables or disables the DCN function of the VC-12
timeslots of the optical interface on the CD1.
Maximum number of 63
VC-12 timeslots or serial
ports in each IMA group
The jitter compensation buffer time of the CES service can be set. The
jitter buffer time ranges from 0.375 ms to 16 ms, and the step value
is 0.125 ms.
The packet loading time of the CES service can be set. The
encapsulation buffer time ranges from 0.125 ms to 3 ms, and the step
value is 0.125 ms.
LMSP protection Supports the 1+1 LMSP and 1:1 LMSP protection schemes.
Figure 2-15 shows the block diagram for working principle of the CD1.
Figure 2-15 Block diagram for the working principle of the CD1
Channelized Backplane
STM-1
SDH Service Line Service Data Service
Stand-by
processing signal processing signal processing signal
channelized CXP
STM-1 module module module
Management
Management bus Management bus
bus
Line clocks
Clock CXP
Line clocks
module System clocks
CXP
3.3V -48V/-60V
. . Power PIU
. . supply
. -48V/-60V
1.2V . module PIU
NOTE
As shown in Figure 2-15, the CXP on the backplane indicates the system control, cross-connect and
protocol processing board. For OptiX PTN 910, the CXP indicates the CXPA/CXPB/CXPG/CXPH.
Receive Direction
In the receive direction, the SDH processing module accesses 1 x channelized STM-1 services
through the interface on the front panel. This module decapsulates the VC-12 timeslots from the
STM-1 signals, recovers the E1 signals, processes the overhead bytes, pointers, and alarm
signals, and sends the processed signals to the line processing module. Then, the line processing
module rearranges the E1 frames, processes the rearranged signals according to the service type,
and sends the signals to the data processing module for PWE3 encapsulation and PW scheduling.
Finally, the signals are sent to the CXPA/CXPB/CXPG/CXPH through the interface on the
backplane.
Transmit Direction
In the transmit direction, the data processing module receives the signals from the CXPA/
CXPB/CXPG/CXPH, identifies the signals, performs the PWE3 decapsulation, and then sends
the signals to the line processing module. The line processing module processes various signals,
schedules queues, and sends the processed signals to the SDH processing module. The SDH
processing module maps the E1 signals to the VC-12 timeslots, multiplexes the VC-12 timeslots
to the STM-1 signals, adds the overhead bytes and pointers, processes the alarm signals, and
sends out the STM-1 signals through the interface on the front panel.
l In the receive direction, this module accesses 1 x channelized STM-1 signals, decapsulates
the VC-12 timeslots from the STM-1 signals, obtains the E1 signals by demapping the
VC-12 timeslots, and processes the overhead bytes, pointers, and alarm signals.
l In the transmit direction, this module receives the E1 signals from the line processing
module, maps the signals to the VC-12 timeslots, multiplexes the VC-12 timeslots to
STM-1 signals, adds the overhead bytes and pointers, processes the alarm signals, and sends
out the 1 x channelized STM-1 signals through the interface on the backplane.
l When the service fails, this module realizes the LMSP protection. Thus, the service is
switched.
l This module extracts and recovers the line clocks.
l In the receive direction, this module receives the signals from the SDH processing module,
rearranges the frames of the E1 signals, performs processing for various services such as
setup and deletion of the IMA link, creation of the ML-PPP group, extraction of protocol
packets in the ML-PPP services, and suppression of timeslots of the CES services. Then,
the processed signals are sent to the data processing module.
l In the transmit direction, this module receives the signals from the data processing module,
processes various services, and sends the processed signals to the SDH processing module.
l In the receive direction, this module obtains the corresponding PW channel information of
each E1 service, performs the PWE3 encapsulation and PW scheduling, and sends the
processed signals to the CXPA/CXPB/CXPG/CXPH through the interface on the
backplane.
l In the transmit direction, this module receives the signals from the CXPA/CXPB/CXPG/
CXPH, identifies different service types, and performs the PWE3 decapsulation and service
scheduling.
l In the case of the ATM E1 or IMA services, this module performs the VP/VC switching
for the ATM cells, and processes the concatenated cells during the PWE3 encapsulation or
decapsulation.
Management Module
When used with the CXPA/CXPB/CXPG/CXPH, this module manages and controls each
module on the CD1.
Clock Module
This module performs the following functions:
l Accesses and processes the system clock from the CXPA/CXPB/CXPG/CXPH, and
provides the working clock to each module on the CD1.
l Supports the SSM protocol.
Indicators
The following indicators are present on the front panel of the CD1:
l STAT indicator, red, green, or orange, which indicates the working status
l SRV indicator, red, green, or orange, which indicates the service status
l LOS1 and LOS2 indicators, red, green, or orange, which indicate the port status
Interfaces
Table 2-44 lists the amount, types, and usage of the interfaces on the CD1.
Item Specification
Working 1261 to 1360 1263 to 1360 1480 to 1580 For details, see For details, see
wavelength wavelength wavelength
range (nm) allocation of allocation of
single-fiber single-fiber
bidirectional bidirectional
optical interface optical interface
and related and related
optical module optical module
code. code.
Optical module 34060276 34060281 34060282 For details, see For details, see
code 34060307 34060308 34060309 wavelength wavelength
allocation of allocation of
single-fiber single-fiber
bidirectional bidirectional
optical interface optical interface
and related and related
optical module optical module
code. code.
Item Specification
NOTE
For details of the optical module, see 4.2 Optical Module Labels.
