This application relates to optical communications based on wavelength division multiplexing, and more particularly, to optical networks in ring configurations and associated fault management and failure protection techniques.
Fiber optical communication systems may be implemented in a variety of network configurations. Fiber ring networks represent one type of network configurations and have versatile applications for, e.g., forming the access part of a network or the backbone of a network such as interconnecting central offices. Fiber ring networks may include more than one fiber rings to connect communication nodes and hubs to provide redundancy and to ensure continuity of communications when one of the fiber rings fails. Different communication protocols and standards may be used in ring networks, such as the Synchronous Optical Network (SONET) standard.
This application includes fiber ring networks and techniques for using two fiber rings to provide communication redundancy and failure protection with local detection and switching control in each communication node. Optical channel designation among the communication nodes is provided to allow for a communication node to broadcast an signal to the ring networks and to establish either or both of unidirectional and bidirectional communications with other nodes.
One example of an optical ring network system is described to include communication nodes, and first and second fiber rings. The first fiber ring is coupled to the communication nodes to direct WDM optical signals at different wavelengths. The second fiber ring is coupled to the same communication nodes to direct duplication of the WDM optical signals. Each communication node that sends a signal is operable to add and drop at least one pre-selected WDM optical signal in both the first and second fiber rings without an optical-break point in other communication nodes. This communication node further allows for other WDM optical signals to get dropped and to continue to a next communication node without changing information therein. Each communication node comprises an optical-receiver, an optical switch to direct light from the first fiber ring into the optical receiver, and a switch control which monitors light received by the optical receiver and control the optical switch to direct light from the second fiber ring to the optical receiver when a signal property in light from said first fiber ring fails to meet a threshold.
In another example of an optical ring network system, a first fiber ring is coupled to communication nodes to direct WDM optical signals at different wavelengths along a first direction. A second fiber ring is coupled to the same communication nodes to direct duplication of said WDM optical signals along a second direction opposite to the first direction. Among the communication nodes, a first communication node is operable to add and drop a first WDM optical signal in both the first and second fiber rings, and the first communication node further allows for other WDM optical signals to get dropped and to continue to a next communication node without changing information therein. Also, a second communication node adds and drops a second WDM optical signal in both the first and second fiber rings, and the second communication node further allows for other WDM optical signals to get dropped and to continue to a next communication node without changing information therein. Each of other communication nodes allows for the first and the second WDM optical signals to get dropped and to continue to a next communication node without changing information therein.
This application also describes methods for operating fiber ring networks. In one implementation, for example, first and second fiber rings are provided to be optically coupled to a plurality of communication nodes. Each optical signal from a communication node is then coupled to both the first and the second fiber rings. A single communication node is used to originate and terminate one or more pre-selected optical channels in the first and the second fiber rings without having an optical break point in the one or more pre-selected optical channels in other communication nodes, and to pass through other optical channels without changing information therein. An optical receiver within each communication node is used to monitor a signal quality in light from the first fiber ring via an optical switch within the communication node to receive light from both the first and the second fiber rings. The optical switch is controlled to direct light from the second fiber ring into the optical receiver when the signal quality from the first fiber ring fails to meet a threshold.
These and other fiber ring networks and their operations and benefits are described in greater detail in the attached drawings, the detailed description, and the claims.
Optical networks with a ring configuration described in this application may be used in various communication systems, e.g., access networks, backbone networks, and other networks. Cable television systems, video-on-demand delivery systems, and other communication service systems may use fiber rings described here. In the present ring networks, optical communication signals circulate in a ring and two or more communication nodes are connected in the optical ring to send out or receive communication signals in the ring. An output optical signal from a node may be a broadcast signal to all nodes in the ring, a multicast signal to selected nodes in the ring, or a signal to a selected single node. The ring may be designed to support a unidirectional signal which circulates along one direction in the ring. Bi-directional communications between two or more selected nodes may also be supported in the ring as described below. In addition, the ring networks of this application may be implemented in various configurations, such as centrally controlled networks with a central office and dispersed hubs, and distributed networks with hubs or nodes that have distributed traffic, control or management.
