Claims
- 1. A method for routing optical traffic, the method comprising:
distributing with a configurable wavelength link architecture spectral bands received on a first plurality of input optical signals among a first plurality of output optical signals; and upgrading a capacity of the configurable wavelength link architecture to distribute spectral bands received from a second plurality of input optical signals among a second plurality of output optical signals, wherein:
each such input optical signal is received from one of a plurality of separated optical transmission systems and a corresponding output optical signal is directed to such one of the plurality of separated optical transmission systems; the second plurality of input optical signals includes the first plurality of input optical signals; and the second plurality of output optical signals includes the first plurality of output optical signals.
- 2. The method recited in claim 1 wherein such upgrading is performed without disrupting distribution of the spectral bands received on the first plurality of input optical signals among the first plurality of output optical signals
- 3. The method recited in claim 1 further comprising distributing with the configurable wavelength link architecture the spectral bands received on the second plurality of input optical signals among the second plurality of output optical signals.
- 4. The method recited in claim 1 wherein the configurable wavelength link architecture comprises a wavelength cross connect.
- 5. The method recited in claim 1 wherein the configurable wavelength link architecture includes a protection fabric.
- 6. The method recited in claim 5 wherein upgrading the capacity of the configurable wavelength link architecture comprises:
sequentially bypassing each of a plurality of working fabrics of the configurable wavelength link architecture onto the protection fabric and upgrading the bypassed working fabric; upgrading the protection fabric; and adding additional working fabric to the configurable wavelength link architecture.
- 7. The method recited in claim 1 wherein the configurable wavelength link architecture comprises a first plurality of wavelength routing elements, each such wavelength element adapted for selectively routing wavelength components between a first optical signal and a plurality of second optical signals according to a configurable state of such wavelength routing element, wherein a mapping of the spectral bands comprised by the first plurality of input optical signals to the first plurality of output optical signals is determined by the states of the first plurality of wavelength routing elements.
- 8. The method recited in claim 7 wherein the configurable wavelength link architecture further comprises a plurality of optical couplers each disposed to intercept one of the first plurality of input optical signals and to transmit an equivalent of such one of the first plurality of input optical signals to each of the first plurality of wavelength routing elements, wherein each of the first plurality of wavelength routing elements is disposed to receive equivalents corresponding to each of the first plurality of input optical signals and to transmit the respective one of the first plurality of output optical signals depending on the state of such wavelength routing element.
- 9. The method recited in claim 7 wherein no spectral band received from any one of the separated optical transmission systems is routed back to that separated optical transmission system.
- 10. The method recited in claim 7 wherein the configurable wavelength link architecture further comprises a second plurality of wavelength routing elements disposed to transmit the first plurality of output optical signals, wherein outputs of each of the first plurality of wavelength routing elements are in optical communication with an input to at least one of the second plurality of wavelength routing elements.
- 11. The method recited in claim 10 wherein no spectral band received from any one of the separated optical transmission systems is routed back to that optical transmission system.
- 12. The method recited in claim 10 wherein pairs of the first plurality of wavelength routing elements and pairs of the second plurality of wavelength routing elements are provided by optical add/drop multiplexers.
- 13. The method recited in claim 1 wherein the configurable wavelength link architecture comprises a plurality of optical add/drop multiplexers, each of which is disposed to receive a pair of the input optical signals and to transmit a pair of the output optical signals.
- 14. The method recited in claim 1 further comprising distributing with the configurable wavelength link architecture at least one spectral band received on at least one add signal among at least one of the output optical signals.
- 15. The method recited in claim 14 further comprising distributing with the configurable wavelength link architecture at least one spectral band received on at least one of the input optical signals onto at least one drop signal.
- 16. The method recited in claim 15 wherein the at least one add signal comprises a plurality of add signals and the at least one drop signal comprises a plurality of drop signals.
- 17. The method recited in claim 16 wherein each add signal and each drop signal is associated with one of the plurality of separated optical transmission systems.
