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A passive optical network (PON) is a point-to-multipoint, fiber to the premises n
etwork architecture in which unpowered optical splitters are used to enable a singl
e optical fiber to serve multiple premises, typically 32-128. A PON consists of an
Optical Line Termination (OLT) at the service provider's central office and a num
ber of Optical Network Units (ONUs) near end users. A PON configuration reduc
es the amount of fiber and central office equipment required compared with point
to point architectures.
Upstream signals are combined using a multiple access protocol, invariably time d
ivision multiple access (TDMA). The OLTs "range" the ONUs in order to provide
time slot assignments for upstream communication.
A PON is a shared network, in that the OLT sends a single stream of downstream
traffic that is seen by all ONTs. Each ONT only reads the content of those packets
that are addressed to it.
Optical Line Terminal (OLT)
The OLT provides the interface between the PON and the backbone network.
These typically include:
Internet Protocol (IP) traffic over Gigabit, 10G, or 100 Mbit/s Ethernet
standard time division multiplexed (TDM) interfaces such as SONET/SDH
or PDH at various rates
ATM UNI at 155-622 Mbit/s
2) Cross-connect shell
The Cross-connect shell provides a communication path between the PON core
shell and the Service shell. Technologies for connecting this path depends on
services, internal architecture in OLT and other factors. OLT provides cross-
connect functionality according to selected modes, such as GEM, ATM or Dual.
3) Service shell
This shell provides translation between service interfaces and TC frame
interface of the PON section.
Optical Network Terminals (ONT)
The ONT terminates the PON and presents the native service interfaces to the
user. These services can include voice (plain old telephone service (POTS) or
voice over IP (VoIP)), data (typically Ethernet or V.35), video, and/or telemetr
y (TTL, ECL, RS530, etc.). Often, the ONT functions are separated into two p
arts:
the ONU, which terminates the PON and presents a converged interface –
such as xDSL or multiservice Ethernet – toward the user, and
network termination equipment (NTE), which provides the separate, nativ
e service interfaces directly to the user
The functional building blocks of the G-PON ONT are mostly similar to the fu
nctional building blocks of the OLT. Since the ONT operates with only a singl
e PON Interface (or maximum 2 interfaces for protection purposes), the cross-
connect function can be omitted. However, instead of this function, service M
UX and DMUX function is specified to handle traffic. Each PON TC selects o
ne mode of ATM, GEM and Dual.
ONT functional block diagram
Upstream bandwidth allocation
The OLT is responsible for allocating upstream bandwidth to the ONTs. Becaus
e the optical distribution network (ODN) is shared, ONT upstream transmission
s could collide if they were transmitted at random times. ONTs can lie at varyin
g distances from the OLT, meaning that the transmission delay from each ONT
is unique. The OLT measures delay and sets a register in each ONT via PLOA
M (physical layer operations and maintenance) messages to equalize its delay w
ith respect to all of the other ONTs on the PON.
Once the delay of all ONTs has been set, the OLT transmits so-called grants to t
he individual ONTs. A grant is permission to use a defined interval of time for
upstream transmission. The grant map is dynamically re-calculated every few m
illiseconds. The map allocates bandwidth to all ONTs, such that each ONT rece
ives timely bandwidth for its service needs.
Some services – POTS, for example – require essentially constant upstream ban
dwidth, and the OLT may provide a fixed bandwidth allocation to each such ser
vice that has been provisioned. DS1 and some classes of data service may also r
equire constant upstream bit rate. But much data traffic – internet surfing, for ex
ample – is burst and highly variable.
Through dynamic bandwidth allocation (DBA), a PON can be oversubscribed f
or upstream traffic, according to the traffic engineering concepts of statistical m
ultiplexing. (Downstream traffic can also be oversubscribed, in the same way th
at any LAN can be oversubscribed. The only special feature in the PON archite
cture for downstream oversubscription is the fact that the ONT must be able to
accept completely arbitrary downstream time slots, both in time and in size.)
There are basically two forms of DBA, status-reporting (SR) and non-status re
porting (NSR).
In NSR DBA, the OLT continuously allocates a small amount of extra bandwidt
h to each ONT. If the ONT has no traffic to send, it transmits idle frames during
its excess allocation. If the OLT observes that a given ONT is not sending idle f
rames, it increases the bandwidth allocation to that ONT. Once the ONT's burst
has been transferred, the OLT observes a large number of idle frames from the
given ONT, and reduces its allocation accordingly. NSR DBA has the advantag
e that it imposes no requirements on the ONT, and the disadvantage that there is
no way for the OLT to know how best to assign bandwidth across several ONTs
that need more.