In the specific exemplary ring networks described here, each ring network has a dual fiber ring configuration where two separate fiber rings are used to connect all nodes and to carry optical signals in opposite directions, respectively. A node in such ring networks, when sending out a communication signal, simultaneously produces two optical signals carrying the signal in opposite directions in the two separate fiber rings. Similar to other dual ring networks, this use of the dual fiber rings in the ring networks of this application provides a redundancy for each communication signal and allows the ring to continue to operate when there is a fiber break on the ring. Different from other dual ring networks, the ring networks of this application provide unique features within nodes to allow for broadcast and select communications and node-to-node uni-directional and bi-directional communications along with enhanced failure protection mechanisms.
Ring networks described here may use wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) or ultra dense WDM to transmit multiple optical signals at different wavelengths in a single fiber. These wavelengths may be at different ITU-specified WDM wavelengths and each ITU wavelength is generally assigned to a single optical channel. All optical signals at different wavelengths may be divided into bands for purpose of communication management as described here, where each band may include one or more optical signals at different wavelengths. These bands and ITU channels may be dropped or added at each node. Tunable or fixed narrow passband optical filters or WDM demultiplexers may be used to separate the ITU channels within each band.
In addition, multiple wavelengths for different channels may be closely packed within each ITU grid to increase the number of WDM channels beyond the common arrangement of one channel per ITU grid. Accordingly, high resolution tunable or fixed narrow passband optical filters or WDM demultiplexers may be used to separate the closely spaced channel wavelengths within each ITU grid. One way to generate such closely spaced wavelengths within each ITU grid, as an example, is to use subcarrier multiplexing by interleaving subcarrier-sidebands and suppressing optical carrier from multiple separately modulated subcarriers. Exemplary methods include use of an optical single sideband modulation to obtain the components within the one ITU wavelength grid as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,525,857 entitled “Method Apparatus for Interleaved Optical Single Sideband Modulation” and issued on Feb. 25, 2003 to Way et al., the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference as part of the specification of this application.
The headend node 131 has an optical transmitter (TX) to produce an optical signal and an optical splitter which splits the optical signal into a first optical signal to be coupled to the first fiber ring 110 in the counter-clock-wise direction and a second optical signal to be coupled to the second fiber ring 120 in the clock-wise direction. In the hub 132, an optical switch is coupled to receive signals from both fiber rings 110 and 120 and is switched to direct only one received signal from one of the two fiber rings 110 and 120 to an optical receiver (RX) during normal operation. When the received signal from the fiber ring is degraded beyond a preset threshold level or is lost, the switch responds by a switching action to direct the same optical signal from the other fiber ring to the receiver instead. Hence, this protection switching mechanism, called optical uni-directional path switching (O-UPSR) or tail-end switching, maintains the optical communication in the ring network 100 when there is a single fiber break point on the ring network 100. Since the switching action is based on the signal that is detected by the optical receiver (RX) local (in the same node) to the switch, fast protection switch, as fast as less than about 50 ms, can be achieved.
Each node 132 may use two optical devices 141 and 142 to respectively couple in the fiber rings 110 and 120 to drop signals from and add its allocated channel to the ring network 100. In general, such optical devices 141 and 142 may be implemented with broadband or narrowband couplers, or a band optical add-drop filter (BOAD) which adds or drops one or more selected channels within a band. Within the receiver (RX) in the hub 131, a WDM demultiplexer or a tunable bandpass optical filter may be used to select the desired one or more channels from a signal received from the fiber ring 110 or 120. Hence, this ring network 100 is a broadcast and select ring where the broadcast feature is reflected by the fact that each signal sent to the ring network 100 by a node, e.g., the node 131 as illustrated, can be received by any node connected to the network 100, and where the select feature is reflected by the ability of each node, such as the node 132, for selectively receiving one or more desired channels (e.g., one or more selected bands).