- 18. The method recited in claim 17 wherein the configurable wavelength link architecture further comprises a plurality of optical add/drop multiplexers, each disposed to exchange spectral bands between the input optical signal received from a respective one of the separated optical transmission systems and the add signal and drop signal associated with the respective one of the separated optical transmission systems.
- 19. The method recited in claim 17 wherein, for each separated optical transmission system, spectral bands from the input optical signal received from such each separated optical transmission system are dropped directly onto the drop signal associated with such each separated optical transmission system and spectral bands from the add signal associated with such each separated optical transmission system are added directly to the output optical signal directed to such each separated optical transmission system.
- 20. The method recited in claim 17 wherein, for each separated optical transmission system, the drop signal associated with such each separated optical transmission system comprises an equivalent to the input optical signal received from such each separated optical transmission system.
- 21. The method recited in claim 20 wherein the output optical signal directed to such each separated optical transmission system comprises spectral bands selected from the add signal associated with such each separated optical transmission system and from equivalents to input optical signals received from separated optical transmission systems other than such each optical transmission system.
- 22. The method recited in claim 15 wherein the at least one drop signal comprises spectral bands selected from the first plurality of input optical signals.
- 23. The method recited in claim 22 wherein the configurable wavelength link architecture is configured to permit each output optical signal to include spectral bands selected from the at least one add signal.
- 24. The method recited in claim 1 wherein the configurable wavelength link architecture comprises a first plurality of optical add/drop multiplexers.
- 25. The method recited in claim 24 wherein upgrading the capacity of the configurable wavelength link architecture comprises adding an optical wavelength cross connect in optical communication with add and drop ports on at least one of the first plurality of optical add/drop multiplexers.
- 26. The method recited in claim 24 wherein upgrading the capacity of the configurable wavelength link architecture comprises:
removing links to add and drop signals from the configurable wavelength link architecture; adding wavelength routing capacity to the configurable wavelength link architecture to accommodate at least one additional separated optical transmission system; increasing wavelength routing capacity for each of the plurality of separated optical transmission systems; connecting input and output optical signals for the at least one additional separated optical transmission system to the configurable wavelength link architecture; and restoring links to the add and drop signals from the configurable wavelength link architecture.
- 27. The method recited in claim 26 wherein adding wavelength routing capacity to the configurable wavelength link architecture comprises:
adding a second plurality of optical add/drop multiplexers in a cascaded arrangement to the configurable wavelength link architecture; and placing add ports of the first plurality of optical add/drop multiplexers in optical communication with outputs of the second plurality of optical add/drop multiplexers.
- 28. The method recited in claim 26 wherein increasing wavelength routing capacity for each of the plurality of separated optical transmission systems comprises:
adding a second plurality of optical add/drop multiplexers to the configurable wavelength link architecture, wherein each of the second plurality of optical add/drop multiplexers is added in a cascaded arrangement with one of the first plurality of optical add/drop multiplexers; and placing outputs of the second plurality of optical add/drop multiplexers in optical communication with add ports of the second plurality of optical add/drop multiplexers.
- 29. The method recited in claim 1 wherein the configurable wavelength link architecture is configured so that spectral bands on input optical signals received from a subset of the plurality of separated optical transmission systems may not be included on output optical signals directed to a separated optical transmission system within the subset.
- 30. The method recited in claim 29 wherein the configurable wavelength link architecture comprises a plurality of DWDM links optically interconnected with a wavelength cross connect.
- 31. The method recited in claim 30 wherein upgrading the capacity of the configurable wavelength link architecture comprises:
removing links to add and drop signals from the configurable wavelength link architecture; adding at least one additional DWDM link; upgrading the capacity of the wavelength cross connect; and restoring links to the add and drop signals from the configurable wavelength link architecture.
- 32. The method recited in claim 31 wherein the plurality of DWDM links comprise a plurality of optical add/drop multiplexers.
