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Alcatel-Lucent 7705 SAR

SERV ICE AGGREG AT IO N ROU T ER | REL E A SE 4 .0

The Alcatel-Lucent 7705 Service Aggregation Router (SAR) portfolio delivers industry-leading IP/MPLS and
pseudowire capabilities in compact platforms with the ability to reliably groom and aggregate multiple media,
service and transport protocols onto an economical packet transport infrastructure.

The Alcatel-Lucent 7705 SAR portfolio market-leading feature set of that


is optimized for multiservice adaptation, product line, the Alcatel-Lucent 7705 SAR
aggregation and routing, especially brings a powerful, service-oriented
onto a modern Ethernet and IP/MPLS capability to the RAN, specifically in
Alcatel-Lucent 7705 SAR-F infrastructure. Leveraging the powerful form factors and at-price points that
Service Router Operating System (SR OS) are particularly appropriate for cell
and 5620 Service Aware Manager sites and hub locations in addition to
(SAM), it is available in compact, low denser points of concentration. With
power consumption platforms delivering end-to-end service management under
highly available services over resilient the Alcatel-Lucent 5620 management
and flexible network topologies. portfolio, the Alcatel-Lucent 7705 SAR
greatly augments the IP/MPLS RAN
Alcatel-Lucent 7705 SAR-8
The 7705 SAR is well suited to the transport solution from Alcatel-Lucent.
aggregation and backhaul of 2G, 3G and
LTE mobile traffic — providing cost- Service aggregation and
effective scaling and the transformation networking
to IP/MPLS networking. Business services To provide the most efficient transport
modernization is supported in the solution, the Alcatel-Lucent 7705 SAR
transition from legacy to consolidated, can employ pseudowire encapsulation
packet-based operation. Hugely reduced methods to map services end to end.
equipment footprints are achievable with The use of pseudowires ensures that the
reduced energy costs. Enterprise and key attributes of the service are main­
vertical organizations (such as energy tained, while using a cost-effective
utilities, transportation and government packet environment to aggregate
agencies) can deploy with confidence, services. In addition to pseudowire
Alcatel-Lucent 7705 SAR-18 achieving reliable and resilient support transport, IP routing and forwarding
of legacy and advanced services. and Virtual Private LAN Service (VPLS)
are supported. Services such as Asyn­
The Alcatel-Lucent 7705 SAR owes much chronous Transfer Mode (ATM), inverse
of its development heritage to the multi­plexing over ATM (IMA), Ethernet
Alcatel-Lucent Service Router (SR) and TDM traffic can be natively switched
product line. Sharing much of the across the 7705 SAR.
The Alcatel-Lucent 7705 SAR supports Highly flexible network infrastructure marking are carried out based on the
RFC 5086 — Structure-Aware TDM options include the use of MPLS, IP or following categories:
Circuit Emulation Service over Packet GRE (Generic Routing Encapsulation)
Switched Network (CESoPSN) and also tunneling for aggregated traffic. When Classification (Layer 1/Layer 2/Layer 2.5
RFC 4553 — Structure-Agnostic TDM dynamic MPLS signaling is deployed, and/or Layer 3 header):
over Packet (SAToP) for the encapsulation the end-to-end pseudowire is estab- • Time slot/port
and transport of TDM traffic; for lished using targeted label distribution • Ethernet port/VLAN
example, from mobile 2G, TDM-attached protocol (T-LDP) and the MPLS tunnel
• ATM service category (CBR/rt-VBR/
base stations. The use of circuit using LDP. In addition to efficient
nrt-VBR/UBR)
emulation service (CES) ensures that LDP-based dynamic signaling, static
only the active time slots are trans- provisioning of both the MPLS tunnel • ATM VC
ported, keeping bandwidth usage to and the pseudowire is supported. • Ethernet 802.1p/VLAN
a minimum. Also, the Alcatel-Lucent GRE or IP tunneling allows low-cost, • IP DSCP/MPLS EXP
7705 SAR supports RFC 4717 — Encap- ubiquitous IP networks to be used
