October 2010 MBH Evolution Using MPR TWP PDF
October 2010 MBH Evolution Using MPR TWP PDF
October 2010 MBH Evolution Using MPR TWP PDF
W H I T E
P A P E R
Table of contents
1 2 1. Introduction 2. Market drivers challenges and opportunities 2.1 Ethernet and MEF 22 2.2 Ethernet-based microwave
2 3 4
3. Microwave for mobile backhaul 3.1 Mobile evolution from TDM to full-packet 3.2 Mobile evolution with packet microwave
5 5 6
4. Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR for mobile backhaul 4.1 Multiservice aggregation 4.2 Radio-bandwidth optimization 4.3 Service-aware traffic management 4.4 Service-driven adaptive modulation 4.5 Synchronization distribution
7 7 8 8 8 9 9
5. Network management with the Alcatel-Lucent 5620 SAM 6. Meeting real-world challenges with the Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR 6.1 Globalive Wireless, Canada 6.2 Digicel Antilles 6.3 TIM Brasil 6.4 Indosat, Indonesia
10 10 10 11 11 11 12 12 13
7. Conclusion 8. Abbreviations 9. Contacts 10. References 11. Appendix A: comparison of packet and hybrid microwave
1. Introduction
Despite todays wide availability of broadband access technologies, one of the constraints limiting massive deployment of wireless broadband services is confusion about the best way to interact with legacy networks. Communications service providers are being challenged to: Reduce backhaul transport costs while meeting escalating demands for bandwidth-intensive mobile multimedia data services Evolve to packet-optimized networks that are capable of supporting Fourth Generation (4G) wireless Ensure service availability to retain and grow their customer bases Communications service providers are seeking mobile-backhaul networks that can meet capacity demands with architectures that support data services as well as traditional voice at a sustainable cost. One solution to these challenges is to increase the use of microwave. Worldwide, microwave is used for half of the total connections in the access network, representing a valid and complementary alternative to wireline technologies such as copper and fiber. Ethernet-based microwave connections are replacing legacy Plesiochronous Digital Hierarchy (PDH) E-carrier system/ T-carrier system (E1/T1) microwave connections at an increasing rate. This paper describes the advantages of using the Alcatel-Lucent 9500 Microwave Packet Radio (MPR) for mobile backhaul. For communications service providers that want to deliver feature-rich mobile services at attractive rates and with profitable operating margins, the Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR, unlike hybrid microwave systems, supports Second Generation/Third Generation (2G/3G) networks and is Long Term Evolution (LTE) ready today. The Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR is capable of operating in hybrid mode to support current TDMbased architectures and help service providers to progressively migrate their backhaul networks to packet and full-packet mode, to service the new generations of packet-based Evolved High-Speed Packet Access (HSPA+) and LTE services. The Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR fully supports all the mobile-backhaul scenarios defined in MEF 22 Carrier Ethernet for Mobile Backhaul Implementation Agreement (MBIA), giving service providers a wide variety of choices to move their backhaul networks away from legacy infrastructures. A key capability of the Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR is the integrated Generic Inter-Working Function (GIWF), defined in MEF 22, to carry TDM and ATM services as pseudowires or circuit emulation: Pseudowires (RFC 4717: Encapsulation Methods for Transport of Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) over MPLS Networks) Circuit emulation: MEF 8: Implementation Agreement for the Emulation of PDH Circuits over Metro Ethernet Networks RFC 4553: Structure-Agnostic Time Division Multiplexing (TDM) over Packet (SAToP) RFC 5086: Structure-Aware TDM Circuit Emulation Service over Packet-Switched Network (CESoPSN)
Mobile Backhaul Evolution using Microwave Packet Radio | Technology White Paper
Enriched service and QoE Voice and multimedia Pay per use Walled garden Efcient network and operations 2000 to 2005 2005 to 2010 2010 to 2020
Service providers can strengthen user-paid revenues with IP services, such as multiscreen video and location-based services, and supplement these with revenues from non-traditional services, such as targeted advertising, content brokering and e-commerce transactions. An innovative business model is needed to address these market conditions, one that can generate additional revenue from content providers, application providers and other sources. The nextgeneration wireless broadband network must be able to support escalating demands for bandwidth and QoE while reducing total cost of ownership (TCO). 2.1 Ethernet and MEF 22 Historically, mobile-backhaul networks have been implemented using TDM and ATM technologies. However, these networks cannot keep pace with the bandwidth capacity and reliability requirements of increasingly popular voice, data and video broadband applications on mobile devices. To meet these demands, next-generation mobile equipment and networks are evolving to Ethernet, which is optimized for packet-data traffic. Ethernet is becoming increasingly available at sites because of its flexibility to be transported over a multitude of transport media (fiber, copper and microwave).