- 33. A wavelength link architecture for distributing spectral bands received on a plurality of input optical signals among a plurality of output optical signals, wherein each such input optical signal is received from one of a plurality of separated optical transmission systems and a corresponding output optical signal is directed to such one of the plurality of separated optical transmission systems, the wavelength link architecture comprising:
an optical wavelength cross connect having a plurality of input ports, a plurality of output ports, and at least one wavelength routing element adapted for selectively routing wavelength components between a first optical signal and a plurality of second optical signals according to a configurable state of such wavelength routing element, wherein the optical wavelength cross connect is adapted to receive cross-connect-input optical signals at the input ports and to transmit cross-connect-output optical signals from the output ports.
- 34. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 33 wherein the optical wavelength cross connect further has a protection fabric.
- 35. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 33 wherein the optical wavelength cross connect comprises a first plurality of wavelength routing elements, wherein a mapping of the spectral bands comprised by the plurality of input optical signals to the plurality of output optical signals is determined by the states of the first plurality of wavelength routing elements.
- 36. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 35 wherein the optical wavelength cross connect further comprises a plurality of optical couplers each disposed to couple one of the cross-connect-input optical signals with a plurality of equivalents of such one of the cross-connect-input optical signals, wherein the first optical signal for each of the first plurality of wavelength routing elements corresponds to one of the cross-connect-output optical signals and the second optical signals for such each of the first plurality of wavelength routing elements corresponds to equivalents of each of the cross-connect-input optical signals.
- 37. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 35 wherein the optical wavelength cross connect is adapted so that no spectral band received from any one of the separated optical transmission systems is routed back to that separated optical transmission system.
- 38. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 35 wherein the optical wavelength cross connect further comprises a second plurality of wavelength routing elements disposed to transmit the cross-connect-output optical signals, wherein outputs of the first plurality of wavelength routing elements are in optical communication with an input to at least one of the second plurality of wavelength routing elements.
- 39. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 38 wherein the optical wavelength cross connect is adapted so that no spectral band received from any one of the separated optical transmission systems is routed back to that separated optical transmission system.
- 40. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 38 wherein pairs of the first plurality of wavelength routing elements and pairs of the second plurality of wavelength routing elements are provided by optical add/drop multiplexers.
- 41. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 33 wherein the optical wavelength cross connect includes a plurality of optical add/drop multiplexers, each of which is disposed to receive a pair of the input optical signals and to transmit a pair of the output optical signals.
- 42. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 33 further comprising at least one add optical connection adapted to add at least one spectral band from at least one add signal to at least one of the cross-connect-input signals.
- 43. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 42 further comprises at least one drop optical connection adapted to distribute at least one spectral band from at least one of the plurality of input optical signals onto a drop signal.
- 44. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 43 wherein the at least one add signal comprises a plurality of add signals and the at least one drop signal comprises a plurality of drop signals.
- 45. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 44 wherein each add signal and each drop signal is associated with one of the plurality of separated optical transmission systems.
- 46. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 45 further comprising a plurality of add/drop multiplexers, each disposed to exchange spectral bands between the input optical signal received from a respective one of the separated optical transmission systems and the add signal and drop signal associated with the respective one of the separated optical transmission systems.
- 47. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 45 further comprising:
a plurality of drop wavelength routing elements each associated with one of the separated optical transmission systems and disposed to drop spectral bands from the input optical signal received from such one of the separated optical transmission systems onto the drop signals associated with such one of the separated optical transmission systems; and a plurality of add optical couplers each associated with one of the separated optical transmission systems and disposed to add spectral bands from the add signal associated with such one of the separated optical transmission systems onto the output optical signal transmitted to such one of the separated optical transmission systems.
- 48. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 43 wherein the at least one add signal corresponds to at least one of the cross-connect-input optical signals and the at least one drop signal corresponds to at least one of the cross-connect-output optical signals.