Table 2-46 Wavelength allocation of single-fiber bidirectional interface optical interface and related optical module
code
Item Local Remote
2.9 ADS2A/ADS2B
This section describes the ADS2A/ADS2B, a 2-channel ADSL service interface board, in terms
of the version, functions, features, working principle, front panel, valid slots, and technical
specifications.
NOTE
The ADS2A and ADS2B have the same functions, except for supporting different modes. The ADS2A
supports the Annex A mode and the ADS2B supports the Annex B mode. The following refers the ADS2A
and ADS2B uniformly as ADS2.
Basic Function Provides two ADSL interfaces and accesses 2 x ADSL signals.
Supports PVC pair setting for ports (eight PVC for each port).
Application scenario The ADS2 is applied in the offload scenario. On the access side,
the OptiX PTN 910 performs ATM PWE3 emulation for the
HSDPA service flow. Then, the emulated service is
encapsulated in the tunnel required by the WMS network.
Finally, the ADS2 performs ATM adaptation for the service.
When entering the ADSL network, the encapsulated service is
transported to the opposite equipment, then decapsulated, and
finally transported to the RNC node.
ANSI T1.413
Figure 2-17 shows the block diagram for the working principle of the ADS2.
Figure 2-17 Block diagram for the working principle of the ADS2
Backplane
Service Service
Parallel/serial bus
bus converting CXP
Logic module
Two-channel ADSL Management
transceiver control Serial management bus
ADSL signals bus
Line module CXP
driver Status signal
CXP
-48V/-60V
1.2 V PIU
2.5 V Power supply
3.3 V module -48V/-60V
5V PIU
NOTE
As shown in Figure 2-17, the CXP on the backplane indicates the system control, cross-connect and
protocol processing board. For OptiX PTN 910, the CXP indicates the CXPA/CXPB/CXPG/CXPH.
l The ADSL transceiver unit performs ATM AAL5 adaptation and encapsulation for the
service sent by the interface converting and control module and finally outputs the ADSL
service.
l The line driver unit amplifies the signals to be transmitted.
The system control board controls and manages the board through the serial management bus.
In addition, the logic control unit detects alarms and reports them to the CXPA/CXPB/CXPG/
CXPH through the serial management bus.
Clock Module
The clock module provides working clock signals to each module.
Indicators
l STAT indicator, red, green, or orange, which indicates the working status
l STAT indicator, red, green, or orange, which indicates the working status
l LINK1 and LINK2 indicators, green, which indicate the port connection status.
Interfaces
Table 2-48 lists the types of the interfaces on the ADS2 and their respective usage.
ADSL1, ADSL2 RJ-11 Accesses two channels of For details, see 5.4.4
ADSL services. xDSL Cables.
Table 2-49 lists the pins of the ADSL1 and ADSL2 interfaces.
Table 2-49 Pins of the ADSL1 and ADSL2 interface on the ADS2
1 Unspecified
2 Unspecified
3 RING
4 TIP
6543 21
5 Unspecified
6 Unspecified
You can use the U2000 to configure the following parameters for the ADS2.
ADSL Interface
Table 2-50 and Table 2-51 list the performance specifications of the ADS2A/ADS2B.
2.10 SHD4
This section describes the SHD4, a 4-channel G.SHDSL service interface board, in terms of the
version, functions, features, working principle, front panel, valid slots, and technical
specifications.
The SHD4 mainly consists of the service access module, interface converting module, clock
module, and power supply module.
2.10.4 Front Panel
On the front panel of the SHD4, there are indicators, and interfaces.
2.10.5 Valid Slots
The SHD4 can be housed in any of slots 3 - 4.
2.10.6 Board Configuration Reference
You can use the U2000 to configure parameters for the SDH4.
2.10.7 Technical Specifications
The technical specifications of the SHD4 cover the performance specifications, board
dimensions, weight, and power consumption.
Application scenario The SHD4 is applied in the offload scenario. On the access side,
the OptiX PTN 910 performs ATM PWE3 emulation for the
HSDPA service flow. Then, the emulated service is
encapsulated in the tunnel required by the WMS network.
Finally, the SHD4 performs ATM adaptation for the service.
When entering the xDSL network, the encapsulated service is
transported to the opposite equipment, then decapsulated, and
finally transported to the RNC node.
Figure 2-20 shows the block diagram for the working principle of the SHD4.
Figure 2-20 Block diagram for the working principle of the SHD4
Backplane
Clock signals
Each module Clock signals
Clock module CXP
of the board
Service
Parallel/serial
Signal bus
Service bus converting CXP
4 x G.SHDSL voltage Service module
and encapsulation Logic
signals
performs and bundling Management control Serial management bus
bus unit CXP
protection module
module Status signal
CXP
Interface converting and control
Service access module
module
1.2 V -48V/-60V
To each PIU
1.5 V Power supply
module module
3.3 V -48V/-60V
PIU
NOTE
As shown in Figure 2-20, the CXP on the backplane indicates the system control, cross-connect and
protocol processing board. For OptiX PTN 910, the CXP indicates the CXPA/CXPB/CXPG/CXPH.
The system control board controls and manages the board through the serial management bus.
In addition, the logic control unit detects alarms and reports them to the CXPA/CXPB/CXPG/
CXPH through the serial management bus.
Clock Module
The clock module provides working clock for each module on the SHD4.
Indicators
l STAT indicator, red, green, or orange, which indicates the working status
l SRV indicator, red, green, or orange, which indicates the service status
l LINK1/LINK2/LINK3/LINK4 indicators, green, which indicate the port connection status.
Interfaces
Table 2-53 lists the types of the interfaces on the SHD4 and their respective usage.