Notably, the exemplary ring network 100 implements nodes 131, 132, etc. that allow for each individual channel or a band of channels in each of the fiber rings 110 and 120 to have only one break point in the optical propagation of the channel or a band of channels through out each of the two rings 110 and 120. This single break point is located within a designated node for each individual channel or a band of channels inside the fiber ring 110 or 120. The designated node for the above channel or a band of channels may include one or more optical transmitters as part of the break point and send out information in that channel or a band of channels to the fiber rings 110 and 120. The break point eliminates the possibility of optical signal crosstalk and undesired optical oscillation in the ring if optical amplifiers are implemented within the ring. Under this single-break-point design, the channel or a band of channels which has an optical break point in its designated node passes through any other nodes in the ring network 100 without an optical break point. Certainly, other nodes may either split a portion of all optical signals in each of two fiber rings 110 and 120 including the above channel or band channels, or selectively split one or more selected channels from each fiber ring without interrupting the continuous propagation of the above channel or band channels. In this context, the channel or a band of channels is said to be allocated to the designated node for sending out information to the fiber ring network 100.
In some implementations of the above single-break-point design, each node may be allocated with one channel or band channel. But two or more channels or band channels may also be allocated to a particular node in order to increase the capacity of that particular node for sending out information to the ring network 100. One example of such a node is a headend node in a CATV system for delivering various programming channels to users connected to the CATV system, such as a video-on-demand (VOD) channel to one or more users who requested a particular video program.
This exemplary network 200 is shown to include four different nodes or hubs 210, 220, 230, and 240 in each of the two fiber rings. In general, different nodes may have either the same or different designs depending on specific requirements of the application of the network 200. In this particular example, the node or hub 210 is similar to a headend node in a CATV system in the sense that it is allocated a largest number of bands of channels where each of the other three nodes 220, 230, and 240 is allocated with a single band channel. It is assumed here that, as an example, the network 200 has a total of eight available WDM bands at different wavelengths, each band may include one or more wavelengths for carrying data channels. The node 210 is allocated with five bands 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5. Each of its allocated bands has a continuous optical path through the entire ring except a single optical break point within the node 210 which originates and also terminates bands 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5. The nodes 220, 230, and 240 are allocated with bands 6, 7, and 8, respectively. Hence, the band 6 originates from and ends at the node 220 and has a continuous optical path throughout the rest of the ring; the band 7 originates from and ends at the node 230 and has a continuous optical path throughout the rest of the ring; and the band 8 originates from and ends at the node 240 and has a continuous optical path throughout the rest of the ring.
Under the above channel allocation scheme, each node can broadcast information to any other node with a fast protection from a single failure point on the ring network. In addition, each node can receive information sent by any other node with fast fiber failure protection. Therefore, any two nodes in the ring network can send information to each other with fast fiber failure protection which restores communication in a short response time, e.g., less than about 50 ms. This two-way communication between any two nodes is bi-directional and uses the two allocated bands for the two nodes. For example, the node 220 and node 240 communicate with each other using their allocated bands 6 and 8, respectively. The node 210 can use any of its allocated bands 1-5 to communicate with another node in the broadcast and select optical network 200.
Hence, a dual fiber ring network based on the above design allocates at least one channel or band to each node in the network that passes through all other nodes without an optical break point to allow each node to send out information in its allocated channel or band and to communicate with another node (bi-directional) or to broadcast information to all nodes on the network (uni-directional). The remaining channels or bands can then be assigned to one or more nodes according to the communication requirements of the network. Certainly, under certain application conditions, one or more nodes in the network may be passive receivers and hence are not allocated with a channel or band for sending out information to the network. All channels or bands drop and continue through such a passive node without an optical break point.
In implementing a bi-directional communication between two nodes, each node may use its designated channel or band to send information to the other node so that the bi-direction communication is established with two separate channels respectively designated to the two communicating nodes. For example, the nodes 220 and 240 in
Based on the above exemplary architectural designs, specific implementations of dual fiber ring networks and their nodes are now described in the following.
The nodes 320 and 330 may be configured differently from the node 310. For example, the node 320 may use an optical add and drop device 321, which may be a combination of an optical splitter, an add/drop filter, or an add/drop multiplexer (mux) and demultiplexer (demux) to split a fraction of the bands 1-6 and 8 and drop the band 7 that is allocated to the node 320. In one implementation, for example, the device 321 may include optical amplifiers to compensate for power loss due to the transmission and power splitting. An optical device 322 may be used to receive the optical drop signal and to separate channels in bands 1-6 and 8 to a bank 327 of optical detectors. An optical transmitter 323 may be used to produce the output signal in band 7, via an optical coupler or an optical add and drop device (OAD), with the desired information from the node 320. The device 322 may include an optical splitter, a WDM demux, a tunable filter, or a bank of fixed filters to separate the channels in bands 1-6 and 8 prior to detection of selected one or more channels. An optical detector 328 may be implemented to receive the dropped band 7.