- 49. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 33 further comprising a plurality of DWDM links optically interconnected with the optical wavelength cross connect.
- 50. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 49 wherein the plurality of DWDM links comprise a plurality of optical add/drop multiplexers.
- 51. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 50 wherein an add port of at least one of the plurality of optical add/drop multiplexers is in optical communication with one of the cross-connect-output optical signals and a drop port of the at least one of the plurality of optical add/drop multiplexers is in optical communication with one of the cross-connect-input optical signals.
- 52. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 51 wherein at least one of the plurality of input optical signals corresponds to one of the cross-connect-input optical signals and at least one of the plurality of output optical signals corresponds to one of the cross-connect-output optical signals.
- 53. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 51 wherein at least one of the plurality of input optical signals is in optical communication with an input port of the at least one of the plurality of optical add/drop multiplexers and at least one of the plurality of output optical signals is in optical communication with an output port of the at least one of the plurality of optical add/drop multiplexers.
- 54. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 50 wherein:
each of the input optical signals is in optical communication with an input port of one of the optical add/drop multiplexers; each of the output optical signals is in optical communication with an output port of one of the optical add/drop multiplexers; an add port of each of the optical add/drop multiplexers is in optical communication with one of the cross-connect-output optical signals; and a drop port of each of the optical add/drop multiplexers is in optical communication with one of the cross-connect-input optical signals.
- 55. A wavelength link architecture comprising:
a plurality of optical couplers; and a plurality of wavelength routing elements adapted for selectively routing wavelength components between a first optical signal and a plurality of second optical signals, wherein the wavelength routing elements are in optical communication with the optical couplers such that when each of a plurality of input optical signals is received from one of a plurality of separated optical transmission systems and a corresponding output optical signal is directed to such one of the plurality of separated optical transmission systems, the first optical signal for each of the wavelength routing elements corresponds to one of the output optical signals and the second optical signals for such each of the wavelength routing elements corresponds to equivalents to the input optical signals.
- 56. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 55 wherein at least one of the output optical signals includes spectral bands selected from at least one of the input optical signals and from an add signal.
- 57. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 55 wherein at least one of the equivalents to the input optical signals is transmitted as a drop signal.
- 58. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 55 wherein:
a first equivalent to one of the input optical signals is transmitted as a drop signal and a second equivalent to the one of the input optical signals is exchanged with at least one of the wavelength routing elements; and each of the wavelength routing elements is disposed to receive an add signal associated with the output optical signal corresponding to the first optical signal for such each of the wavelength routing elements.
- 59. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 55 wherein, for each of the separated optical transmission systems, the input optical signal from such separated optical transmission system has no wavelength component in common with the output optical signal transmitted to such separated optical transmission system.
- 60. A wavelength link architecture for distributing spectral bands received on a plurality of input optical signals among a plurality of output optical signals, wherein each such input optical signal is received from one of a plurality of separated optical transmission systems and a corresponding output optical signal is directed to such one of the plurality of separated optical transmission systems, the wavelength link architecture comprising:
means for receiving the plurality of input optical signals; means for transmitting the plurality of output optical signals; and cross-connect means for selectively routing wavelength components between a plurality of cross-connect-input optical signals and a plurality of cross-connect-output optical signals, wherein the cross-connect means is in optical communication with the means for receiving the plurality of input optical signals and the means for transmitting the plurality of output optical signals.
- 61. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 60 wherein the cross-connect means comprises a first plurality of wavelength routing means for selectively routing wavelength components between a first optical signal and a plurality of second optical signals according to a configurable state of such wavelength routing means,
wherein a mapping of the spectral band comprised by the plurality of input optical signals to the plurality of output optical signals is determined by states of the first plurality of wavelength routing means.
- 62. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 61 wherein the cross-connect means further comprises a plurality of optical coupling means each disposed to couple one of the cross-connect-input optical signals with a plurality of equivalents to such one of the cross-connect-input optical signals, wherein the first optical signal for each of the first plurality of wavelength routing means corresponds to one of the cross-connect-output optical signals and the second optical signals for such each of the first plurality of wavelength routing elements corresponds to equivalents to each of the cross-connect-input optical signals.