SHDSL1 - RJ-11 Accesses the first 4 x G.SHDSL For details, see 5.4.4
SHDSL4 services. xDSL Cables.
1 Unspecified
2 Unspecified
3 TIP
4 RING
6543 21
5 Unspecified
6 Unspecified
2.11 SHD4I
This section describes the SHD4I, a 4-channel SHDSL service interface board that supports the
IMA mode, in terms of the version, functions, features, working principle, front panel, valid
slots, and technical specifications.
Figure 2-22 Block diagram for the working principle of the SHD4I
Management and Backplane
control bus
Service signals
IMA processing IMA service signals CXP
module ATM cells
Serial
Interface management bus
converting and CXP
control module
4 x G.SHDSL signals Service access IMA service signals
Status signal bus
module Management CXP
and control bus
NOTE
As shown in Figure 2-22, the CXP on the backplane indicates the system control, cross-connect and
protocol processing board. For OptiX PTN 910, the CXP indicates the CXPA/CXPB/CXPG/CXPH.
l In the receive direction, this module converts the serial packets to parallel packets, and
sends the parallel packets to the interface converting and control module.
l In the transmit direction, this module receives the IMA service signals from the interface
converting and control module, converts the serial IMA service signals to parallel IMA
service signals, and finally sends the parallel IMA service signals to the G.SHDSL
interfaces.
l In addition, this module extracts the NTR clock signals from the G.SHDSL service signals
received and sends the clock signals to the clock module.
Clock Module
This module performs the following functions:
l Selects a clock source from the four channels of NTR clock signals and uploads the clock
signals to the CXPA/CXPB/CXPG/CXPH.
l Provides working clock signals for each module on the SHD4I board.
l 1.2 V
Indicator
The following indicators are present on the front panel of the SHD4I:
l STAT indicator, red, green, or orange, which indicates the working status
l SRV indicator, red, green, or orange, which indicates the service status
l LINK1, LINK2, LINK3 and LINK4 indicators, green, which indicate the port connection
status.
For details on indications of indicators, see B Indicators.
Interface
Table 2-57 lists the types of the interfaces on the SHD4I and their respective usage.
SHDSL1- RJ-11 Input and output G.SHDSL For details, see 5.4.4
SHDSL4 signals. xDSL Cables.
1 Unspecified
2 Unspecified
3 TIP
4 RING
6 5 4 3 2 1
5 Unspecified
6 Unspecified
You can use the U2000 to configure the following parameters for the SHD4I.
G.SHDSL Interface
2.12 PIU
This section describes the PIU, a power input unit, in terms of the version, functions, features,
working principle, front panel, valid slots, and technical specifications.
Power access One PIU accesses two -48 V DC (or -60 V DC) power supplies for
the equipment.
Power protection The PIU protects the power supply against overcurrent and short
circuit. In this way, the overcurrent is prevented from shocking
boards and components on them.
Lightning protection The PIU protects the equipment against lightning and reports an
alarm if the protection fails.
Figure 2-24 shows the block diagram for the working principle of the PIU.
Figure 2-24 Block diagram for the working principle of the PIU
Backplane
-48 V/-60 V Lightning protection and
failure detection module
Each board
NOTE
In Figure 2-24, the CXP on the backplane indicates the system control, cross-connect and protocol
processing board. For OptiX PTN 910, the CXP indicates the CXPA/CXPB/CXPG/CXPH.
Indicators
The following indicator is present on the front panel of the PIU.
PWRA/PWRB, green, which indicates the power supply status. When PWRA/PWRB is on and
green, it indicates that power is accessed.
Interfaces
The PIU accesses two power supplies. Table 2-61 lists the types of the interfaces on the PIU
and their respective usage. For cable corresponding to the interfaces, see 5.2 -48 V Power Supply
Cable.
Label
Operation warning label: indicates the following precaution, which should be taken for removal
or insertion of the PIU board.
CAUTION
Multiple power supplies are accessed for the equipment. When powering off the equipment,
make sure that these power supplies are disabled.
Do not remove or insert the board with power on.
2.13 FAN
This section describes the FAN, a fan board, in terms of the version, functions, features, working
principle, front panel, valid slots, and technical specifications.
The technical specifications of the FAN cover the board dimensions, weight, power
consumption, and input voltage.
l Accesses one 12 V power supply for driving three fans that each consumes 6 W power.
l Provides start-delay for the power supply of the fans and protects fans against
overcurrent.
l Intelligently adjusts the rotating speed of fans to ensure proper heat dissipation of the
system.
l Reports information about the fan rotating speed, environment temperature, alarms, version
number, and board in-position information.
l Provides alarm indicators.
Figure 2-26shows the block diagram for the working principle of the FAN.
Figure 2-26 Block diagram for the working principle of the FAN
Fans x 3
12 V Backplane
12 V 12V
Start-delay module
CXP
Fan-speed signals
Fan-speed
reporting module CXP
NOTE
In the block diagram, the CXP on the backplane indicates the system control, cross-connect and protocol
processing board. For OptiX PTN 910, the CXP indicates the CXPA/CXPB/CXPG/CXPH.
Start-delay Module
This module has the function of provides start-delay to the power supply for fans and protects
fans against overcurrent.
Indicators
The following indicators are present on the front panel of the FAN:
Handle
The handle is used for pushing the FAN into or pulling the FAN out of the chassis during board
replacement.
Label
The following labels are present on the front panel of the FAN:
3 Filler Panel
Appearance
Figure 3-1 shows the appearance of a filler panel.