In SR DBA, the OLT polls ONTs for their backlogs. A given ONT may have s
everal so-called traffic containers (T-CONTs), each with its own priority or tra
ffic class. The ONT reports each T-CONT separately to the OLT. The report
message contains a logarithmic measure of the backlog in the T-CONT queue.
By knowledge of the service level agreement for each T-CONT across the enti
re PON, as well as the size of each T-CONT's backlog, the OLT can optimize
allocation of the spare bandwidth on the PON.
PON classification and Standards
ITU-T G.983
APON (ATM Passive Optical Network). This was the first Passive optical network sta
ndard. It was used primarily for business applications, and was based on ATM.
BPON (Broadband PON) is a standard based on APON. It adds support for WDM, dy
namic and higher upstream bandwidth allocation, and survivability. It also created a st
andard management interface, called OMCI, between the OLT and ONU/ONT, enabli
ng mixed-vendor networks.
ITU-T G.984
GPON (Gigabit PON) is an evolution of the BPON standard. It supports higher rates,
enhanced security, and choice of Layer 2 protocol (ATM, GEM, Ethernet). In early 20
08, Verizon is in the process of installing millions of lines, while British Telecom and
AT&T are in advanced trials.
IEEE 802.3ah
EPON or GEPON (Ethernet PON) is an IEEE/EFM standard for using Ethernet for pa
cket data.
IEEE 802.3av
10GEPON (10 Gigabit Ethernet PON) is an IEEE Task Force for 10Gbit/s backwards
compatible with 802.3ah EPON. 10GigEPON will likely multi-lamda downstream and
continue to use a single lamda with ATDMA for upstream. It will also be WDM-PON
compatible.
History of PON
Early work on efficient fiber to the home architectures was done in the 1990s by t
he Full Service Access Network (FSAN) working group, formed by major telecom
munications service providers and system vendors. The International Telecommun
ications Union (ITU) did further work, and has since standardized on two generati
ons of PON. The older ITU-T G.983 standard is based on asynchronous transfer
mode (ATM), and has therefore been referred to as APON (ATM PON). Further i
mprovements to the original APON standard – as well as the gradual falling out of
favor of ATM as a protocol – led to the full, final version of ITU-T G.983 being re
ferred to more often as broadband PON, or BPON. A typical APON/BPON provid
es 622 megabits per second (Mbit/s) of downstream bandwidth and 155 Mbit/s of
upstream traffic, although the standard accommodates higher rates.
The ITU-T G.984 (GPON) standard represents a boost in both the total bandwidth
and bandwidth efficiency through the use of larger, variable-length packets. Again
, the standards permit several choices of bit rate, but the industry has converged o
n 2.488 gigabits per second (Gbit/s) of downstream bandwidth, and 1.244 Gbit/s o
f upstream bandwidth. GPON Encapsulation Method (GEM) allows very efficient
packaging of user traffic, with frame segmentation to allow for higher Quality of S
ervice (QoS) for delay-sensitive traffic such as voice and video communications.
The IEEE 802.3 Ethernet PON (EPON or GEPON) standard was completed in
2004 (http://www.ieee802.org/3/), as part of the Ethernet First Mile project. E
PON uses standard 802.3 Ethernet frames with symmetric 1 gigabit per second
upstream and downstream rates. EPON is applicable for data-centric networks,
as well as full-service voice, data and video networks. Recently, starting in ear
ly 2006, work began on a very high-speed 10 Gbit/s EPON (XEPON or 10-GE
PON) standard (http://www.ieee802.org/3/av/).
A PON consists of a central office node, called an optical line terminal (OLT), one
or more user nodes, called optical network units (ONUs) or optical network termina
ls (ONTs), and the fibers and splitters between them, called the optical distribution
network (ODN). In apartment buildings, the ONT often separately connects via VD
SL or Ethernet to the apartments, at speeds up to 100 megabits. An ONT is a single
integrated electronics unit that terminates the PON and presents native service interf
aces to the user. An ONU is the PON-side half of the ONT, terminating the PON, a
nd may present one or more converged interfaces, such as xDSL or Ethernet, towar
d the user. An ONU typically requires a separate subscriber unit to provide native u
ser services such as telephony, Ethernet data, or video. In practice, the difference be
tween an ONT and ONU is frequently ignored, and either term is used generically t
o refer to both classes of equipment.
Current Status of PON
TDM-PON
Both APON/BPON and EPON/GEPON have been deployed widely, but most
networks designed in 2008 use GPON or GEPON. GPON is most common in
the West, GEPON more common in Asia. In china, Carriers looking to deliver
the latest broadband services over fiber access have a choice of PON
technologies. Gigabit PON offers greater bandwidth and functionality, but
Ethernet PON benefits from maturity.
