The present disclosure relates to an optical communication system, a control circuit, a storage medium, and an optical communication method for transmitting signals in the optical region.
Some conventional optical switch device includes N wavelength group generation units each including M fixed-wavelength light sources, M split/selection units, and MN tunable filters, as described in WO 2017/131125 A. As for the optical switch device described in WO 2017/131125 A, the split/selection units provide M selectable paths for data input from MN input ports, and the tunable filters provide N selectable wavelengths. This allows optical switch device to switch the path for data to be output from desired output ports. The configuration of the optical switch device described in WO 2017/131125 A has an advantage that the optical switch device can be implemented by smaller-scale hardware than an MNxMN-scale spatial matrix switch using micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) or the like.
The split/selection units of the optical switch device described in WO 2017/131125 A are implemented by a delivery-and-coupling (DC) switch or a multicast switch, and include 1×M optical couplers and M×1 optical switches. Unfortunately, the optical switches, which are active components, suffers from a problem of a higher failure rate than passive components such as optical couplers, resulting in a reduction in the reliability of the entire system. In addition, the optical switch device with an increased switch scale requires the insertion of optical amplifiers such as erbium-doped fiber amplifiers (EDFAs) to compensate for losses such as splitting losses and combining losses of the optical couplers used in the split/selection units. Unfortunately, the optical amplifiers, which are active components like the optical switches, suffers from a problem a higher failure rate than passive components, resulting in a reduction in the reliability of the entire system. Further, the optical switch device with a larger switch scale provides a longer switching time, which reduces line efficiency.
In order to solve the above-described problems, an optical communication system according to the present disclosure comprises: a plurality of optical transmitting apparatuses each to convert a first data signal that is an electrical signal into a plurality of optical-signal packet signals and transmit the plurality of optical-signal packet signals; a plurality of optical couplers each to combine optical-signal packet signals transmitted from fewer than all of the plurality of optical transmitting apparatuses, the fewer optical transmitting apparatuses being different from each other, split the combined optical-signal packet signals into a plurality of optical-signal transmission signals of the same information, and output the plurality of optical-signal transmission signals; a plurality of optical receiving apparatuses each to receive optical-signal transmission signals from the plurality of optical couplers, the received optical-signal transmission signals each being one of the separate optical-signal transmission signals provided by a corresponding one of the plurality of optical couplers, convert the optical-signal transmission signals into a second data signal that is an electrical signal, and output the second data signal; and a controller to control operation of the plurality of optical transmitting apparatuses and the plurality of optical receiving apparatuses, wherein the number of signals combined by each optical coupler is smaller than the number of the plurality of optical transmitting apparatuses, on the basis of a first control signal acquired from the controller, each optical transmitting apparatus transmits the plurality of optical-signal packet signals, allocating communication resources thereto in such a manner as to prevent the transmitted optical-signal packet signals from colliding with the optical-signal packet signals transmitted from the other optical transmitting apparatuses, and each optical receiving apparatus converts the optical-signal transmission signals into electrical-signal transmission signals, and, on the basis of a second control signal acquired from the controller, selects specified signal portions from the electrical-signal transmission signals and outputs the selected signal portions as the second data signal.
An optical communication system, a control circuit, a storage medium, and an optical communication method according to embodiments of the present disclosure will be hereinafter described in detail with reference to the drawings.
In the optical communication system 200, the TDMA signal generation unit 11-1 and the optical transmitters 13-1 to 13-M define an optical transmitting apparatus 10-1, the TDMA signal generation unit 11-2 and the optical transmitters 13-(M+1) to 13-M2 define an optical transmitting apparatus 10-2, ..., and the TDMA signal generation unit 11-N and the optical transmitters 13-(M(N-1)+1) to 13-MN define an optical transmitting apparatus 10-N. The optical receivers 71-1 to 71-LM and the TDMA signal selection unit 72-1 define an optical receiving apparatus 70-1, the optical receivers 71-(LM+1) to 71-LM2 and the TDMA signal selection unit 72-2 define an optical receiving apparatus 70-2, ..., and the optical receivers 71-(LM(N-1)+1) to 71-LMN and the TDMA signal selection unit 72-N define an optical receiving apparatus 70-N. The optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM are, for example, power splitters.
In the following description, the optical transmitting apparatuses 10-1 to 10-N are sometimes referred to as optical transmitting apparatuses 10 when not distinguished, the TDMA signal generation units 11-1 to 11-N are sometimes referred to as TDMA signal generation units 11 when not distinguished, and the optical transmitters 13-1 to 13-MN are sometimes referred to as optical transmitters 13 when not distinguished. The optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM are sometimes referred to as optical couplers 20 when not distinguished. The optical receiving apparatuses 70-1 to 70-N are sometimes referred to as optical receiving apparatuses 70 when not distinguished, the optical receivers 71-1 to 71-LMN are sometimes referred to as optical receivers 71 when not distinguished, and the TDMA signal selection units 72-1 to 72-N are sometimes referred to as TDMA signal selection units 72 when not distinguished.