Valid Slots
A filler panel can be housed in any of slots 3-4 of a chassis.
Optical interface boards for the OptiX PTN 910 use the enhanced small form-factor pluggable
(eSFP) optical module.
The eSFP optical module, which is a protocol-independent optical transceiver applicable to
optical communication, implements O/E and E/O conversion for signals, and supports query of
information such as the transceiver performance and manufacturer.
4.1 Appearance and Application
The eSFP optical module can be inserted in GE, FE, and STM-1 optical interfaces.
4.2 Optical Module Labels
Optical module labels, attached on back of the optical modules, are used to distinguish different
types of optical modules.
Appearance
Figure 4-1 shows the appearance of the eSFP optical module.
Application
Table 4-1 lists the boards where the eSFP optical module is applicable.
1.25G-80km-1550nm
34060360
As shown in Table 4-2, different types of optical modules have different codes.
This chapter describes various fibers and cables used on the equipment, including fibers, power
cables, grounding cables, service cables, management cables, clock cables, and alarm cables.
5.1 Fibers
This section describes the types of fibers and fiber connectors.
5.2 -48 V Power Supply Cable
The OptiX PTN 910 uses 1 U DC connectors to receive external power.
5.3 Protection Grounding Cables
Protection grounding cables are used to ground the OptiX PTN 910.
5.4 Service Cables
The service cables include Ethernet cables, 75-ohm 16 x E1 cables, 120-ohm 16 x E1 cables,
and telephone wires.
5.5 Management Cables
On the OptiX PTN 910, Ethernet cables are used to input and output NM signals.
5.6 Clock Cables
The clock cables used on the OptiX PTN 910 include external clock cables and 120-to-75-ohm
clock cables.
5.7 Alarm Input/Output Cables
On the OptiX PTN 910, the RJ-45 connectors are used to input the alarm signals from the external
equipment and output the local alarm signals to the equipment that monitors all the alarms.
5.1 Fibers
This section describes the types of fibers and fiber connectors.
Table 5-1 lists the types of fibers used on the OptiX PTN 910.
2 mm multi- 10 m, 20 m
mode fiber
Select proper fiber connectors and fibers of proper length according to the site survey.
Table 5-2 lists the types and usage of the fiber connectors applicable to the equipment.
LC/PC Plug-in square fiber connector/ Used at the optical interfaces on all the
protruding polished boards on the OptiX PTN equipment
FC/PC Round fiber connector/protruding Used at the client-side ODF or the optical
polished interfaces on other equipment
Only axial operations instead of rotation is required to insert or remove the LC/PC fiber
connector. To insert or remove an LC/PC fiber connector, do as follows:
l To insert the fiber jumper into the LC/PC connector, align the head of the fiber jumper with
the optical interface and then push the fiber jumper with proper force into the connector.
l To remove the LC/PC fiber jumper, press the clip first, push the fiber connector inward
slightly, and then pull out the connector.
2.5 mm2 Electronic/Electric wire, 450 V/ Bare crimp terminal, single cord end
power cable 750V, H07Z, K, 2.5 mm2, blue/ terminal, 2.5 mm2, 12.5 A, tin plating, 8
and terminal black green, fire resistant cable mm deep, blue
with low smoke and no halogen
NOTE
In the case of the OptiX PTN 910 equipment, there are following limitations on mapping relations between
the cable length and the cross-sectional area.
If the cross-sectional area is 2.5 mm2, the maximum cable length is 50 m.
Protection grounding cables are made of wires and OT terminals. Figure 5-5 shows the
appearance of a protection grouding cable. The technical specifications of the protection
grounding cable are listed in Table 5-4.
Table 5-4 Technical specifications of the power cable and protection grounding cable
Wire Related Parameter Terminal Related Parameter
Electronic/Electric wire, 450 V/750 V, H07Z, Bare crimp terminal, OT, 2.5 mm2, M4, tin
K, 2.5 mm2, yellow green, fire resistant cable plating, pre-insulated ring terminal,
with low smoke and no halogen 16-14AWG, blue
NOTE
In the case of the OptiX PTN 910 equipment, there are following limitations on mapping relations between
the cable length and the cross-sectional area.
If the cross-sectional area is 2.5 mm2, the maximum cable length is 50 m.
Structure
Figure 5-6 shows the appearance of the network cable.
RJ-45 connectors are used at both ends of a network cable. Figure 5-7 shows an RJ-45 connector
and Figure 5-8 shows the structure of the network cable.
8 W 8
1 1
X1 X2
NOTE
For a crossover cable, pins 1 and 2 of the RJ-45 connector at one end must be cross-connected to pins 3
and 6 of the RJ-45 connector at the other end respectively.
Pin Assignment
Table 5-5 lists the pin assignment of the network cable connector.
Technical Specifications
Table 5-6 lists the technical specifications of the network cable. For the technical specifications
of connector X1/X2, see Figure 5-8 and Figure 5-6.
Number of Eight
cores
At one end of the 75-ohm 16 x E1 cable, the Anea96 connector is used to connect the 75-ohm
E1 electrical interface on the board; the other end is connected to the digital distribution frame
(DDF). Make the connector as required on site.
Structure
Figure 5-9 shows the appearance of the 75-ohm 16 x E1 cable and Figure 5-10 shows the
structure of the cable.
X1 A
View A Pos.96
Cable Connector, Anea, 96PIN,
Female Connector
Pos .1
Pin Assignment
Table 5-7 lists the pin assignment of the 75-ohm 16 x E1 cable connector.