The currently deployed PON (e.g., APON, GPON) is named as TDM-PON, in
which the bandwidth is shared among the users in the manner of time domain
multiplexing. This is different from the multiplexing manner discussed below,
e.g., WDM-PON.
WDM-PON
Wavelength Division Multiplexing PON, or WDM-PON, is a type of passive optic
al networking, being pioneered by several companies, that uses multiple optical w
avelengths to increase the upstream and/or downstream bandwidth available to en
d users. This technology looks forward to a day when optical technology is cheap
er and easier to deploy, and end users demand higher bandwidth. WDM-PON can
provide more bandwidth over longer distances by devoting more raw optical band
width to each user, and by increasing the link loss budget of each wavelength, ma
king it less sensitive to the optical losses incurred at each optical splitter.
The multiple wavelengths of a WDM PON can be used to separate Optical Netwo
rk Units (ONUs) into several virtual PONs co-existing on the same physical infra
structure. Alternatively the wavelengths can be used collectively through statistic
al multiplexing to provide efficient wavelength utilization and lower delays exper
ienced by the ONUs. Corecess and Korea Telecom have done important research.
Novera Optics Inc. has introduced first products, which supports the WDM PON
deployment in Korea.
DOCSIS-PON
Data Over Cable Service Interface Specification (DOCSIS) PON, or D-
PON/DPON, is a type of passive optical networking, being proposed by
several companies, that implements the DOCSIS service layer interface on
existing Ethernet PON (EPON or GEPON) Media Access Control (MAC) and
Physical layer (PHY) standards. In short it implements the DOCSIS
Operations Administration Maintenance and Provisioning (OAMP)
functionality on existing EPON equipment. It makes the EPON OLT look and
act like a DOCSIS Cable Modem Termination Systems (CMTS) platform.
Some DPON systems may optionally support the Metro Ethernet Forum
(MEF) 9 and 14 specifications for the delivery of Ethernet Transport services
including Ethernet LANs (ELAN), Ethernet Virtual Private Line (EVPL), and
point to point Ethernet Transport (ELINE) services. In these instances the
DPON system also acts as an IP/MPLS Provider Edge (PE) Router.
RF-PON or RFOG
Radio Frequency PON (RF-PON) or Radio Frequency over Glass (RFOG) or
Hybrid-Fiber-Coax PON (HFC-PON) or Cable PON, is a type of passive optic
al networking, that proposes to transport RF signals that are now transported o
ver copper (principally over a hybrid fiber and coaxial cable) over PON. In the
forward direction RF-PON is an optical overlay for existing PON such as GPO
N or GEPON/EPON. The overlay for RF-PON works in the same way that so
me CWDM PON or potential WDM-PON overlays work. Reverse RF support
may be provided by digitizing and transporting the upstream or return RF into
the digital PON upstream overhead, or by the use a of a CWDM overlay. Impl
ementations vary by vendor and there are no standards for the return portion of
the RF overlay for PONs. RF-PON offers backwards compatibility with existi
ng RF modulation technology, but offers no additional bandwidth for RF base
d services. It offers a means to support RF technologies in locations where onl
y fiber is available or where copper is not permitted or feasible.
The Future of PON
On paths to next-gen PON: There are two general approaches, both in the sta
ndards bodies and among most vendors: the higher line rate, similar to current
GPON but run at faster speeds like 10 Gb/s; the other is to run multiple wavele
ngths on the same fiber and use wavelength-specific filters at the [optical netw
ork terminals]. That could be either using DWDM or CWDM wavelengths, de
pending on how many wavelengths you want to run and the performance [you
need]. Two standards bodies are working on 10G: The IEEE is working on an
Ethernet or EPON flavor, and [Full Service Access Network] has started on a s
uccessor to 2.5G GPON at 10 Gb/s. There’s been some talk about trying to uni
fy those standards, but that hasn’t progressed very far. Right now at least the o
ptics or lasers used could be used for both technologies, even if the framing m
echanisms and protocols are different.
It’s still early, but one general trend we see is more interest in 10 Gb/s GPON
for business or enterprise services. There’s an expectation that GPON, because
of the way it was standardized by FSAN and the ITU, is a little more stringent
in meeting [service level agreements].
Also, GPON can support an embedded synchronization mechanism if you want to
do something that requires synchronization like TDM-type emulation. We see the
10G flavor of EPON [more among] CLECs or [in] developing countries like Chin
a, where the service provider may not have lots of existing infrastructure or their
main target is to get high-speed Internet to as many customers as possible.
On DOCSIS 3.0 and NG GPON: I don’t think 3.0 is really driving interest in
NG PON. What comes after 3.0 might drive a move to WDM. 3.0 creates at be
st parity with GPON, and that’s debatable.