The TDMA signal generation units 11-1 to 11-N acquire, from the input ports described above, a first data signal that is an electrical signal required to be transferred. The TDMA signal generation units 11-1 to 11-N acquire, from the controller 100, a first control signal including a reference clock generated by the controller 100 and a transmission timing signal. The transmission signal is a communication resource allocation. The reference clock defines a transmission/reception transfer rate of optical-signal packet signals. The controller 100 determines the communication resource allocation on the basis of a request for communication of the first data signal acquired at the input ports of the optical communication system 200. The first embodiment is based on the assumption that communication resources are time slots.
The TDMA signal generation units 11-1 to 11-N once buffer the acquired first data signal, and, on the basis of the transmission timing signal included in the first control signal, convert the first data signal into intermittent electrical-signal packet signals on the time axis, adjusting timing in such a manner that the packet signals avoid colliding on the time axis with electrical-signal packet signals that are time-division multiplexed signals generated by the other TDMA signal generation units 11. The TDMA signal generation units 11-1 to 11-N then transmit the electrical-signal packet signals to the optical transmitters 13 connected thereto. For example, the TDMA signal generation unit 11-1 transmits the electrical-signal packet signals to the optical transmitters 13-1 to 13-M. Other portions than the intermittent signal portion in each electrical-signal packet signal transmitted by the TDMA signal generation units 11 may include a series of “0s” or an idle signal. The series of “0s” and the idle signal indicate no signals. The idle signal is, for example, a signal having alternate “1s” and “0s”. Typically, the TDMA signal generation units 11 and the optical transmitters 13 are alternating current (AC)-coupled using capacitors. In view of this, the electrical-signal packet signal typically has a DC-balanced idle signal inserted therein in order to avoid direct current (DC) drifts. In this case, the optical transmitters 13 also acquire, via another signal line, a gate signal indicating which portion is the intermittent signal portion and which portion is the idle signal. The gate signal may be transmitted from the TDMA signal generation units 11 to the optical transmitters 13, or may be transmitted from the controller 100 that controls the entire optical communication system 200 to the optical transmitters 13.
The optical transmitters 13-1 to 13-MN convert the electrical-signal packet signals acquired from the TDMA signal generation unit 11, into optical-signal packet signals, and transmit the optical-signal packet signals to a fiber-optic network, that is, the optical couplers 20. For example, the optical transmitters 13-1 to 13-M convert the electrical-signal packet signals received from the TDMA signal generation unit 11-1, into optical-signal packet signals and transmit the optical-signal packet signals to the fiber-optic network. The optical transmitters 13-1 to 13-MN each emit light providing an optical signal only in a time region of the electrical-signal packet signal received from the TDMA signal generation units 11, and undergoes a transition to a non-light-emitting state in the other time regions so as not to interfere with signals from the other optical transmitters 13.
The TDMA signal generation unit 11-1 speeds up, that is, compresses the divided signals in the sense of time domain, so as to avoid their collisions in the time domain with signals from the other TDMA signal generation units 11. For example, the number of the parallel TDMA signal generation units 11 connected to the same optical fiber line is two, i.e., K=2, and an optical switch device employs non-blocking processing, in which case a signal time width Tp per optical transmitter 13 is ½ [msec], i.e., 0.5 [msec]. When the number of input ports for multiplexing on the same optical fiber line is more than two, the collision is avoidable even with the signal time width Tp longer than 0.5 [msec] provided that the number of ports to switch simultaneously is small. In
The optical transmitters 13 convert, into optical-signal packet signals, the electrical-signal packet signals transmitted with transmission timing determined by the TDMA signal generation units 11. The optical transmitters 13 output the optical-signal packet signals to the connected optical couplers 20. In
Each of the optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM acquires the optical-signal packet signals from K optical transmitters 13 connected thereto, and combines these acquired signals together. The optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM each split the thus combined optical-signal packet signal into N optical-signal transmission signals of the same information, and output each of the optical-signal transmission signals to a corresponding one of the optical receivers 71 of each optical receiving apparatus 70. That is, each optical coupler outputs the optical-signal transmission signals to the N optical receivers 71 in one-to-one correspondence. As illustrated in
According to the example described above, the optical receiver input signals illustrated in
The optical receivers 71-1 to 71-LM convert the acquired optical-signal transmission signals into electrical-signal transmission signals. For optical-signal transmission signals acquired by a certain one of the optical receivers 71, different losses in transmission paths from the optical transmitters 13 to the optical receiver 71, different output optical powers of the optical transmitters 13, etc. cause a difference in optical level between the optical-signal transmission signals. These optical level differences is removable without changing the photoelectric conversion gain of the optical receiver 71. In other words, the optical-signal transmission signals of different optical levels can be converted into signals of a constant voltage amplitude. In some case, however, the photoelectric conversion gain for each optical-signal transmission signal needs changing depending on the switch configuration. Further, it is difficult for the receiving end to exactly synchronize the phases of the optical-signal packet signals from the different optical transmitters 13. For this reason, relative phases, for example, the phases of rising edges and falling edges when non-return-to-zero (NRZ) signals are used are typically different. In this case, the state of the optical receiver 71 is required to be optimized on a per optical-transmission-signal basis to remove the optical level difference, the phase differences, etc. without the occurrence of signal losses. For this purpose, each optical-signal transmission signal has a preamble pattern inserted in the packet head. For example, International Telecommunication Union (ITU)-TG.9807.1, which provides for a 10 Gbps-class system, 10 \-Gigabit-capable symmetric passive optical network (XGS-PON), stipulates that the preamble length is 128.6 ns to 610.9 ns. A proper preamble pattern can be inserted according to the system configuration. The longer preamble length provides the more relaxed optimization time required of the optical transmitters 13 and the optical receivers 71 while the improvement of the transmission speed, the time compression ratio, etc. is required to maintain desired switching capability.