1 Tip 1 R0 25 Tip 2 T0
2 Ring 26 Ring
3 Tip 3 R1 27 Tip 4 T1
4 Ring 28 Ring
5 Tip 5 R2 29 Tip 6 T2
6 Ring 30 Ring
7 Tip 7 R3 31 Tip 8 T3
8 Ring 32 Ring
9 Tip 9 R4 33 Tip 10 T4
10 Ring 34 Ring
11 Tip 11 R5 35 Tip 12 T5
12 Ring 36 Ring
13 Tip 13 R6 37 Tip 14 T6
14 Ring 38 Ring
15 Tip 15 R7 39 Tip 16 T7
16 Ring 40 Ring
17 Tip 17 R8 41 Tip 18 T8
18 Ring 42 Ring
19 Tip 19 R9 43 Tip 20 T9
20 Ring 44 Ring
22 Ring 46 Ring
24 Ring 48 Ring
50 Ring 74 Ring
52 Ring 76 Ring
54 Ring 78 Ring
56 Ring 80 Ring
Technical Specifications
Cable type Coaxial Cable, SYFVZP-MC 75-1-1*32, 75 ohm, 12.40 mm, 1.1
mm, 0.26 mm, Pantone Warm Gray 1U, Only for OEM
Number of cores 32
Available length 5 m, 10 m, 15 m, 20 m, 25 m, 30 m, 35 m, 40 m, 45 m, 50 m
Structure
Figure 5-11 shows the appearance of the 120-ohm 16 x E1 cable and Figure 5-12 shows the
structure of the cable.
X1 A
View A Pos.96
Cable Connector, Anea, 96PIN,
Female Connector
Pos .1
Pin assignment
Table 5-9 lists the pin assignment of the 120-ohm 16 x E1 cable connector.
4 Green 28 Brown
56 Grey 80 Blue
Technical Specifications
Cable Trunk Cable, 120 ohm, 16E1, 0.4 mm, Anea 96F,
120CC32P0.4P430U(S), +45deg
Cable type Twisted-Pair Cable, 120 ohm, SEYVP, 0.4 mm, 26AWG, 32Pairs,
Pantone 430U
Available length 5 m, 10 m, 15 m, 20 m, 25 m, 30 m, 35 m, 40 m, 45 m, 50 m
Structure
Figure 5-13 shows the structure of the telephone wire used as an xDSL cable.
6 W 6
1 1
X1 X2
15 m
Pin Assignment
Table 5-11 lists the pin assignment of the ADSL cable connector and Table 5-11 lists the pin
assignment of the G.SHDSL cable connector.
Technical Specifications
Table 5-13 lists the technical specifications of the xDSL cable (telephone wire).
Item Specification
RJ-11 Connector X1/ Network Interface Connector, 6-Bit 4PIN, Crystal Model
X2 Connector, Matching 26-28AWG
Number of cores 2
Available length 15 m
The management cables for the OptiX PTN 910 include Ethernet cables and orderwire telephone
wires.
l Ethernet cables are classified into straight through cables and crossover cables, and are
used for communication between the equipment and the NMS computer. Both the NM
interface and 64 kbit/s data-synchronization interface on the equipment are adaptive to a
straight through cable or a crossover cable.
Ethernet Cables
Figure 5-14 shows an RJ-45 connector used at the end of the Ethernet cable.
When the cable is connected to the ETH/OAM interface, the pin assignment of the RJ-45
connector is as listed in Table 5-14; when the cable is connected to the EXT/F1 interface, the
pin assignment of the RJ-45 connector is as listed in Table 5-15.
Item Specification
Structure
Figure 5-15 shows the structure of the RJ-45 connector used on the external clock cable.
Pin Assignment
The external clock cables must be made on the equipment installation site. When the CLK1/
TOD1 and CLK2/TOD2 interfaces are used as external clock interfaces, the pin assignment of
the RJ-45 connector is as listed in Table 5-17; when the CLK1/TOD1 and CLK2/TOD2
interfaces are used as external time interfaces, the pin assignment of the RJ-45 connector is as
listed in Table 5-18.
Table 5-17 Pin assignment of the RJ-45 connector (external clock mode)
Connector Color Relation Description
Pin
6 Green Unspecified
8 Brown Unspecified
Table 5-18 Pin assignment of the RJ-45 connector (external time mode)
Connecto Color Relation Description
r Pin
1PPS + Time DCLS Mode
Information Mode
Technical Specifications
Table 5-19 lists the technical specifications of the external clock cable.
Item Specification
Cable type Twisted-Pair Cable, 100 ohm, Category 5e, 0.52 mm, 24AWG, 8 Cores, 4
Pairs, PANTONE 430U
Number of Eight
cores
Structure
Figure 5-16 shows the structure of the 120-to-75-ohm clock bridging cable.
8
W5 Heat-shrink tube W2
A
1
W3
X1
W4
30 m
Pin Assignment
Table 5-20 lists the pin assignment of the clock bridging cable connector.
X1.2 White
X1.5 White
X1.6 White
X1.8 Brown
Technical Specifications
Table 5-21 lists the technical specifications of the clock bridging cable.
120-ohm cable Twisted-Pair Cable, 120 ohm, SEYVP, 0.4 mm, 26AWG, 4Pairs, Pantone
type 430U
Cable length 30 m
Structure
Figure 5-17 shows the structure of the alarm input/output cable.
RJ-45 Connector
Main label
8 W
X1
Pin Assignment
Table 5-22 lists the pin assignment of the alarm input/output alarm cable connector.
Technical Specifications
Table 5-23 lists the technical specifications of the alarm input/output cable.