Mobile Backhaul Evolution using Microwave Packet Radio | Technology White Paper
As a guide, the MEF (formerly known as Metro Ethernet Forum) issued MEF 22 MBIA to explain how existing MEF specifications can be applied to Ethernet backhaul architectures for 2G, 3G and 4G mobile networks. MEF 22 explains how to successfully and cost-effectively implement Carrier Ethernet for mobile backhaul, including how to apply MEF specifications and industry standards to meet Radio Access Network (RAN) backhaul requirements. MEF 22 enables the deployment of profitable, data-driven mobile services, describing both the benefits and technicalimplementation details. This specification assists mobile service providers as they prepare their RAN backhaul networks to meet current dynamic market and economic conditions. Key to the MBIA is preserving voice-based service revenues with a transition path that supports legacy technologies and an evolution to 3G and 4G. The MBIA includes recommendations for the network design, architecture and operation of packet-based mobile-backhaul networks. 2.2 Ethernet-based microwave In the access network, microwave is used for half of the total connections worldwide, demonstrating its acceptance as a valid alternative that complements wireline technologies such as copper and fiber (see Figure 2).
Figure 2. Global equipment forecast by media type
Source: Wireless Backhaul: Opportunities for Optical and Switching/Routing Vendors , Ovum, October 2009
Ethernet-based microwave connections are expected to increasingly replace legacy PDH E1/T1 microwave connections a trend expected to take hold in 2011, as shown in light blue in Figure 3.
Figure 3. Worldwide mobile-backhaul new connectivity by technology
Source: Mobile Backhaul Equipment and Services market size, share and forecast report, Infonetics Research, April 2010 Mobile Backhaul Evolution using Microwave Packet Radio | Technology White Paper 3
Confidence in using packet microwave for mobile backhaul is growing because it addresses: The economic push to maintain and reuse existing microwave access networks, avoiding the deployment of expensive fiber connections in the last mile Support for LTE and 4G services that demand packet-based transport while continuing to support fixed services
Mobile Backhaul Evolution using Microwave Packet Radio | Technology White Paper
3.1 Mobile evolution from TDM to full-packet The TDM present mode of operation (PMO) must evolve to support full-packet in the future. As shown in Figure 4, PDH/SDH microwave supports 2G/3G TDM voice and 3G data by introducing an ATM switch in the transmission path. Hybrid networks keep TDM traffic in the TDM network and transport Ethernet data in a separate packet network. Hybrid microwave works in the same way, handling TDM and packet traffic separately with two different physical units, but it still needs ATM switches for the 3G TDM data, as shown in Figure 5. How will this hybrid microwave approach evolve to support a full-packet network? How will the remaining 2G and 3G voice be transported across the network? Indications are that service providers are retaining T1/E1s at their cell sites for Ethernet backhaul synchronization, at least until 2013.1
2G E1/T1 TDM 3G E1/T1 ATM switch 2G (voice) > TDM > E1/T1 3G (voice) > ATM > E1/T1 3G (data) > ATM > E1/T1
TDM
Packet microwave uses Ethernet as the only native radiotransmission protocol, as shown in Figure 6.Ethernet Packet HSPA signals such as Fast Ethernet (100 Mb/s) and Gigabit Ethernet (GigE; 1 Gb/s) are natively transmitted while TDM/ATM signals such as T1 and E1 are transmitted by pseudowire (PWE3; Pseudowire Emulation Edge-to-Edge) 2G (voice) > TDM > E1/T1 TDM and Circuit Emulation Service (CES) as integrated functionalities. 3G (voice) > ATM > E1/T1 3G (data) > Ethernet > Packet 3.2 Mobile evolution with packet microwave The Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR is designed to costeffectively support the launch of data services without Figure 6. Future mode of operation impact on traditional voice services. For the first time, native packet microwave is capable of being deployed in 2G E1/T1 E1/T1 TDM networks to support a smooth transition from the PMO to a full-packet network, without extra steps such 3G E1/T1 as hybrid systems while TDM and data services coexist. Packet
4G LTE
ATM switch
The Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR can shorten the amount of time it takes operators to evolve from their PMO to full packet. As shown in Figure 7, the Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR can be deployed in a TDM, hybrid or full-packet network, supporting evolution based on communications service providers business needs.