The TDMA signal selection units 72 acquire the electrical-signal transmission signals from the optical receivers 71 connected thereto. On the basis of routing information included in a second control signal acquired from the controller 100, each TDMA signal selection unit 72 selects signals in a specified time slot from the received electrical-signal transmission signals, and outputs the selected time-slot signals as a second data signal that is an electrical signal. Specifically, each TDMA signal selection unit 72 extracts only a necessary destination on the basis of the routing information, and discards the other signals. Each TDMA signal selection unit 72 converts the temporally intermittent extracted signals into a temporally continuous signal, and changes the transmission speed in conformity with the following system connected thereto before transmitting the continuous signal. A TDMA signal selection unit output signal illustrated in
The controller 100 generates control information necessary for the TDMA signal generation units 11 and the TDMA signal selection units 72 to perform the above-described control, a reference clock for the entire optical communication system 200 to operate in synchronization, etc., and provides those to each unit. The controller 100 generates and distributes a first control signal: The controller 100 generates a reference clock, a transmission timing signal as a communication resource allocation, and routing information, and distributes those to the TDMA signal generation units 11-1 to 11-N. The controller 100 distributes a second control signal: The controller 100 distributes a transmission timing signal as a communication resource allocation, and routing information to the TDMA signal selection units 72-1 to 72-N. Although not illustrated in
As described above, the optical communication system 200 in the present embodiment includes: the plurality of optical transmitting apparatuses 10-1 to 10-N, each of which converts a first data signal that is an electrical signal into a plurality of optical-signal packet signals and transmits the plurality of optical-signal packet signals; and the plurality of optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM, each of which combines optical-signal packet signals transmitted from fewer than all of the plurality of optical transmitting apparatuses 10-1 to 10-N, the fewer optical transmitting apparatuses 10 being different from each other, splits the combined optical-signal packet signals into a plurality of optical-signal transmission signals of the same information, and outputs the plurality of optical-signal transmission signals. Further, the optical communication system 200 includes: the plurality of optical receiving apparatuses 70-1 to 70-N, each of which receives optical-signal transmission signals from the plurality of optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM, the received optical-signal transmission signals each being one of the separate optical-signal transmission signals provided by the corresponding one of the plurality of optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM, converts the received optical-signal transmission signals into a second data signal that is an electrical signal, and outputs the second data signal; and the controller 100 that controls the operation of the plurality of optical transmitting apparatuses 10-1 to 10-N and the plurality of optical receiving apparatuses 70-1 to 70-N. The number of signals combined by the optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM is smaller than the number of the plurality of optical transmitting apparatuses 10-1 to 10-N. On the basis of the first control signal acquired from the controller 100, each optical transmitting apparatus 10 transmits a plurality of optical-signal packet signals, allocating communication resources thereto in such a manner as to prevent the transmitted optical-signal packet signals from colliding with optical-signal packet signals transmitted from the other optical transmitting apparatuses 10. Each optical receiving apparatus 70 converts optical-signal transmission signals into electrical-signal transmission signals, and, on the basis of the second control signal acquired from the controller 100, selects specified signal portions from the electrical-signal transmission signals and outputs the selected signal portions as the second data signal.
The operation of the optical communication system 200 will be described with reference to a flowchart.
Specifically, in the present embodiment, on the basis of the first control signal, the optical transmitting apparatuses 10-1 to 10-N transmit optical-signal packet signals, allocating time slots thereto in such a manner as to prevent the transmitted optical-signal packet signals from colliding with optical-signal packet signals transmitted from the other optical transmitting apparatuses 10. On the basis of the second control signal, the optical receiving apparatuses 70-1 to 70-N select signals in a specified time slot from electrical-signal transmission signals, and output the selected signals as the second data signal.