Item Specification
Item Specification
Cable type Twisted-Pair Cable, 100 ohm, Category 5e, 0.52 mm, 24AWG, 8 Cores, 4
Pairs, PANTONE 430U
A Safety Labels
The equipment has various safety labels. This section describes the suggestions and locations
of these safety labels.
Label Description
There are labels on the chassis and boards. See Table A-1.
Fan warning label The label suggests that do not touch the fan
leaves when the fan is rotating.
HUAWEI
HUAWEI TECHNOLOGIES CO.,LTD. MADE IN CHINA
Product nameplate label The label suggests the product name and
OptiX PTN 910
POWER RATING: -48-60V;3.2A certification.
Class 1 Laser Product
N14036
HUAWEI TECHNOLGIES CO.,LTD. MADE IN CHINA
Label Position
Figure A-1 shows positions of labels on the chassis.
/QUALIFICATION CARD
N14036
HUAWEI
HUAW EI TECHNOLOGIES CO.,LTD. MADE IN CHINA
H U A W E I TE C H N O LG I E S C O . , LTD . MADE IN CHINA
B Indicators
This section describes the names of various indicators and their indications.
Index of Indicators
For boards and their indicators, see Boards and Their Indicators.
For combination of indicators in different start statuses on the system control board, see
Description of the Start Status Indicator Combination on the System Control Board.
CXPA/CXPB STAT, PROG, SYNC, SRV, CRIT, MAJ, MIN, LINK, ACT
CXPG/CXPH STAT, PROG, SYNC, SRV, CRIT, MAJ, MIN, L/A1, L/A2,
LINK, ACT
FAN FAN
Status Indication
On for 100 ms and off for Loading of the board software is in process.
100 ms alternately (green)
On for 300 ms and off for The BIOS is guiding the upper-layer software.
300 ms alternately (green)
On (green) l The clock works in free-run mode and the system clock
priority list is not set. By default, the system clock priority
list contains only internal sources.
l The clock works in locked mode and is tracing a clock source
other than the internal sources in the priority list.
l The system clock is working in time synchronization mode,
and the PTP time and system clock are in the tracing state.
On (red) l The system clock priority list is set. All the clock sources,
however, are lost except for the internal clock sources. The
clock works in holdover mode or free-run mode.
l The system clock is working in time synchronization mode,
but no synchronization source is available. The system clock
and PTP time are working in holdover or free-run mode.
Status Indication
Description of the Port Status Indicators of the ADS2 (LINK1 and LINK2)
Status Indication
On (green) Physical connections at the service port are normal and links are
activated.
On for 300 ms and off for l The board software is normally initialized
300 ms alternately (green) l No service is accessed.
On for 100 ms and off for Service connections are being activated.
100 ms alternately (green)
On (green) l Physical connections at the service port are normal and links
are activated.
l The board software is being initialized.
On for 300 ms and off for Service connections are being activated.
300 ms alternately (green)
Description of the Start Status Indicator Combination on the System Control Board
From power on to normal running, the system control board goes through various status. Table
B-1 shows the indicator combination corresponding to these statuses.
This chapter lists the power consumption and weight of each board used for the OptiX PTN
910.
Table C-1 lists the power consumption and weight of boards.
EF8T 0.53 9
You can use the U2000 to configure each parameter of the interface boards, cross-connect and
system control board.
l The attributes of an Ethernet interface cover the general attributes, Layer 2 attributes, Layer
3 attributes, advanced attributes and flow control. To configure an Ethernet interface,
configure the physical parameters, link layer parameters, network layer parameters and
flow control schemes.
l The attributes of a PDH interface cover the general attributes, Layer 3 attributes and
advanced attributes. To configure an E1 interface, configure the physical parameters,
network layer parameters, signal frame format, clock mode and loopback scheme.
l The attributes of an ADSL interface cover the general attributes, VPI/VCI of the interface,
and enabling status of the tunnel at the virtual interface
l The attributes of a G.SHDSL interface cover the general attributes, the interface mode
(ATM mode,,IMA mode and EFM mode included).
l The attributes of an SDH interface cover the general attributes, Layer 2 attributes, Layer 3
attributes and advanced attributes. To configure an SDH interface, configure the physical
parameters, link layer parameters and network layer parameters.
l The attributes of the path configuration cover the VC12 frame format and frame mode of
a channelized SDH interface.
l The J0 byte is continually transmitted to carry section access point identifiers, according
to which the receive end verifies the constant connection to the intended transmit end. It is
recommended to set the J0 byte to "0".
l The J1 byte is the path tracing byte. The transmit end successively transmits the higher
order access point identifiers, according to which the receive end verifies the constant
connection to the intended transmit end. When detecting mismatch of the J1 bytes, the
receive end inserts the HP_TIM alarm in the corresponding path.
l The J2 byte is a VC-12 path tracing byte. The transmit end successively transmits the lower
order access point identifiers based on the negotiation of the two ends. According to these
access point identifiers, the receive end verifies the constant connection to the intended
transmit end in this path.
l The C2 byte is the signal label byte, which indicates the multiplexing structure of the VC
frames and the payload property. The received C2 should be consistent with the transmitted
C2. If the C2 bytes are mismatched, the local end inserts the HP_SLM alarm in the
corresponding VC-4 path.
Table D-1 lists the mapping relation between the service type and setting of the C2.
Table D-1 Mapping relation between the service type and C2 byte
TUG structure 02
ATM mapping 13
Unequipped 00
l As a path status and signal identification byte, the V5 byte detects the bit error and indicates
the remote fault and failure in the lower order path. Table D-2 lists the mapping relation
between the service type and V5 byte.