- 63. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 61 wherein the cross-connect means further comprises a second plurality of wavelength routing means disposed to transmit the cross-connect-output optical signals, wherein outputs of the first plurality of wavelength routing means are in optical communication with an input to at least one of the second plurality of wavelength routing means.
- 64. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 60 further comprising means for distributing at least one spectral band from at least one of the plurality of input optical signals onto a drop signal.
- 65. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 60 further comprising means for adding at least one spectral band from at least one add signal to at least one of the cross-connect-input optical signals.
- 66. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 60 further comprising a plurality of means for exchanging spectral bands between one of the input optical signals and a drop signal and add signal associated with the separated optical transmission system from which the one of the input optical signals is received.
- 67. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 60 further comprising:
a plurality of drop wavelength routing means for dropping spectral bands from one of the input optical signals onto a drop signal associated with the separated optical transmission system from which the one of the input optical signals is received; and a plurality of means for adding spectral bands from an add signal associated with one of the separated optical transmission systems onto the output optical signal transmitted to the one of the separated optical transmission systems.
- 68. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 60 further comprising a plurality of means for adding and dropping spectral bands to through-traffic optical signals in optical communication with the cross-connect means.
- 69. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 68 wherein at least one of the plurality of input optical signals is in optical communication with an input port of one of the plurality of means for adding and dropping spectral bands to through-traffic optical signals and at least one of the plurality of output optical signals is in optical communication with an output port of one of the plurality of means for adding and dropping spectral band to through-traffic optical signals.
- 70. The wavelength link architecture recited in claim 68 wherein:
each of the input optical signals is in optical communication with an input port of one of the means for adding and dropping spectral bands to through-traffic optical signals; each of the output optical signals in is optical communication with an output port of one of the means for adding and dropping spectral bands to through-traffic optical signals; an add port of each of the means for adding and dropping spectral bands to through-traffic optical signals is in optical communication with one of the cross-connect-output optical signals; and a drop port of each of the means for adding and dropping spectral bands to through-traffic optical signals is in optical communication with one of the cross-connect-input optical signals.
- 71. A wavelength routing element comprising:
a plurality of interconnected component wavelength routing elements each adapted for selectively routing wavelength components between a first optical signal at a first port and a plurality of second optical signals at a plurality of second ports according to a configurable state of such wavelength routing element.
- 72. The wavelength routing element recited in claim 71 wherein an output of a first of the component wavelength routing elements is in optical communication with an input of a second of the component wavelength routing elements.
- 73. The wavelength routing element recited in claim 71 wherein the first optical signals for each of the component wavelength routing elements are optically combined with on optical arrangement to form a single optical signal.
- 74. The wavelength routing element recited in claim 73 wherein at least one of the second ports for each of the component wavelength routing elements is not in optical communication with any optical signal.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/093,844, entitled “OPTICAL WAVELENGTH CROSS CONNECT ARCHITECTURES USING WAVELENGTH ROUTING ELEMENTS,” filed Mar. 8, 2002 by Edward J. Bortolini et al., the entire disclosure of which is herein incorporated by reference for all purposes. This application is also a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/093,842, entitled “METHODS FOR PERFORMING IN-SERVICE UPGRADES OF OPTICAL WAVELENGTH CROSS CONNECTS,” filed Mar. 8, 2002 by Edward J. Bortolini, the entire disclosure of which is herein incorporated by reference for all purposes. These two applications are sometimes referred to collectively herein as “the Bortolini applications.”
Continuation in Parts (2)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
10093844 |
Mar 2002 |
US |
Child |
10126189 |
Apr 2002 |
US |
Parent |
10093843 |
Mar 2002 |
US |
Child |
10126189 |
Apr 2002 |
US |