Next, a hardware configuration of the optical communication system 200 will be described. In the optical communication system 200, the optical transmitters 13 and the optical receivers 71 are photoelectric conversion circuits. The optical couplers 20 are power splitters as described above. The TDMA signal generation units 11, the TDMA signal selection units 72, and the controller 100 are implemented by processing circuitry. The processing circuitry may be a processor that executes a program stored in memory and the memory, or may be dedicated hardware. The processing circuitry is also referred to as a control circuit.
The program can be said to be a program for the controller 100 to cause each optical transmitting apparatus 10 to, based on the first control signal acquired from the controller 100, allocate communication resources so as to avoid collisions with optical-signal packet signals transmitted from the other optical transmitting apparatuses 10, and transmit a plurality of optical-signal packet signals, and cause each optical receiving apparatus 70 to convert optical-signal transmission signals into electrical-signal transmission signals, and, based on the second control signal acquired from the controller 100, select specified signal portions from the electrical-signal transmission signals and output the selected signal portions as the second data signal.
Here, the processor 301 is, for example, a central processing unit (CPU), a processing unit, an arithmetic unit, a microprocessor, a microcomputer, a digital signal processor (DSP), or the like. The memory 302 corresponds, for example, to nonvolatile or volatile semiconductor memory such as random-access memory (RAM), read-only memory (ROM), flash memory, an erasable programmable ROM (EPROM), or an electrically EPROM (EEPROM) (registered trademark), or a magnetic disk, a flexible disk, an optical disk, a compact disk, a mini disk, a digital versatile disc (DVD), or the like.
As described above, according to the present embodiment, by controlling transmission timing for the TDMA signal generation unit 11 of each optical transmitting apparatus 10 using TDMA, the optical communication system 200 can configure matrix switch connections only with passive components of the optical couplers 20, without using optical switches in the optical region, and thus can improve reliability. Furthermore, by limiting the number of signals combined by the optical couplers 20, the optical communication system 200 can limit the number of packets combined by each the optical coupler 20, and thus can improve line efficiency.
Optical switches, which are, for example, Mach-Zehnder interferometers, are larger in power consumption, cost, size, and weight per switch port than electrical switches made up of an ASIC, etc., and require a long switching time of some 10 us from the determination of path switching information to switching. By contrast, the optical communication system 200 does not use optical switches, and thus can achieve lower power consumption, space saving, weight reduction, cost reduction, and path switching time reduction.
In the first embodiment, each optical receiving apparatus 70 includes the same number of the optical receivers 71 as that of the optical couplers 20. A second embodiment describes each optical transmitting apparatus 10 including the same number of the optical transmitters 13 as that of the optical couplers 20.
In the optical communication system 200, the TDMA signal generation unit 11-1 and the optical transmitters 13-1 to 13-LM define the optical transmitting apparatus 10-1, the TDMA signal generation unit 11-2 and the optical transmitters 13-(LM+1) to 13-LM2 define the optical transmitting apparatus 10-2, ..., and the TDMA signal generation unit 11-N and the optical transmitters 13-(LM(N-1)+1) to 13-LMN define the optical transmitting apparatus 10-N. The optical receivers 71-1 to 71-M and the TDMA signal selection unit 72-1 define the optical receiving apparatus 70-1, the optical receivers 71-(M+1) to 71-M2 and the TDMA signal selection unit 72-2 define the optical receiving apparatus 70-2, ..., and the optical receivers 71-(M(N-1)+1) to 71-MN and the TDMA signal selection unit 72-N define the optical receiving apparatus 70-N. The optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM are, for example, power splitters.
In the following description, the optical transmitting apparatuses 10-1 to 10-N are sometimes referred to as the optical transmitting apparatuses 10 when not distinguished, the TDMA signal generation units 11-1 to 11-N are sometimes referred to as the TDMA signal generation units 11 when not distinguished, and the optical transmitters 13-1 to 13-LMN are sometimes referred to as the optical transmitters 13 when not distinguished. The optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM are sometimes referred to as the optical couplers 20 when not distinguished. The optical receiving apparatuses 70-1 to 70-N are sometimes referred to as the optical receiving apparatuses 70 when not distinguished, the optical receivers 71-1 to 71-MN are sometimes referred to as the optical receivers 71 when not distinguished, and the TDMA signal selection units 72-1 to 72-N are sometimes referred to as the TDMA signal selection units 72 when not distinguished.