Marking:
sulation Methods for Transport of ATM for backhauling; for example, for the
• Layer 2 (802.1p)
over MPLS networks; N:1 cell mode is transport of HSPA (High Speed Packet
supported. Multiple access ATM ports Access) off-loaded traffic using DSL • Layer 2.5 (EXP) both for tunnel
are bundled together to attain higher access media. and PWE3
speeds using IMA. The IMA protocol is • Layer 3 (DiffServ)
terminated on the Alcatel-Lucent 7705 SAR, Label switched routing
and only the cells containing user data The 7705 SAR can be configured as The Alcatel-Lucent 7705 SAR utilizes
that belong to a virtual circuit/virtual either a Label Edge Router (LER) or extensive traffic management policies to
path (VC/VP) structure are trans- a full Label Switched Router (LSR). ensure fairness with detailed classification
ported. RFC 4448 — Encapsulation Label Switched Paths (LSPs) can be and hierarchical scheduling including:
Methods for Transport of Ethernet signaled using either the Label minimum/maximum, queue type-based
over MPLS Networks is also supported. Distribution Protocol (LDP) or the weighted round robin or strict priority
To offer greater scalability, all the Resource Reservation Protocol with and profiled scheduling, as well as
traffic out of an Ethernet port can Traffic Engineering (RSVP-TE). The multi-tier policing to differentiate and
be carried over a single Ethernet 7705 SAR brings a strong suite of prioritize individual services and flows.
pseudowire or, alternatively, a pseudo­ traffic engineering and resiliency
wire can be created for each VLAN capabilities using functions such as Operations, administration
that is assigned to a different service Constraint-based Shortest Path First and maintenance
or end customer. IP pseudowires are (CSPF) routing, Fast Reroute (FRR), In order to ensure continuity of services,
supported and provide the ability primary and secondary LSPs and the Alcatel-Lucent 7705 SAR has a full
to deterministically carry IP traffic redundant pseudowires. set of operations, administration and
between disparate media. For example, maintenance (OAM) features including:
IP traffic can be carried between a Quality of service and • LSP ping
Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) (or traffic management • LSP traceroute
Multi-Link Point-to-Point Protocol It is critical to maintain the end-to-end • Service distribution path (SDP) ping
(MLPPP)) access and an Ethernet quality of service (QoS) for packet
connection. The 7705 SAR product line ¬ Verifies, for example, tunnel con-
traffic. Not all types of traffic have the
supports Border Gateway Protocol nectivity and round-trip delay
same set of requirements. Voice traffic
(BGP)/MPLS Virtual Private Networks • Virtual circuit connectivity verification
in particular requires low latency and
(VPNs) to allow the separation of Layer 3 (VCCV)
jitter (latency variation) as well as low
traffic between different groups of loss, whereas data traffic often has less ¬ Verifies, for example, service level
users or organizations. Virtual Private stringent delay requirements but may existence and round-trip time
LAN Service (VPLS) is supported for the be very sensitive to loss, as packet loss ¬ Extends OAM to pseudowire
delivery of Layer 2 VPNs. Analog voice can seriously constrain application services
encoding and transport is available on throughput. To offer the required • Ethernet OAM functions, for example:
the 7705 SAR-8 and the 7705 SAR-18. treatment throughout the network, ¬ 802.3ah: Ethernet in the First Mile
Voiceband analog traffic can be carried traffic flows with different require-
over a modern network infrastructure ¬ 802.1ag: Connectivity Fault
ments are identified at the access and
between two analog devices using either Management
marked in-line with the appropriate
traditional T1/E1 network interfaces or ¬ Y.1731: Ethernet OAM mechanisms
QoS metrics. Traffic classification and
over Ethernet or MLPPP interfaces. for fault management — mainly
at a service level