3G (data) > Ethernet > Packet 4G (data) > Ethernet > Packet
atrick Donegan, Ethernet Backhaul Quarterly Market Tracker, Heavy Reading, August 2010. Operators will continue to support P T1/E1 as they adopt SyncE and IEEE 1588v2.
Mobile Backhaul Evolution using Microwave Packet Radio | Technology White Paper
In Figure 7, the text in peach-colored boxes highlights how the Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR supports the network as it evolves. An ATM switch is not needed in the PMO because the Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR encapsulates the ATM signal in a pseudowire. In a hybrid network, Ethernet is used for data services, using one node with adaptive modulation for best-effort Ethernet over TDM. For a full-packet network in future mode of operation (FMO), the Alcatel-Lucent 9500MPR can transport all traffic using one piece of equipment: 2G voice is transported using CES, with TDM-like quality and with the same performance. 3G IP voice is prioritized over 3G best-effort data. As such, 3G data is handled through service-driven adaptive modulation. LTE congestion management is supported for Quality of Service (QoS) and traffic handling. Appendix A provides a summary comparison of hybrid microwave to packet microwave.
Figure 7. Mobile evolution with the Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR
PMO with 9500 MPR 2G E1/T1 TDM 3G E1/T1 ATM switch 2G (voice) 3G (voice) 3G (data) ATM TDM ATM E1/T1 E1/T1 E1/T1 TDM HSPA Packet 2G (voice) TDM Pseudowire 3G E1/T1 Hybrid network with 9500 MPR 2G E1/T1 2G E1/T1 TDM 3G E1/T1 4G LTE Packet FMO with 9500 MPR E1/T1
3G (voice) 3G (data)
IP IP
3G (data)
Ethernet
Eth
Mobile Backhaul Evolution using Microwave Packet Radio | Technology White Paper
The Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR implements all these innovations on one LTE-ready platform that also supports current TDM-based and hybrid architectures during the evolution cycle. Provisioning and monitoring of all services (2G/3G/LTE) are provided through either the Alcatel-Lucent 1350 Optical Management Suite (OMS) or the Alcatel-Lucent 5620 Service Aware Manager (SAM) system. Both systems support end-to-end QoS across the Ethernet backhaul network and mobile core.
Figure 8. Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR differentiators
Multiservice aggregation
TDM networking Packet networking
Packet node
Full-packet trafc
Stacking
Converging
Local trafc
100% guarantee
QoS/QoE
Synchronization distribution in TDM, hybrid and full Ethernet networks Single network manager for TDM and packet conguration
4.1 Multiservice aggregation With multiservice aggregation, Ethernet is used as a common transmission layer to transport any kind of traffic. Ethernet becomes the convergence layer: regardless of access technology, interface type and transmission layer, the Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR can converge all traffic over a single packet network using industry-standard pseudowire and circuit-emulation technologies (MEF 8, ATM PWE3, SAToP/CESoPSN). The Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR is MEF 9 and MEF 14 certified to support Ethernet Private Line (EPL), Ethernet Virtual Private Line (EVPL) and Ethernet LAN (E-LAN) service functionality and performance, enabling the acceleration of full interoperability in multivendor environments. Multiservice-aggregation layers remove the need for intermediate E1/T1 connectivity, enabling unique traffic management regardless of ATM/TDM/Ethernet traffic type. 4.2 Radio-bandwidth optimization The Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR is a packet node that supports multiple radio directions and local access, handling all traffic over a common multiservice-aggregation layer. This permits service overbooking across different technologies. The same services, in terms of Class of Service (CoS) generated by an ATM source and an IP source, can now share the same bandwidth resource. The resulting benefit is optimization of radio-bandwidth resources in conjunction with tremendous switching capacity and very high scalability.