In the present embodiment, each of the optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM combines optical-signal packet signals each transmitted from one of the optical transmitters 13 of the corresponding optical transmitting apparatus 10. That is, each of the optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM combines optical-signal packet signals transmitted from N optical transmitters 13. The optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM split the combined optical-signal packet signals into K optical-signal transmission signals of the same information, and output the K optical-signal transmission signals to K the optical receivers 71 connected thereto. As illustrated in
The optical transmitters 13 convert, into optical-signal packet signals, the electrical-signal packet signals transmitted with transmission timing determined by the TDMA signal generation units 11. The optical transmitters 13 output the optical-signal packet signals to the optical couplers 20 connected thereto. As indicated by optical transmitter output signals of
As described above, each of the optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM combines the optical-signal packet signals each transmitted from one of the optical transmitters 13 of the corresponding optical transmitting apparatus 10. That is, each of the optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM combines the optical-signal packet signals transmitted from N optical transmitters 13. The optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM split the combined optical-signal packet signals into K optical-signal transmission signals of the same information, and output the K optical-signal transmission signals to K optical receivers 71 connected thereto.
Each optical receiver 71 acquires, from the corresponding one of the optical couplers 20, the optical-signal transmission signal defined by the N optical-signal packet signals combined together. That is, each optical receiver 71 can acquire the signals output from all the TDMA signal generation units 11. It therefore follows that the signal time width Tp of the signal output from each TDMA signal generation unit 11 included in each optical-signal transmission signal is obtained by division of Tc by the number of the packet signals from all the TDMA signal generation units 11. For example, when packet signals of the same time width are transmitted from all the TDMA signal generation units 11, the signal time width Tp is Tc/N, or Tp=Tc/N. Optical receiver input signals of
As in the first embodiment, on the basis of routing information included in a second control signal acquired from the controller 100, each TDMA signal selection unit 72 selects the signals in a specified time slot from the electrical-signal transmission signals received from the connected optical receivers 71, and outputs the selected time-slot signals as a second data signal that is an electrical signal. Specifically, each TDMA signal selection unit 72 extracts only a necessary destination on the basis of the routing information, and discards the other signals. Each TDMA signal selection unit 72 converts the temporally intermittent extracted signals into a temporally continuous signal, and changes the transmission speed in conformity with the following system connected thereto before transmitting the continuous signal. A TDMA signal selection unit output signal illustrated in
The operation other than the operation of each component described in the present embodiment is the same as the operation of each component described in the first embodiment.
As described above, in the present embodiment, the optical communication system 200 includes: the plurality of optical transmitting apparatuses 10-1 to 10-N, each of which converts the first data signal that is an electrical signal into a plurality of optical-signal packet signals and transmits the plurality of optical-signal packet signals; and the plurality of optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM, each of which combines optical-signal packet signals transmitted in one-to-one correspondence from the plurality of optical transmitting apparatuses 10-1 to 10-N, splits the combined optical-signal packet signals into a plurality of optical-signal transmission signals of the same information, and outputs the plurality of optical-signal transmission signals. Further, the optical communication system 200 includes: the plurality of optical receiving apparatuses 70-1 to 70-N, each of which receives optical-signal transmission signals from fewer than all of the plurality of optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM, the received optical-signal transmission signals each being one of the separate optical-signal transmission signals provided by the corresponding one of the fewer optical couplers 20, converts the received optical-signal transmission signals into a second data signal that is an electrical signal, and outputs the second data signal; and the controller 100 that controls the operation of the plurality of optical transmitting apparatuses 10-1 to 10-N and the plurality of optical receiving apparatuses 70-1 to 70-N. The number of the separate optical-signal transmission signals provided by each of the optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM is smaller than the number of the plurality of optical receiving apparatuses 70-1 to 70-N. On the basis of the first control signal acquired from the controller 100, each optical transmitting apparatus 10 duplicates a first data signal and transmits a plurality of optical-signal packet signals, allocating communication resources thereto by destination in such a manner as to prevent the transmitted optical-signal packet signals from colliding with optical-signal packet signals transmitted from the other optical transmitting apparatuses 10. Each optical receiving apparatus 70 converts optical-signal transmission signals into electrical-signal transmission signals, and, on the basis of the second control signal acquired from the controller 100, selects specified signal portions from the electrical-signal transmission signals and outputs the selected signal portions as the second data signal.
As described above, according to the present embodiment, by controlling transmission timing for the TDMA signal generation unit 11 of each optical transmitting apparatus 10 using TDMA, the optical communication system 200 can configure matrix switch connections only with passive components of the optical couplers 20, without using optical switches in the optical region, and thus can improve reliability. In the present embodiment, each optical coupler 20 combines signals transmitted from all the TDMA signal generation units 11. Thus, when the number of the TDMA signal generation units 11 that transmit signals is small, that is, when signals are sparse, the optical communication system 200 can improve line efficiency, compared to the first embodiment.
The first embodiment and the second embodiment are the same in the total number of the optical transmitters 13 and the optical receivers 71. A third embodiment describes the smaller total number of the optical transmitters 13 and the optical receivers 71 than that in the first and second embodiments.