2 Alcatel-Lucent 7705 SAR | Release 4.0 | Data Sheet


Table 1. Features and benefits

FEATURES BENEFITS

Cost-effective migration from E1/T1-based backhaul to economical and flexible Transition from PDH-based connectivity to modern Ethernet and/or IP-based
IP/MPLS-based transport, leveraging Ethernet or ISP network services over a networking infrastructures can greatly reduce recurring operating expenditures
wide range of first mile media such as line lease costs.
Resiliency and redundancy including: One-for-one hitless control and switch Advanced resiliency features lead to improved network uptime, which can
module failover (7705 SAR-8 and 7705 SAR-18), synchronization redundancy, positively impact customer retention and allow critical services to be offered
network uplink resiliency and redundancy of power feeds plus temperature for increased revenue.
hardening (7705 SAR-8 and 7705 SAR-F)
Powerful, service-aware OAM capabilities complemented by the Alcatel-Lucent Rapid fault detection and powerful commissioning and troubleshooting tools
5620 management portfolio for GUI-based network and element configuration, can improve productivity of operations staff and reduce network downtime.
provisioning, and fault and performance management
Dense adaptation of multiple converged services onto an efficient economical Multiprotocol and convergence capa­bilities (with flexible and granular QoS)
packet infrastructure reduce equipment instances needed to carry multiple traffic types. Compact,
energy efficient platforms reduce power and cooling costs.
Extends service routing IP/MPLS dynamic capabilities to the remote site, hubs Modular, flexible architecture alleviates the burden of complex pre-engineering
and network edge in compact form factors with low power consumption and future scenario planning. Compact, rugged form factors allow remote sites
to be addressed.
Breadth of synchronization solutions with flexible operation, redundancy Accurate synchronization allows cost-effective deployment over packet
and independent validation of accuracy infrastructure and improves the user experience (for example, less data loss
and minimal dropped calls in mobile applications).

• Service Assurance Agent (SAA) to ensure reliable subscriber handover 7705 SAR Family Chassis options
¬ Runs in background, periodically between cell towers. Accurate synchro-
collecting network ‘health’ nization is also important in wireline 7705 SAR-F
information from OAM mechanisms networks in maintaining network The 7705 SAR-F is a fixed configuration
(such as VCCV) and monitoring for operational integrity; for example, version of the Service Aggregation
problems (such as SLA transgressions) avoiding data underflows and over- Router packaged in a one-rack unit
flows and transmission ‘slips.’ (1 RU) high form factor that supports
These features, when under the up to 16 T1/E1 any service any port
control of the Alcatel-Lucent 5620 The Alcatel-Lucent 7705 SAR supports (ASAP) ports. The ASAP ports can be
management portfolio, ensure rapid external reference timing, line timing, configured to support ATM, ATM IMA,
fault detection as well as efficient adaptive clock recovery (ACR) timing, TDM and MLPPP. Six 10/100 Base-T
troubleshooting. In particular, SLAs synchronous Ethernet and also timing auto-sensing Ethernet ports are
can be proactively monitored by the distribution using 1588v2. The 1588v2 provided, plus two further ports
SAA. This powerful capability allows Master Clock and Boundary Clock supporting 10/100/1000 Base-TX with
the specification of test suites, policies functions are also supported. Accuracy small form factor plug­gable optics
and schedules. The tests are then and high performance of timing over (SFPs). Network uplink connectivity
auto-created, and the results obtained packet solutions, such as ACR and options are: Ethernet, Fast Ethernet
are automatically compared to pre- IEEE 1588v2, are accomplished by a (FE), Gigabit Ethernet (GigE), n × T1/ E1
defined SLA metrics. Any transgressions combination of built-in architectural MLPPP or n × T1/E1 ATM IMA. Integrated
detected are automatically reported features, efficiently tuned algorithms DS3 point-to-point trunking is supported
through the SAA to operations staff. and powerful QoS mechanisms to using a SFP device.
An auto-discovery protocol is sup- minimize the delay experienced by
ported to allow rapid commissioning synchronization traffic. These capabilities
of remote devices. are cornerstones of the design of the
Alcatel-Lucent 7705 SAR. A built-in
Synchronization Stratum-3 clock is provided to assist in
Cell sites rely on the backhaul network synchronization maintenance during
to provide synchronous interfaces for unavailability of a primary source.
the proper delivery of data. In addition,
cell sites may rely on the network
interfaces as stable references with
which to derive radio frequencies and

Alcatel-Lucent 7705 SAR | Release 4.0 | Data Sheet 3


7705 SAR-8 Availability. The twelve 2.5 Gb/s • *6-port Ear and Mouth (E&M)
The 7705 SAR-8 is a two-rack unit adapter card slots support the same adapter card supporting selectable
(2 RU) version of the 7705 SAR with adapter cards as the 7705 SAR-8. μ-Law or A-Law encoding
industry-leading access density. The Network connectivity options are: • *12-port Serial Data Interface (SDI)
platform can be optionally configured Ethernet, FE, GigE, n × T1/ E1 MLPPP card, which can be configured for
with a redundant control and switch or n × T1/E1 ATM IMA. Integrated DS3 RS232, V.35 or X.21 operation
module and uplinks. The Alcatel- point-to-point trunking is supported • An auxiliary alarm card with
Lucent 7705 SAR-8 has eight slots; using the 4-port DS3 adapter card. 26 digital alarm inputs, 2 analog
two are allocated for control and OC-3/STM-1 trunking is supported inputs and 8 output relays
switch modules (CSMs), with the using POS on the 4-port OC-3/STM-1
*Note: SDI and E&M cards will be supported on
remaining six being available for clear channel adapter card. the 7705 SAR-18 in a future release.