Mobile Backhaul Evolution using Microwave Packet Radio | Technology White Paper
4.3 Service-aware traffic management Service awareness enables the categorization of different traffic types carried over the converged Ethernet stream. The transmitted data stream can come from different sources and may therefore have different requirements. For example, ATM traffic from a 3G base station can carry voice (high priority, real-time service) and data (lower priority and possibly non-real time with a high-variability load, such as Internet browsing, music downloading or video streaming). Service awareness identifies the different traffic types for Hierarchical QoS (H-QoS) and guaranteed QoS/QoE. Service awareness also includes genuine TDM transport options, enabling E1/T1 transmission with TDM-like performance in terms of spectral efficiency and jitter/wander and avoiding the typical quality degradation caused by the packetization process. 4.4 Service-driven adaptive modulation In the Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR, service-driven adaptive modulation operates in conjunction with service-aware traffic management. This approach enables full exploitation of the entire air bandwidth by changing the modulation scheme according to propagation availability, consequently providing sufficient transport capacity. Flow control is service-aware and can adapt the traffic throughput to the new available bandwidth by discarding the packet traffic according to the QoS marking performed at the PWE3/MPLS/Ethernet level. When full bandwidth is restored on the air interface, packets are not discarded. The Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR provides a full set of protection methods with no single point of failure, including the Ethernet switch, Ethernet traffic ports, E1/T1 ports, equipment controller and radio transceivers. Moreover, if the Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR is connected to a packet network, link aggregation is supported within the same access card or on two different cards to maximize redundancy of the system. 4.5 Synchronization distribution To transport real-time services over a packet network, an operator must provide a precise time signal to synchronize the traditional TDM services in the packet network without compromising service quality. With native TDM traffic, the synchronization signal can be recovered from the traffic itself, for example, from the E1/T1 or Synchronous Transport Mode level 1/Optical Carrier level 3 (STM-1/OC-3) line signal; alternatively synchronization is delivered to site using a sync-out port. For packet traffic, other techniques must be implemented to achieve the same performance as in a circuit-based network. Synchronous Ethernet (SyncE) and Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) 1588v2 are suitable mechanisms for this. On the air, synchronization distribution using packet radio consumes no bandwidth, being based on radio symbol rate, and is totally immune to the network load. Synchronization-delivery options are independent of the synchronization source. As shown in Figure 9, the Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR implements a number of mechanisms for transporting and distributing synchronization in the network, including: SyncE IEEE 1588v2 Packet-microwave synchronization STM-1 (SDH)/OC-3 (SONET)
Mobile Backhaul Evolution using Microwave Packet Radio | Technology White Paper
Line clock
E1/T1
SyncE
Eth
SyncE
Eth
Private
Mobile Backhaul Evolution using Microwave Packet Radio | Technology White Paper
6.1 Globalive Wireless, Canada Globalive Wireless wanted to build a high-speed 3G mobile network able to smoothly transition to LTE. The company deployed the Alcatel-Lucent 9500MPR and Alcatel-Lucent service routers and service-aggregation routers.
Our commitment is to provide Canadian consumers with unmatched value. For that we need future-ready technology that enables the delivery of high-capacity, cost-effective IP-based services. We look to the experience, expertise and forward-thinking technology of Alcatel-Lucent to support our commitment to building an advanced, high-speed mobile network that will support economic development and jobs creation throughout Canada.
Ken Campbell, Chief Executive Officer, Globalive Wireless
6.2 Digicel Antilles A mobile telecommunications operator in the Caribbean and Latin America, Digicel Antilles faces the challenges of the island terrain and weather that affects radio transmissions. The company selected the Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR for its IP mobile-network transformation.
To meet the increase in traffic and satisfy the growing demand for high-speed mobile data services, we needed to progressively transform our infrastructure towards a simpler network architecture that could ensure the highest level of quality in all circumstances. The Alcatel-Lucent microwave packet radio solution allows us to optimize our networks radio bandwidth, regardless of the signal propagation conditions, which is a particularly important factor in the islands latitude.
Franck Rogier, Transmission Manager, Digicel Antilles French Guiana
6.3 TIM Brasil Telecom Italia Mobile Brasil wanted to transform its network to enable the reliable, cost-effective transport of its existing 3G traffic as the company transitions to support LTE and WiMAX-based services. To transform the mobile network, TIM Brasil deployed the Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR and Alcatel-Lucent 1850 Transport Service Switch (TSS).
The success of our 3G services is driving the demand for new and higher-speed services. To meet the resulting traffic growth, we needed to transform our infrastructure into a simpler network architecture ensuring cost-effectiveness and the highest quality in service delivery. With Alcatel-Lucents state-of-the-art packet transport solution, we evolve profitably towards the next generation of wireless broadband, while preparing for LTE and WiMAX-based services.