In the optical communication system 200, the TDMA signal generation unit 11-1, the transmission switch unit 12-1, and the optical transmitters 13-1 to 13-M define the optical transmitting apparatus 10-1, the TDMA signal generation unit 11-2, the transmission switch unit 12-2, and the optical transmitters 13-(M+1) to 13-M2 define the optical transmitting apparatus 10-2,..., and the TDMA signal generation unit 11-N, the transmission switch unit 12-N, and the optical transmitters 13-(M(N-1)+1) to 13-MN define the optical transmitting apparatus 10-N. The optical receivers 71-1 to 71-M and the TDMA signal selection unit 72-1 define the optical receiving apparatus 70-1, the optical receivers 71-(M+1) to 71-M2 and the TDMA signal selection unit 72-2 define the optical receiving apparatus 70-2, ..., and the optical receivers 71-(M(N-1)+1) to 71-MN and the TDMA signal selection unit 72-N define the optical receiving apparatus 70-N. The optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM are, for example, power splitters.
In the following description, the optical transmitting apparatuses 10-1 to 10-N are sometimes referred to as the optical transmitting apparatuses 10 when not distinguished, the TDMA signal generation units 11-1 to 11-N are sometimes referred to as the TDMA signal generation units 11 when not distinguished, the transmission switch units 12-1 to 12-N are sometimes referred to as transmission switch units 12 when not distinguished, and the optical transmitters 13-1 to 13-MN are sometimes referred to as the optical transmitters 13 when not distinguished. The optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM are sometimes referred to as the optical couplers 20 when not distinguished. The optical receiving apparatuses 70-1 to 70-N are sometimes referred to as the optical receiving apparatuses 70 when not distinguished, the optical receivers 71-1 to 71-MN are sometimes referred to as the optical receivers 71 when not distinguished, and the TDMA signal selection units 72-1 to 72-N are sometimes referred to as the TDMA signal selection units 72 when not distinguished.
In the present embodiment, each of the optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM combines optical-signal packet signals transmitted from K of the optical transmitters 13. The optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM split the combined optical-signal packet signals into J optical-signal transmission signals of the same information, and output the J optical-signal transmission signals to J optical receivers 71 connected thereto. As illustrated in
In
The example illustrated in
As in the first embodiment, on the basis of routing information included in a second control signal acquired from the controller 100, each TDMA signal selection unit 72 selects the signals in a specified time slot from the electrical-signal transmission signals received from the connected optical receivers 71, and outputs the selected time-slot signals as a second data signal that is an electrical signal. Specifically, each TDMA signal selection unit 72 extracts only a necessary destination on the basis of the routing information, and discards the other signals. Each TDMA signal selection unit 72 converts the temporally intermittent extracted signals into a temporally continuous signal, and changes the transmission speed in conformity with the following system connected thereto before transmitting the continuous signal. A TDMA signal selection unit output signal illustrated in
The operation other than the operation of each component described in the present embodiment is the same as the operation of each component described in the first embodiment.
As described above, in the present embodiment, the optical communication system 200 includes: the plurality of optical transmitting apparatuses 10-1 to 10-N, each of which converts a first data signal that is an electrical signal into a plurality of optical-signal packet signals and transmits the plurality of optical-signal packet signals; and the plurality of optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM, each of which combines optical-signal packet signals transmitted from fewer than all of the plurality of optical transmitting apparatuses 10-1 to 10-N, the fewer optical transmitting apparatuses being different from each other, splits the combined optical-signal packet signals into a plurality of optical-signal transmission signals of the same information, and outputs the plurality of optical-signal transmission signals. Further, the optical communication system 200 includes: the plurality of optical receiving apparatuses 70-1 to 70-N, each of which receives optical-signal transmission signals from fewer than all of the plurality of optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM, the received optical-signal transmission signals each being one of the separate optical-signal transmission signals provided by the corresponding one of the fewer optical couplers 20, converts the received optical-signal transmission signals into a second data signal that is an electrical signal, and outputs the second data signal; and the controller 100 that controls the operation of the plurality of optical transmitting apparatuses 10-1 to 10-N and the plurality of optical receiving apparatuses 70-1 to 70-N. The number of signals combined by each of the optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM is smaller than the number of the plurality of optical transmitting apparatuses 10-1 to 10-N. The number of the separate optical-signal transmission signals provided by each of the optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM is smaller than the number of the plurality of optical receiving apparatuses 70-1 to 70-N. On the basis of the first control signal acquired from the controller 100, each optical transmitting apparatus 10 switches between the optical couplers 20 by destination, and transmits optical-signal packet signals, allocating communication resources thereto by destination in such a manner as to prevent the transmitted optical-signal packet signals from colliding with optical-signal packet signals transmitted from the other optical transmitting apparatuses 10. Each optical receiving apparatus 70 converts optical-signal transmission signals into electrical-signal transmission signals, and, on the basis of the second control signal acquired from the controller 100, selects specified signal portions from the electrical-signal transmission signals and outputs the selected signal portions as the second data signal.