The node 330 may have a similar design as the node 320 and include a device 331 to split a fraction of the bands 1-7 and drop the band 8 that is allocated to the node 330 and is to be received by a detector 338, a device 332 to separate bands 1-7 into a bank of detectors 337 and an optical transmitter 333 to produce the output channel in band 8 with the desired information from the node 330.
The channels 1-8 for data communications may use the 1550-nm C band while optical supervision channels (OSCs) may use wavelengths outside the C-band, e.g., 1510 nm or 1620 nm. As illustrated, at the two ends of node 310, WDM couplers 315 and 316 are used to inject and retrieve the OSCs from the fiber ring. Similarly, WDM couplers 324 and 325 are coupled at the two ends of the node 320 and WDM couplers 334 and 335 are coupled at the two ends of the node 330 for coupling the OSC signals.
One of the applications of the network 300 in
Referring now to
A more detailed design for the node 1020 is shown in
The capability of assigning different channels within a common band to different nodes in
The above examples and exemplary implementations of dual fiber ring networks have a number of advantages. For example, fiber path failure protection can be provided to each bi-directional transmission between any two nodes. Such fiber path failure protection is performed within each node which provides both local detection and local switching operations. Therefore, any transmission is lost only for a short period, typically 50 ms or less, when fiber path failure occurs. As another example, any node can broadcast its information to any other node in optical domain uni-directionally. This is generally simple and easy to deploy. In the mean time, any node can receive information from any other node in optical domain. As yet another example, while suitable for symmetric node to node bi-directional communication, the above implementations may be particularly efficient in carrying highly asymmetric traffic signals, such as VOD applications in cable or other applications that need mass downloading information from storage servers. Furthermore, the above implementations of the ring networks can be easily scalable so that each ring can be expanded to add additional nodes as needed.
In the example shown in
In implementing the above ring networks, each node may be equipped with a broadband coupler to receive uni-directionally broadcast traffic from any other nodes, and one or a pair of channel OADs or band OADs to add traffic. Also, each node may be equipped with a narrowband filter to receive uni-directional traffic from a certain number of other nodes, and a pair of channel OADs or band OADs to drop and add bi-directional traffic.
The above ring networks may be designed to accommodate a range of available optical wavelengths for carrying data channels. A part of such wavelengths may be allocated for uni-directional applications while some others may be allocated for bi-directional applications.
Such a ring network may be configured as a centralized optical network with multi-channel multiplexers and demultiplexers located at the central location. One example of the central location is a headend in CATV network). The majority of the traffic is emitted from this central location. Not only the uni-directional traffic from this central location to other dispersed hubs is protected, but also the bi-directional traffic from hub to hub and from hub to the central location is protected.
In the case of hub-to-hub traffic protection at specific wavelengths or bands, optical bypass in the central location only at those wavelengths or bands is executed. The local traffic at each hub can be added to the ring network via a broadband coupler or an (channel or band) OAD, while it has to be stripped off from the ring network after circulating around the ring once by using a similar OAD.
The above ring networks may also be configured as a distributed optical network with channel or band OADs located at each hub. All hubs can generate uni- and bi-directional traffic into the ring network. Uni-directional traffic generated from a hub is received by all other hubs on the ring network (broadcast), while bi-directional traffic is received only by a designated hub. Uni-directional traffic originated from a hub needs to be stripped off the ring network after it circulates around the ring network once.
All the above network implementations may utilize O-UPSR or tail-end optical switching to achieve a short recovery time, e.g., less than 50 ms.
Only a few implementations and examples are disclosed. However, it is understood that variations and enhancements may be made.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/488,173 entitled “Optical Ring. Networks With Failure Protection Mechanisms” and filed Jul. 16, 2003, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference as part of the specification of this application.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60488173 | Jul 2003 | US |