user traffic adapter cards. The Alcatel-


Lucent 7705 SAR-8 has a compact, 7705 SAR adapter cards
modular architecture, constructed Each of the six adapter card slots in
to allow flexible use of line adapter the 7705 SAR-8 or the twelve 2.5 Gb/s
cards so operators can optimize the adapter card slots in the 7705 SAR-18, can
configuration to meet the specific be used to house the following adapter
requirements of a site. With the card types, this flexibility alleviates the
modular architecture comes additional burden of complex pre-engineering and
resilience and flexibility. The platform future scenario planning:
can optionally support 1+1 fully redun­ • 4-port OC-3/STM-1 clear channel
dant CSMs. This industry-leading, adapter card, supporting ATM and
independently validated High Avail­ POS with ports configurable for
ability feature has been inherited from SONET or SDH operation
the Service Router product line and is
• 2-port OC-3/STM-1 channelized
a strong contributor to overall network
adapter card, supporting ATM,
uptime. Network uplink connectivity
ATM IMA, TDM and MLPPP with
options are: Ethernet, FE, GigE, n × T1/
ports configurable for SONET
E1 MLPPP or n × T1/E1 ATM IMA.
or SDH operation
Integrated DS3 point-to-point trunking
• 16-port ASAP T1/E1 adapter card
is supported using the 4-port DS3
supporting ATM, ATM IMA,
adapter card. OC-3/STM-1 trunking is
TDM and multiclass MLPPP
supported using Packet over SONET/
SDH (POS) on the 4-port OC-3/STM-1 • 32-port ASAP T1/E1 adapter card
clear channel adapter card. supporting ATM, ATM IMA,
TDM and multiclass MLPPP
7705 SAR-18 • 8-port Ethernet adapter card
The 7705 SAR-18 is a 10 RU version of supporting six ports of auto-sensing
the 7705 SAR with industry-leading 10/100 Base-TX ports plus two further
scalability. The platform can be ports supporting 10/100/1000
optionally configured with a redun­ Ethernet with SFP optics
dant control and switch module and • 4-port DS3/E3 adapter card
uplinks. The Alcatel-Lucent 7705 SAR-18 supporting clear channel PPP
has 18 slots; two are allocated for and ATM service (ATM on DS3 only)
control and switch modules (CSMs),
with the remaining 16 being available
for user traffic adapter cards. Twelve of
the adapter card slots have full duplex
2.5 Gb/s connectivity to the switching
fabric, the remaining four have full
duplex 10 Gb/s connectivity. The
platform can optionally support 1+1
fully redundant CSMs for High