Marco Di Costanzo, Network Director, TIM Brasil
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Mobile Backhaul Evolution using Microwave Packet Radio | Technology White Paper
6.4 Indosat, Indonesia In Indonesia, Indosat wanted to converge its mobile and fixed-line services to improve mobilebackhaul capacity and optimize their CAPEX and OPEX. In view of the extraordinary growth in both the number of subscribers and the traffic volume, the company deployed the Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR, the Alcatel-Lucent 7705 Service Activation Router (SAR) and the Alcatel-Lucent 5620 SAM. Deploying the Alcatel-Lucent solution is helping Indosat prepare for emerging nextgeneration wireless network services and to scale to meet bandwidth demand for High Speed Downlink Packet Access (HSDPA) and eventually 4G.
7. Conclusion
Communications service providers can reduce backhaul transport costs, evolve to scalable packet-optimized networks, and ensure service availability that fosters customer loyalty. The Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR is a true packet wireless-transmission system that natively handles packets and efficiently transports feature-rich mobile services, enabling the launch of data services at attractive rates and with profitable operating margins. Using Ethernet as the only native radio-transmission protocol, Fast Ethernet (100 Mb/s) and Gigabit Ethernet (1 Gb/s) are natively transmitted while TDM/ATM signals are transmitted as pseudowire and CES. The Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR supports 2G and 3G services and is LTE-ready today.
8. Abbreviations
1350 OMS 1850 TSS 5620 SAM 7705 SAR 9500 MPR 2G, 3G, 4G ATM BSC BTS CAPEX CES CESoPSN CoS DDF E-LAN E1 EPL EVPL FCAPS FMO GigE GIWF H-QoS HLN HSPA HSPA+ IEEE IP L2 LTE Alcatel-Lucent 1350 Optical Management Suite Alcatel-Lucent 1850 Transport Service Switch Alcatel-Lucent 5620 Service Aware Manager Alcatel-Lucent 7705 Service Aggregation Router Alcatel-Lucent 9500 Microwave Packet Radio Second Generation, Third Generation, Fourth Generation Asynchronous Transfer Mode Base Station Controller Base Transceiver Station capital expenditures Circuit Emulation Service Structure-Aware TDM Circuit Emulation Service over Packet-Switched Network (RFC 5086) Class of Service digital distribution frame Ethernet Local Area Network E-carrier system Ethernet Private Line Ethernet Virtual Private Line Fault, Configuration, Accounting, Performance and Security management future mode of operation Gigabit Ethernet Generic Inter-Working Function Hierarchical QoS Alcatel-Lucent High Leverage Network (architecture) High-Speed Packet Access Evolved HSPA Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Internet Protocol Layer 2 Long Term Evolution
Mobile Backhaul Evolution using Microwave Packet Radio | Technology White Paper
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MBIA MEF MPLS OC-3 OPEX PC PDH PMO PWE3 QAM QoE QoS RAN RNC SAToP SDH SONET STM-1 SyncE T1 TCO TDM VoIP WDM WiMAX
Mobile Backhaul Implementation Agreement (MEF 22) formerly known as Metro Ethernet Forum Multi-Protocol Label Switching Optical Carrier level 3 operating expenditures personal computer Plesiochronous Digital Hierarchy present mode of operation Pseudowire Emulation Edge-to-Edge quadrature amplitude modulation Quality of Experience Quality of Service Radio Access Network Radio Network Controller Structure-Agnostic TDM over Packet (RFC 4553) Synchronous Digital Hierarchy Synchronous Optical Network Synchronous Transport Mode level 1 Synchronous Ethernet T-carrier system total cost of ownership Time Division Multiplexing Voice over Internet Protocol wavelength division multiplexing Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access
9. Contacts
For information about Alcatel-Lucent mobile-backhaul solutions and the Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR, please visit www.alcatel-lucent.com or contact your Customer Team representative.
10. References
Converged Mobile Backhaul; Using microwave packet radio for mobile backhaul in High Leverage Network architecture. Alcatel-Lucent, March 2010. http://webform.alcatel-lucent.com/res/alu/survey/alu2CustomForm.jsp?cw=alu2CorpDocDown load&LMSG_CABINET=Docs_and_Resource_Ctr&LMSG_CONTENT_FILE=White_ Papers/March_2010_HLN_microwave_backhauling_swp.pdf&lu_lang_code=en_WW 2. Evolve 2G/3G Networks for LTE using L2 Optical and Microwave Transport. Alcatel-Lucent, October 2009. http://webform.alcatel-lucent.com/res/alu/survey/alu2CustomForm.jsp?cw=alu2CorpDocDown load&LMSG_CABINET=Docs_and_Resource_Ctr&LMSG_CONTENT_FILE=White_ Papers/4Q09_OptMicMobileTransport_SWP.pdf&lu_lang_code=en_WW 3. Donegan, Patrick. Ethernet Backhaul Quarterly Market Tracker. Heavy Reading, August 2010. http://www.heavyreading.com/ 4. MEF 8: Implementation Agreement for the Emulation of PDH Circuits over Metro Ethernet Networks. MEF, October 2004. http://metroethernetforum.org/PDF_Documents/technical-specifications/MEF8.pdf 5. MEF 9: Abstract Test Suite for Ethernet Services at the UNI. MEF, October 2004. metroethernetforum.org/PDFs/Standards/mef9.doc 1.