A hardware configuration of the optical communication system 200 will be described. In the optical communication system 200, the transmission switch units 12 are implemented by processing circuitry. The processing circuitry may be a processor that executes a program stored in memory and the memory, or may be dedicated hardware.
As described above, according to the present embodiment, by controlling transmission timing for the TDMA signal generation unit 11 of each optical transmitting apparatus 10 using TDMA, the optical communication system 200 can configure matrix switch connections only with passive components of the optical couplers 20, without using optical switches in the optical region, and thus can improve reliability. Furthermore, by limiting the number of signals combined by and the number of separate signals provided by the optical couplers 20, the optical communication system 200 can reduce the losses of the optical couplers 20. Compared to the first and second embodiments, the present embodiment can reduce the loss budget and can reduce the total number of the optical transmitters 13 and the optical receivers 71.
A fourth embodiment describes the optical communication system 200 including TDMA switches that switch electrical signals.
In the optical communication system 200, the TDMA signal generation unit 11-1 and the optical transmitters 13-1 to 13-M define the optical transmitting apparatus 10-1, the TDMA signal generation unit 11-2 and the optical transmitters 13-(M+1) to 13-M2 define the optical transmitting apparatus 10-2, ..., and the TDMA signal generation unit 11-N and the optical transmitters 13-(M(N-1)+1) to 13-MN define the optical transmitting apparatus 10-N. The optical receivers 71-1 to 71-M and the TDMA signal selection unit 72-1 define the optical receiving apparatus 70-1, the optical receivers 71-(M+1) to 71-M2 and the TDMA signal selection unit 72-2 define the optical receiving apparatus 70-2, ..., and the optical receivers 71-(M(N-1)+1) to 71-MN and the TDMA signal selection unit 72-N define the optical receiving apparatus 70-N. The optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM and the optical couplers 60-1 to 60-MN are, for example, power splitters.
In the following description, the optical transmitting apparatuses 10-1 to 10-N are sometimes referred to as the optical transmitting apparatuses 10 when not distinguished, the TDMA signal generation units 11-1 to 11-N are sometimes referred to as the TDMA signal generation units 11 when not distinguished, and the optical transmitters 13-1 to 13-MN are sometimes referred to as the optical transmitters 13 when not distinguished. The optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM are sometimes referred to as the optical couplers 20 when not distinguished, the optical receivers 30-1 to 30-LM are sometimes referred to as optical receivers 30 when not distinguished, the TDMA switches 40-1 to 40-L are sometimes referred to as TDMA switches 40 when not distinguished, the optical transmitters 50-1 to 50-LJM are sometimes referred to as optical transmitters 50 when not distinguished, and the optical couplers 60-1 to 60-MN are sometimes referred to as optical couplers 60 when not distinguished. The optical receiving apparatuses 70-1 to 70-N are sometimes referred to as the optical receiving apparatuses 70 when not distinguished, the optical receivers 71-1 to 71-MN are sometimes referred to as the optical receivers 71 when not distinguished, and the TDMA signal selection units 72-1 to 72-N are sometimes referred to as the TDMA signal selection units 72 when not distinguished. Further, the optical transmitting apparatuses 10 are sometimes referred to as first optical transmitting apparatuses, the optical couplers 20 are sometimes referred to as first optical couplers, the optical receivers 30 are sometimes referred to as first optical receiving apparatuses, the optical transmitters 50 are sometimes referred to as second optical transmitting apparatuses, the optical couplers 60 are sometimes referred to as second optical couplers, and the optical receiving apparatuses 70 are sometimes referred to as second optical receiving apparatuses.
To perform N×N switching, the optical communication system 200 of the present embodiment includes the TDMA switches 40-1 to 40-L that perform optical-electrical-optical conversion to switch electrical signals. This allows the optical communication system 200 to reduce both the number of signals combined by each optical coupler 20 and the number of separate signals provided by each optical coupler 60 per stage, compared to those in the first to third embodiments, to reduce the loss budget. Furthermore, the optical communication system 200 can extend the signal time width TP per packet, and thus can also reduce the transmission speed required of the optical transmitters 13 and 50 and the optical receivers 30 and 71.
As illustrated in
The TDMA switches 40-1 to 40-L acquire the electrical-signal data signals from the optical receivers 30 and switch the acquired electrical-signal data signals by destination for transmission to the optical transmitters 50.
The optical transmitters 50 convert the electrical-signal data signals acquired from the TDMA switches 40, into optical-signal packet signals, and output the optical-signal packet signals to the optical couplers 60. Optical transmitter 50 output signals illustrated in
As illustrated in
As in the first embodiment, on the basis of routing information included in a second control signal acquired from the controller 100, each TDMA signal selection unit 72 selects the signals in a specified time slot from the electrical-signal transmission signals received from the connected optical receivers 71, and outputs the selected time-slot signals as a second data signal that is an electrical signal. Specifically, each TDMA signal selection unit 72 extracts only a necessary destination on the basis of the routing information, and discards the other signals. Each TDMA signal selection unit 72 converts the temporally intermittent extracted signals into a temporally continuous signal, and changes the transmission speed in conformity with the following system connected thereto before transmitting the continuous signal. A TDMA signal selection unit output signal illustrated in
The operation other than the operation of each component described in the present embodiment is the same as the operation of each component described in the first embodiment.