4 Alcatel-Lucent 7705 SAR | Release 4.0 | Data Sheet


Chassis-dependent specifications

7705 SAR-F 7705 SAR-8 7705 SAR-18

Capacity for adapter – 6 12 (2.5 Gb/s full duplex) +


cards per chassis 4 (10 Gb/s full duplex)
Redundancy and resiliency Synchronization, uplinks, MPLS tunnel, Control, fabric, synchronization, uplinks, Control, fabric, synchronization, uplinks,
pseudowires, power feeds, cooling fans MPLS tunnel, pseudowires, power feeds, MPLS tunnel, pseudowires, power feeds,
cooling fans cooling fans
Physical dimensions • Height: 1 RU 4.45 cm (1.75 in.) • Height: 2 RU, 8.9 cm (3.5 in.) • Height: 10 RU, 44.5 cm (17.5 in.)
• Depth: 25.4 cm (10 in.) • Depth: 25.4 cm (10 in.) • Depth: 30 cm (10 in.)
• Width: 43.9 cm (17.3 in.) • Width: 43.9 cm (17.3 in.) • Width: 43.9 cm (17.3 in.)
• Rack mountable in a 48.2-cm rack, • Rack mountable in a 48.2-cm rack, • Rack mountable in a 48.2-cm rack,
30-cm depth (standard 19-inch 30-cm depth (standard 19-inch 30-cm depth (standard 19-inch
equipment rack, 12-inch depth) equipment rack, 12-inch depth) equipment rack, 12-inch depth)
Power • T wo feeds: -48/-60V DC or • T wo feeds: -48/-60V DC or • T wo feeds: -48/-60V DC
two feeds: +24V DC two feeds: +24V DC • Third-party sourced AC power
• Third-party sourced AC power • Third-party sourced AC power solutions available: 100 – 240V AC
solutions available: 100 – 240V AC solutions available: 100 – 240V AC
Cooling Built-in five fan array with redundancy One tray of eight fans with redundancy One tray of eight fans with redundancy
Operating environment • N ormal operating temperature range: • N ormal operating temperature range: • N ormal operating temperature range:
-40°C to +65°C (-40°F to +149°F) -40°C to +65°C (-40°F to +149°F) -5°C to +45°C (23°F to 113°F)
sustained sustained sustained, -5°C to +55°C (23°F
• Normal humidity: 5% to 95% • Normal humidity: 5% to 85% to 131°F) extended (96 hours)
non-condensing • Short term (96 hours) extended • Normal humidity: 5% to 85%
humidity range: 5% to 95% non-condensing
• Short term (96 hours) extended
humidity range: 5% to 95%

Service Aggregation ¬ Raw and tagged mode • Synchronous Ethernet ¬ Ethernet port/VLAN
Router specifications ¬ MEF 9 and MEF 14 certified • Built-in Stratum-3 clock ¬ ATM service category
• IP pseudowires • IEEE 1588v2 (CBR/rt-VBRrt-VBR/UBR)
¬ PPP (as per RFC 1661) and • Synchronization Status Messages ¬ ATM VC
Services MLPPP (as per RFC 1990) (SSMs) support for quality level ¬ Ethernet 802.1p/VLAN
• TDM pseudowires access to IP pseudowires determination, source selection ¬ IP DSCP/MPLS EXP
¬ Ethernet (null, tagged) access and timing loop avoidance
¬ RFC 5086 Structure-Aware Time • Marking based on:
Division Multiplexed (TDM) to IP pseudowires
Traffic management and QoS ¬ Layer 2 (802.1p)
Circuit Emulation Service over • Analog voice encoding and
Packet Switched Network transport • Hierarchical queuing ¬ Layer 2.5 (EXP) both for tunnel
(CESoPSN) and PWE3
¬ A law, μ-law • Multi-tier scheduling
¬ RFC 4553 Structure-Agnostic ¬ Layer 3 (DiffServ)
¬ Traffic transported on a • Profiled (in and out of profile)
Time Division Multiplexing TDM pseudowire IP or MPLS scheduling
(TDM) over Packet (SAToP) infrastructure Security (node access)
• Queue type-based scheduling
• ATM pseudowires • IP VPN • User ID/password-based authenti-
• Ingress policing and egress shaping cation and authorization
¬ RFC 4717 Encapsulation Methods ¬ RFC 4364 BGP/MPLS IP Virtual
for Transport of Asynchronous • Up to 8 queues per service ¬ Exponential login backoff for
Private Networks (VPNs)
Transfer Mode (ATM) over • Memory allocation per queue brute force attacks
MPLS Networks • VPLS (CBS, MBS per queue) ¬ Local or remote storing of
¬ N:1 cell mode, virtual circuit ¬ RFC 4762 Virtual Private • Premium, assured and best-effort user information
connection and virtual path LAN Services Using LDP forwarding classes • Remote authentication/authoriza-
connection • WRED on ingress and egress tion using Remote Authentication
¬ ATM IMA Synchronization Dial In User Service (RADIUS)
• Classification based on:
• Ethernet pseudowires • External reference timing and Terminal Access Controller
¬ Layer 1/Layer 2/Layer 2.5 Access-Control System (TACACS)
¬ RFC 4448 Encapsulation Meth- • Line timing and/or Layer 3 header
ods for Transport of Ethernet • Adaptive timing ¬ Time slot/port
over MPLS Networks