Table D-2 Mapping relation between the service type and V5 byte
Asynchronization 02
You can set the relay control mode and enable or disable the major alarm relay and critical alarm
relay to configure the environment monitor interface.
You can set the basic Attribute, BMC, and Cable Transmitting Distance to configure the external
time interface.
You can set the output mode, output timeslot, output threshold, failure condition and failure
action of the 2M phase-locked source external clock
For details, see OptiX PTN 910 Configuration Guide and the U2000 Online Help.
E Glossary
A
Administrator A user who has authority to access all the Management Domains of the EMLCore
product. He has access to the whole network and to all the management functionalities.
Alarm A message reported when a fault is detected by a device or by the network management
system during the process of polling devices. Each alarm corresponds to a recovery
alarm. After a recovery alarm is received, the status of the corresponding alarm changes
to cleared.
alarm cable The cable for generation of visual or audio alarms.
APS See Automatic Protection Switching
Asynchronous A data transfer technology based on cell, in which packets allocation relies on channel
Transfer Mode demand. It supports fast packet switching to achieve efficient utilization of network
resources. The size of a cell is 53 bytes, which consist of 48-byte payload and 5-byte
header.
ATM See Asynchronous Transfer Mode
Automatic Protection Automatic Protection Switching (APS) is the capability of a transmission system to
Switching detect a failure on a working facility and to switch to a standby facility to recover the
traffic.
B
backup A periodic operation performed on the data stored in the database for the purposes of
database recovery in case that the database is faulty. The backup also refers to data
synchronization between active and standby boards.
bandwidth A range of transmission frequencies that a transmission line or channel can carry in a
network. In fact, it is the difference between the highest and lowest frequencies the
transmission line or channel. The greater the bandwidth, the faster the data transfer rate.
BER See Bit Error Rate
binding strap The binding strap is 12.7 mm wide, with one hook side (made of transparent
polypropylene material) and one mat side (made of black nylon material).
bit error An incompatibility between a bit in a transmitted digital signal and the corresponding
bit in the received digital signal.
Bit Error Rate Bit error rate. Ratio of received bits that contain errors. BER is an important index used
to measure the communications quality of a network.
breaker A breaker is a device that connects/disconnects power to a circuit.
bundling An optional multiplexing operation, whereby more than one user message may be carried
in the same SCTP packet.
C
Cable distribution plate A component which is used to arrange the cables in order.
cable tie The tape used to bind the cables.
CE See Customer Edge
CES See Circuit Emulation Service
Circuit Emulation A function with which the E1/T1 data can be transmitted through ATM networks. At the
Service transmission end, the interface module packs timeslot data into ATM cells. These ATM
cells are sent to the reception end through the ATM network. At the reception end, the
interface module re-assigns the data in these ATM cells to E1/T1 timeslots. The CES
technology guarantees that the data in E1/T1 timeslots can be recovered to the original
sequence at the reception end.
client A device that sends requests, receives responses, and obtains services from the server.
Customer Edge A part of BGP/MPLS IP VPN model. It provides interfaces for direct connection to the
Service Provider (SP) network. A CE can be a router, switch, or host.
D
Data Communication A communication network used in a TMN or between TMNs to support the Data
Network Communication Function (DCF).
DCN See Data Communication Network
DDF See Digital Distribution Frame
diamond-shaped nut A type of nut that is used to fasten the wiring frame to the cabinet.
Digital Distribution A type of equipment used between the transmission equipment and the exchange with
Frame transmission rate of 2 to 155 Mbit/s to provide the functions such as cables connection,
cable patching, and test of loops that transmitting digital signals.
E
E-AGGR Ethernet-Aggregation
E-LAN See Ethernet LAN
ejector lever A lever for removing circuit boards from an electronic chassis.
F
fault A failure to implement the function while the specified operations are performed. A fault
does not involve the failure caused by preventive maintenance, insufficiency of external
resources and intentional settings.
frame A frame, starting with a header, is a string of bytes with a specified length. Frame length
is represented by the sampling circle or the total number of bytes sampled during a circle.
A header comprises one or a number of bytes with pre-specified values. In other words,
a header is a code segment that reflects the distribution (diagram) of the elements pre-
specified by the sending and receiving parties.
G
GE See Gigabit Ethernet
Gigabit Ethernet GE adopts the IEEE 802.3z. GE is compatible with 10 Mbit/s and 100 Mbit/s Ethernet.It
runs at 1000Mbit/s. Gigabit Ethernet uses a private medium, and it does not support
coaxial cables or other cables. It also supports the channels in the bandwidth mode. If
Gigabit Ethernet is, however, deployed to be the private bandwidth system with a bridge
(switch) or a router as the center, it gives full play to the performance and the bandwidth.
In the network structure, Gigabit Ethernet uses full duplex links that are private, causing
the length of the links to be sufficient for backbone applications in a building and campus.
guide rail Components to guide, position, and support plug-in boards.
H
hot standby A mechanism of ensuring device running security. The environment variables and
storage information of each running device are synchronized to the standby device. When
the faults occur on the running device, the standby device can take over the services in
the faulty device in automatic or manual way to ensure the normal running of the entire
system.
HSB See hot standby
I
IEC See International Electrotechnical Commission
IEEE See Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
IMA See Inverse Multiplexing over ATM
Institute of Electrical A society of engineering and electronics professionals based in the United States but
and Electronics boasting membership from numerous other countries. The IEEE focuses on electrical,
Engineers electronics, computer engineering, and science-related matters.