As described above, in the present embodiment, the optical communication system 200 includes: the optical transmitting apparatuses 10-1 to 10-N, which are a plurality of first optical transmitting apparatuses, each of which converts a first data signal that is an electrical signal into a plurality of first optical-signal packet signals and transmits the plurality of first optical-signal packet signals; and the optical couplers 20-1 to 20-LM, which are a plurality of first optical couplers, each of which combines first optical-signal packet signals transmitted from fewer than all of the optical transmitting apparatuses 10-1 to 10-N, the fewer optical transmitting apparatuses being different from each other, and outputs a combined first optical-signal transmission signal. Further, the optical communication system 200 includes: the optical receivers 30-1 to 30-LM, which are a plurality of first optical receiving apparatuses, each of which receives the first optical-signal transmission signal from the corresponding optical coupler 20, converts the first optical-signal transmission signal into a second data signal that is an electrical signal, and outputs the second data signal; and the TDMA switches 40-1 to 40-L, which are a plurality of switches, each of which receives the second data signals from fewer than all of the plurality of optical receivers 30-1 to 30-LM, and switches the second data signals by destination. Further, the optical communication system 200 includes: the optical transmitters 50-1 to 50-LJM, which are a plurality of second optical transmitting apparatuses, each of which receives the second data signal from the corresponding one of the plurality of TDMA switches 40-1 to 40-L, converts the second data signal into a second optical-signal packet signal, and transmits the second optical-signal packet signal; and the optical couplers 60-1 to 60-MN, which are a plurality of second optical couplers, each of which combines second optical-signal packet signals transmitted from fewer than all of the plurality of optical transmitters 50-1 to 50-LJM, the fewer optical transmitters being connected to the different TDMA switches 40, and outputs a combined second optical-signal transmission signal. Further, the optical communication system 200 includes: the optical receiving apparatuses 70-1 to 70-N, which are a plurality of second optical receiving apparatuses, each of which receives the second optical-signal transmission signals from fewer than all of the plurality of optical couplers 60-1 to 60-MN, converts the second optical-signal transmission signals into a third data signal that is an electrical signal, and outputs the third data signal; and the controller 100 that controls the operation of the plurality of optical transmitting apparatuses 10-1 to 10-N and the plurality of optical receiving apparatuses 70-1 to 70-N. The number of signals combined by each optical coupler 20 is smaller than the number of the optical transmitting apparatuses 10, and the number of signals combined by each optical coupler 60 is smaller than the number of the optical transmitters 50. On the basis of the first control signal acquired from the controller 100, each optical transmitting apparatus 10 transmits a plurality of first optical-signal packet signals, allocating communication resources thereto in such a manner as to prevent the transmitted first optical-signal packet signals from colliding with first optical-signal packet signals transmitted from the other optical transmitting apparatuses 10. Each optical receiving apparatus 70 converts second optical-signal transmission signals into electrical-signal transmission signals, and, on the basis of the second control signal acquired from the controller 100, selects specified signal portions from the electrical-signal transmission signals and outputs the selected signal portions as the third data signal.
A hardware configuration of the optical communication system 200 will be described. In the optical communication system 200, the optical receivers 30 and the optical transmitters 50 are photoelectric conversion circuits. The optical couplers 60 are power splitters as described above. The TDMA switches 40 are implemented by processing circuitry. The processing circuitry may be a processor that executes a program stored in memory and the memory, or may be dedicated hardware.
As described above, according to the present embodiment, by controlling transmission timing for the TDMA signal generation unit 11 of each optical transmitting apparatus 10 using TDMA, the optical communication system 200 can configure matrix switch connections only with passive components of the optical couplers 20, without using optical switches in the optical region, and thus can improve reliability. Furthermore, by limiting the number of splits of the optical couplers 20 and the number of signals combined by the optical couplers 60, the optical communication system 200 can reduce the losses of the optical couplers 20 and 60. The present embodiment can further reduce the loss budget depending on how to take the numbers of signals combined and split, compared to the first to third embodiments.
The optical communication system according to the present disclosure has the effect of improving the reliability of the entire system as well as preventing the reduction in line efficiency.
The configurations described in the above embodiments illustrate an example and can be combined with another known art. The embodiments can be combined with each other. The configurations can be partly omitted or changed without departing from the gist.
This application is a continuation application of International Application PCT/JP2021/00039, filed on Jan. 7, 2021, and designating the U.S., the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/JP2021/000339 | Jan 2021 | WO |
Child | 18143204 | US |