Alcatel-Lucent 7705 SAR | Release 4.0 | Data Sheet 5


• Secure Shellv2, Secure File Transfer ¬ ITU-T G.703 RSVP-TE and Fast Reroute IPv6
Protocol and Simple Network ¬ ITU-T G.707 • RFC 2430 A Provider Architecture • RFC 2460 Internet Protocol,
Management Protocol (SNMP) DiffServ and TE Version 6 (IPv6) Specification
Version 3 ¬ ITU-T G.712
¬ ITU-T G.957 • RFC 2702 Requirements for Traffic • RFC 2461 Neighbor Discovery
¬ Secure open interfaces Engineering over MPLS for IPv6
• Syslog ¬ ITU-T V.24
• RFC 2747 RSVP Cryptographic • RFC 2462 IPv6 Stateless Address
¬ Capture security logs on local ¬ ITU-T V.36 Authentication Auto configuration
or remote server ¬ ITU-T X.21 • RFC 3097 RSVP Cryptographic • RFC 2463 Internet Control Message
• Alarm on suspicious sequence • Network Equipment and Building Authentication Protocol (ICMPv6) for the Internet
of operations Standards (NEBS): • RFC 3209 Extensions to RSVP for Protocol Version 6 Specification
• Nodal attack ¬ NEBS Level 1 and 3 Tunnels • RFC 2464 Transmission of IPv6
• Basic firewall with filtering of ¬ Telcordia GR-63-CORE, Issue 3 • RFC 4090 Fast reroute extensions Packets over Ethernet Networks
control plane traffic ¬ Telcordia GR-78-CORE, Issue 2 to RSVP-TE for LSP Tunnels • RFC 3315 Dynamic Host Config­
• Denial of service (DoS) attack OSPF uration Protocol for IPv6
¬ Telcordia GR-1089, Issue 4 (Relay Agent)
prevention (rate-limiting and • RFC 1765 OSPF Database
prioritization) ¬ ATT-TP-76200 • RFC 3587 IPv6 Global Unicast
Overflow
• Data security ¬ VZ.TPR.9305 Address Format
• RFC 2328 OSPF Version 2
• Transfer over peer-to-peer tunnel ¬ ANSI T1.315-2001 • RFC 4007 IPv6 Scoped Address
• RFC 2370 Opaque LSA Support Architecture
(MPLS) • Environmental:
• RFC 3101 OSPF NSSA Option • RFC 4193 Unique Local IPv6
• MD5 authentication ¬ Telcordia GR-63-CORE, Issue 3
• RFC 3137 OSPF Stub Router Unicast Addresses
• Sequence numbers prevent ¬ ETSI EN 300 019-2-1 v2.1.2 Advertisement
replaying of data (Class 1.2) • RFC 4291 IPv6 Addressing
• RFC 3630 Traffic Engineering (TE) Architecture
• Statistics available on suspicious ¬ ETSI EN 300 019-2-2 v2.1.2 Extensions to OSPF Version 2 IS-IS
behavior (Class 2.3)
• RFC 4203 Shared Risk Link Group • RFC 1142 OSI Intermediate
¬ ETSI EN 300 019-2-3 v2.2.2 (SRLG) sub-TLV
Management (Class 3.2) System to Intermediate System
BGP (IS-IS) Intra-domain Routing
• Fully-featured, industry-standard ¬ ETSI 300 132-2 v2.2.1 Protocol (ISO 10589)
command line interface • RFC 1397 BGP Default Route
• Directives: Advertisement • RFC 1195 Use of OSI IS-IS for
• Service assurance tools, including ¬ EU Directive 1999/5/EC R&TTE routing in TCP/IP and dual