International The International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) is an international and non-
Electrotechnical governmental standards organization dealing with electrical and electronical standards.
Commission
International An organization that coordinates standards for telecommunications on behalf of the
Telecommunication International Telecommunication Union (ITU). It is based in Geneva, Switzerland. Prior
Union - to 1992, the ITU-T was known as the International Telegraph and Telephone
Telecommunication Consultative Committee (CCITT, from the French name "Comit| consultatif
Standardization Sector international t|l|phonique et t|l|graphique").
Internet Protocol The TCP/IP standard protocol that defines the IP packet as the unit of information sent
across an internet and provides the basis for connectionless, best-effort packet delivery
service. IP includes the ICMP control and error message protocol as an integral part. The
entire protocol suite is often referred to as TCP/IP because TCP and IP are the two
fundamental protocols. IP is standardized in RFC 791.
Inverse Multiplexing Inverse Multiplexing over ATM. The ATM inverse multiplexing technique involves
over ATM inverse multiplexing and de-multiplexing of ATM cells in a cyclical fashion among links
grouped to form a higher bandwidth logical link whose rate is approximately the sum of
the link rates. This is referred to as an IMA group.
IP See Internet Protocol
ITU-T See International Telecommunication Union - Telecommunication Standardization
Sector
L
L3VPN Layer3 Virtual Private Network
Label Switching Router The Label Switching Router (LSR) is the basic element of MPLS network. All LSRs
support the MPLS protocol. The LSR is composed of two parts: control unit and
forwarding unit. The former is responsible for allocating the label, selecting the route,
creating the label forwarding table, creating and removing the label switch path; the latter
forwards the labels according to groups received in the label forwarding table.
N63E cabinet A cabinet which is 600 mm in width and 300 mm in depth, compliant with the standards
of the ETSI.
NE See network element
network element A network element (NE) contains both the hardware and the software running on it. One
NE is at least equipped with one system control board which manages and monitors the
entire network element. The NE software runs on the system control board.
Network to Network This is an internal interface within a network linking two or more elements.
Interface
packet 1. A sequence of binary digits including data and call control signals that is switched as
a composite whole. The data, call control signals, and possibly error control information,
are arra nged in a specific format. 2. A short block of data of fixed length and destination
information. It is the information transmission unit of the packet switching network. The
maximum length of the information packet reaches 8000 bit. The information packet can
be tranfered from one metwork to another network. 3. Data packets and local packets.
Logical grouping of information that includes a header containing control information
and (usually) user data. Packets are most often used to refer to network layer units of
data.
Packet over SDH/ A MAN and WAN technology that provides point-to-point data connections. The POS
SONET interface uses SDH/SONET as the physical layer protocol, and supports the transport of
packet data (such as IP packets) in MAN and WAN.
PCB See Printed Circuit Board
PDU See Power Distribution Unit
PDU Protocol Data Unit
Point-to-Point Protocol A protocol on the data link layer, provides point-to-point transmission and encapsulates
data packets on the network layer. It is located in layer 2 of the IP protocol stack.
POS See Packet over SDH/SONET
Power Distribution The power distribution unit performs AC or DC power distribution.
Unit
PPP See Point-to-Point Protocol
Printed Circuit Board A board used to mechanically support and electrically connect electronic components
using conductive pathways, tracks, or traces, etched from copper sheets laminated onto
a non-conductive substrate.
Pseudo wire An emulated connection between two PEs for transmitting frames. The PW is established
and maintained by PEs through signaling protocols. The status information of a PW is
maintained by the two end PEs of a PW.
PTN Packet Transport Network
R
Radio Network A device used in the RNS to control the usage and integrity of radio resources.
Controller
RNC See Radio Network Controller
route A route is the path that network traffic takes from its source to its destination. In a TCP/
IP network, each IP packet is routed independently. Routes can change dynamically.
S
SDH See Synchronous Digital Hierarchy
signal cable Common signal cables cover the E1cable, network cable, and other non-subscriber signal
cable.
Synchronous Digital SDH is a transmission scheme that follows ITU-T G.707, G.708, and G.709. It defines
Hierarchy the transmission features of digital signals such as frame structure, multiplexing mode,
transmission rate level, and interface code. SDH is an important part of ISDN and B-
ISDN. It interleaves the bytes of low-speed signals to multiplex the signals to high-speed
counterparts, and the line coding of scrambling is only used only for signals. SDH is
suitable for the fiber communication system with high speed and a large capacity since
it uses synchronous multiplexing and flexible mapping structure.
T
T63 cabinet A cabinet which is 600 mm in width and 300 mm in depth, compliant with the standards
of the ETSI.
TPS See Tributary Protection Switch
Tributary Protection Tributary protection switching, a function provided by the equipment, is intended to
Switch protect N tributary processing boards through a standby tributary processing board.
Tunnel A channel on the packet switching network that transmits service traffic between PEs.
In VPN, a tunnel is an information transmission channel between two entities. The tunnel
ensures secure and transparent transmission of VPN information. In most cases, a tunnel
is an MPLS tunnel.
U
Upload An operation to report some or all configuration data of an NE to the T2000. The
configuration data then covers the configuration data stored at the T2000 side.
Upper subrack The subrack close to the top of the cabinet when a cabinet contains several subracks.
upward cabling Cables or fibres connect the cabinet with other equipment from the top of the cabinet.
V
Virtual Local Area A logical grouping of two or more nodes which are not necessarily on the same physical
Network network segment but which share the same IP network number. This is often associated
with switched Ethernet.
VLAN See Virtual Local Area Network