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Mobile Backhaul Evolution using Microwave Packet Radio | Technology White Paper
6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
MEF 14: Abstract Test Suite for Traffic Management Phase 1. MEF, November 2005. metroethernetforum.org/PDFs/Standards/mef14.doc MEF 22: Carrier Ethernet for Mobile Backhaul Implementation Agreement. MEF, February 2009. http://metroethernetforum.org/PDF_Documents/technical-specifications/MEF22.pdf RFC 4553: Structure-Agnostic Time Division Multiplexing (TDM) over Packet (SAToP). IETF, June 2006. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4553 RFC 4717: Encapsulation Methods for Transport of Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) over MPLS Networks. IETF, December 2006. RFC 5086: Structure-Aware Time Division Multiplexed (TDM) Circuit Emulation Service over Packet Switched Network (CESoPSN). IETF, December 2007. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5086 Carrier Ethernet for Mobile Backhaul. www.metroethernetforum.org/mobile-backhaul Ovum. Wireless Backhaul: Opportunities for Optical and Switching/Routing Vendors. October 2009. Infonetics Research. Mobile Backhaul Equipment and Services. April 2010.
Supports 2G, 3G and 4G LTE-ready Ethernet is the common transmission layer that can transport any kind of traffic (TDM, ATM, Ethernet) T DM and ATM are converted to packet streams using industry standards (MEF8, ATM PWE3, TDM CES) Ethernet provides scalability Aggregates traffic from multiple radio directions and local access, handling all traffic (ATM, TDM, Ethernet) over a common multiservice aggregation layer (Ethernet) Service-aware traffic management uses QoS mechanisms (classification, policing, shaping, metering, scheduling) to grant high priority traffic appropriate treatment Can discriminate different traffic flows (ATM, TDM, Ethernet), including transmission of CES, with the same performance as native TDM traffic O ptimized radio transmission, in which the nature of incoming traffic (TDM voice, VoIP, real-time services or best-effort data) is recognized to perform optimal transmission Service-driven adaptive modulation, which can increase radio throughput by scaling modulation when propagation conditions are appropriated Applies for Ethernet, ATM and TDM traffic Carrier-grade protection provides protection methods to avoid service failure Synchronization distribution provides timing/synchronization to network elements in the access and aggregation networks Packet microwave uses a number of mechanisms for transporting and distributing synchronization that can be freely mixed (for example, SyncE at ingress, E1/T1 line clock at egress) E1/T1 line clock is decoupled at ingress and egress (for example, one line at ingress, n lines at egress)
Supports 2G and 3G Not LTE-ready Ethernet, TDM and ATM are each natively transported Limits scalability
Traffic handled differently: TDM and ATM require a digital distribution frame (DDF) for aggregation Ethernet can be aggregated from multiple radio directions and local access Traffic handled differently: ATM and TDM are treated natively to be directed to the radio channel Ethernet traffic is service-aware, with the ability to discriminate traffic by requirements and CoS to grant high-priority traffic the appropriate treatment Traffic handled differently: Optimized radio transmission for Ethernet traffic TDM and ATM do not have optimized radio transmission Traffic handled differently: Service-driven adaptive modulation for Ethernet traffic TDM and ATM do not support service-driven adaptive modulation Carrier-grade protection provides protection methods to avoid service failure for TDM only Synchronization distribution with limitations Legacy and packet-based methods cannot be mixed E1/T1 line clock is transported one-to-one (for example, n lines at ingress, n lines at egress)
Mobile Backhaul Evolution using Microwave Packet Radio | Technology White Paper
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Alcatel, Lucent, Alcatel-Lucent and the Alcatel-Lucent logo are trademarks of Alcatel-Lucent. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. The information presented is subject to change without notice. Alcatel-Lucent assumes no responsibility for inaccuracies contained herein. Copyright 2010 Alcatel-Lucent. All rights reserved. CPG1076100824 (09)