LSP ping, LSP traceroute, SDP • RFC 1997 BGP Communities
¬ EU Directive 2002/96/EC WEEE Attribute environments
ping, VCCV
¬ EU Directive 2002/95/EC RoHS • RFC 2385 Protection of BGP • RFC 2763 Dynamic Hostname
• ATM In-band Management Exchange for IS-IS
¬ China: Ministry of Information Sessions via MD5
• SSH and Telnet • RFC 2966 Domain-wide Prefix
Industry order No. 39 – CroHS • RFC 2439 BGP Route Flap
• FTP, Trivial File Transfer Protocol Dampening Distribution with Two-level IS-IS
and Secure Copy Protocol Standards and protocols • RFC 2973 IS-IS Mesh Groups
• RFC 2547bis BGP/MPLS VPNs
• RADIUS (AAA) Standards compliance Ethernet • RFC 3373 Three-way Handshake
• RFC 2918 Route Refresh
• TACACS+ • IEEE 802.1p/Q VLAN Tagging Capability for BGP-4 for IS-IS Point-to-Point Adjacencies
• SNMP v2/v3 • IEEE 802.1ag Service Layer OAM • RFC 3107 Carrying Label • RFC 3567 IS-IS Cryptographic
Information in BGP-4 Authentication
• IEEE 802.3 10Base-T
Safety, EMC, environmental • RFC 3392 Capabilities • RFC 3719 Recommendations for
and telecom compliance • IEEE 802.3ah Ethernet OAM Interoperable Networks using IS-IS
Advertisement with BGP-4
• Safety: • IEEE 802.3u 100Base-TX • RFC 3784 IS-IS Extensions for TE
• RFC 4271 BGP-4 (previously
¬ UL/CSA 60950-1 • IEEE 802.3x Flow Control RFC 1771) • RFC 3787 Recommendations for
¬ IEC/EN 60950-1 • IEEE 802.3z 1000Base-SX/LX • RFC 4360 BGP Extended Interoperable IP Networks
¬ AS/NZS 60950-1 • ITU-T Y.1731 OAM functions and Communities Attribute • RFC 4205 for Shared Risk Link
mechanisms for Ethernet-based • RFC 4364 BGP/MPLS IP Virtual Pri- Group (SRLG) TLV draft-ietf-isis-
¬ IEC/EN 60825-1 and 2 networks igp-p2p-over-lan-05.txt
(LASER Safety) vate Networks (VPNs) (previously
RFC 2547bis BGP/MPLS VPNs) • RFC 5309 Point-to-Point Operation
• EMC: Protocol support over LAN in Link State Routing
• RFC 4456 BGP Route Reflection:
¬ EN 55022 2006 (Class A) LDP Alternative to Full-mesh IBGP protocols
¬ FCC Part 15 2008 (Class A) • RFC 5036 LDP Specification (previously RFC 1966 and 2796)
¬ ICES-003 Issue 4 2004 (Class A) MPLS
• RFC 4724 Graceful Restart
¬ EN 300 386 V1.4.1 Mechanism for BGP – GR helper
• RFC 3031 Multiprotocol Label
¬ AS/NZS CISPR 22: 2006 (Class A) Switching Architecture • RFC 4760 Multi-protocol
Extensions for BGP (previously
¬ Telcordia GR-1089 Issue 4 • RFC 3032 MPLS Label Stack RFC 2858)
¬ RRL Notice No. 2008-38 (Class A) Encoding
¬ RRL Notice No. 2008-39 • RFC 4379 Detecting Multi-
protocol Label Switched (MPLS)
• Telecom: Data Plane Failures
¬ IC CS-03 Issue 9
¬ ACTA TIA-968-A
¬ AS/ACIF S016 (Australia/
New Zealand)

6 Alcatel-Lucent 7705 SAR | Release 4.0 | Data Sheet


BFD ATM • RFC 5085 Pseudowire Virtual • RFC 2138 RADIUS
• draft-ietf-bfd-mib-00.txt – Bidi- • RFC 2514 Definitions of Textual Circuit Connectivity Verification • RFC 2571 SNMP-Framework-MIB
rectional Forwarding Detection Conventions and OBJECT- (VCCV): A Control Channel for
Pseudowires • RFC 2572 SNMP-MPD-MIB
Management Information Base IDENTITIES for ATM Manage-
ment, February 1999 • RFC 5086 Structure-Aware Time • RFC 2573 SNMP-Applications
• draft-ietf-bfd-base-05.txt – Bidi-
rectional Forwarding Detection • RFC 2515 Definition of Managed Division Multiplexed (TDM) Circuit • RFC 2574 SNMP-User-based-
Objects for ATM Management, Emulation Service over Packet SM-MIB
• draft-ietf-bfd-v4v6-1hop-06.txt – Switched Network (CESoPSN)
BFD IPv4 and IPv6 (Single Hop) February 1999 • RFC 2575 SNMP-View-based-
• af-tm-0121.000 Traffic Manage- RADIUS ACM-MIB
• draft-ietf-bfd-multihop-06.txt –
BFD for Multi-hop Paths ment Specification Version 4.1, • RFC 2865 Remote Authentication • RFC 2576 SNMP-COMMUNITY-
March 1999 Dial In User Service (RADIUS) MIB
GRE
• ITU-T Recommendation I.610 – • RFC 2866 RADIUS Accounting • RFC 2665 Ethernet-like-MIB
• RFC 2784 Generic Routing B-ISDN Operation and Mainte-
Encapsulation (GRE) SSH • RFC 2819 RMON-MIB
nance Principles and Functions,
Differentiated services version 11/95 • draft-ietf-secsh-architecture.txt – • RFC 2863 The Interfaces
SSH Protocol Architecture Group-MIB
• RFC 2474 Definition of the Differ- • ITU-T Recommendation I.432.1 –
entiated Services Field (DS Field) B-ISDN user-network interface – • draft-ietf-secsh-userauth.txt – • RFC 2864 Inverted-Stack-MIB
in the IPv4 and IPv6 Headers Physical layer specification: SSH Authentication Protocol • RFC 3014 Notification-Log-MIB
• RFC 2597 Assured Forwarding General characteristics • draft-ietf-secsh-transport.txt – • RFC 3273 HCRMON-MIB
PHB Group • GR-1248-CORE – Generic Require­ SSH Transport Layer Protocol
• RFC 3411 An Architecture for
• RFC 2598 An Expedited Forward- ments for Operations of ATM • draft-ietf-secsh-connection.txt – Describing Simple Network
ing PHB Network Elements (NEs), Issue 3, SSH Connection Protocol Management Protocol (SNMP)
June 1996 • draft-ietf-secsh-newmodes.txt – Management Frameworks
• RFC 3140 Per Hop Behavior
Identification Codes • GR-1113-CORE – Asynchronous SSH Transport Layer Encryption • RFC 3412 Message Processing
Transfer Mode (ATM) Adaptation Modes and Dispatching for the Simple
TCP/IP Layer (AAL) Protocols Generic TACACS+ Network Management Protocol
• RFC 768 User Datagram Protocol Requirements, Issue 1, July 1994 (SNMP)
• IETF draft-grant-tacacs-02.txt
• RFC 1350 The TFTP Protocol VPLS
• RFC 3413 Simple Network
(Revision 2) Network management
• RFC 4762 Virtual Private LAN Management Protocol (SNMP)
• RFC 791 Internet Protocol Services Using LDP (previously • ITU-T X.721: Information Applications
draft-ietf-l2vpn-vpls-ldp-08.txt) technology-OSI-Structure of
• RFC 792 Internet Control Message Management Information • RFC 3414 User-based Security
Protocol Pseudowires Model (USM) for version 3 of the
• ITU-T X.734: Information Simple Network Management
• RFC 793 Transmission Control • RFC 4385 Pseudowire Emulation technology-OSI-Systems Manage-
Protocol Edge-to-Edge (PWE3) Control Protocol (SNMPv3)
ment: Event Report Management
• RFC 826 Ethernet Address Word for Use over an MPLS PSN Function • RFC 3418 SNMP MIB
Resolution Protocol • RFC 4447 Pseudowire Setup and • M.3100/3120 Equipment and • draft-ietf-disman-alarm-mib-04.txt
• RFC 854 Telnet Protocol Maintenance using the Label Connection Models • draft-ietf-mpls-ldp-mib-07.txt
Specification Distribution Protocol (LDP)
• TMF 509/613 Network Connectivity • IANA-ifType-MIB
• RFC 1812 Requirements for • RFC 4448 Encapsulation Methods Model
IPv4 Routers for Transport of Ethernet over
MPLS Networks • RFC 1157 SNMPv1 Plus support for an extensive range
PPP
• RFC 4553 Structure-Agnostic • RFC 1907 SNMPv2-MIB of proprietary MIBs
• RFC 1332 PPP Internet Protocol Time Division Multiplexing (TDM) • RFC 2011 IP-MIB
Control Protocol (IPCP) over Packet (SAToP) • RFC 2012 TCP-MIB
• RFC 1661 The Point-to-Point • RFC 4717 Encapsulation Methods
Protocol (PPP) • RFC 2013 UDP-MIB
for Transport of Asynchronous
• RFC 1989 PPP Link Quality Transfer Mode (ATM) over MPLS
Monitoring Networks
• RFC 1990 The PPP Multilink
Protocol (MP)

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