The field of the present invention lies within diagnosing and assessing the performance of an optical DWDM communications system for degradation due to various system conditions, including channel cross-talk and timing jitter.
With the evolution from Point-To-Point to reconfigurable dense wavelength division multiplex (DWDM) networks the complexity of calibrating, configuring, adjusting and maintaining such a DWDM network has greatly increased. Impairments due to various optical components comprising the network, such as insertion loss, chromatic and polarization mode dispersion as well as optical amplifier gain and noise, require precise selection and configuration of all devices and fiber within a single wavelength network path.
But even if each path in the DWDM network is performing well for a single wavelength, impairments may be encountered when a signal channel at a new wavelength is added to the network due to cross-talk or gain/amplification effects between the existing wavelengths. To monitor such impairments, test equipment needs to be connected to various points in the network for introducing test signals at given points and analyzing their effect on the performance of individual signal channels on the network. For carrying out tests over portions of the network, the test equipment must have established communication channels between them.
Present test equipment vendors already use “in-band” protocols to communicate between test equipment connected to various points on the network. Test equipment, which uses a single tunable laser to generate a test signal in a network, and then measures and analyzes the a single tunable laser to generate a test signal in a network, and then measures and analyzes the signal channels at single or multiple wavelengths, are known in the field (King et al., U.S. Pat. No. 7,386,231).
However, with only one tunable laser test signal, several types of impairments may not be synthesized or tested effectively. The present invention proposes a way for overcoming such deficiencies by employing several tunable optical sources.
The present invention discloses a method for testing a multi-wavelength optical network with multiple signal channels using a wavelength selectable optical receiver, a bit error ratio tester and an optical transmitter comprising two or more tunable laser transmitters. The method comprises sequentially setting a first of the two or more tunable laser transmitters to each target wavelength of a list of target wavelengths to transmit a test pattern on the optical network.
For every target wavelength a second of the two or more tunable laser transmitters is set sequentially to emit every test signal on a list of test signals for transmission on the optical network. Each test signal comprises a distortion wavelength corresponding to a signal channel on the optical network, and a distortion level.
Performance impairment of the test pattern is then measured at the set target wavelength, which has been received with the optical receiver from the optical network in response to the test signals.
A final DWDM network test report is produced a at the conclusion of the tests, which contains measurement results for the received signal, the list of target wavelengths, the list of test signals and other configuration information.
A test system for an optical DWDM network is also described, which comprises a first tunable laser transmitter for generating a first output at a target wavelength, a first bit error ratio tester (BERT) for modulating the first tunable laser with a target test pattern, a second tunable laser transmitter for generating a second output at a distortion wavelength and a second bit error ratio tester (BERT) for modulating the second tunable laser with a distorting test pattern.
A DWDM multiplexer is provided for receiving and multiplexing the first and second outputs to transmit a multi-wavelength signal into the optical DWDM network. A DWDM demultiplexer coupled to the optical DWDM network is provided for receiving and demultiplexing the multi-wavelength signal to transmit a signal channel at the target wavelength. A receiver coupled to the DWDM demultiplexer receives the signal channel for evaluating the signal channel by a measuring and analysis function.
The test system may be incorporated in a portable test generator, such as a handheld instrument, for use in the field.
The invention will be described in greater detail with reference to the accompanying drawings which represent preferred embodiments thereof, wherein:
a and 1b show the building blocks for a DWDM system test equipment in accordance with the present invention.
a-3c show possible network scenarios in which the test equipment of
The present invention relates to test equipment (e.g. TBERD 8000) with 2 or more tunable lasers (TL) which enable testing of the complete spectrum of a DWDM system and which uses suitable diagnostic software to stepwise tune one or more TLs to a specific wavelength under test. While simultaneously inserting several “distortion” wavelengths into a network, bit error and impairment tests on a particular wavelength under test are performed. Finally information from these tests is correlated in order to create a combined DWDM network test report.
An example of a basic building block for a test system is shown in
In another embodiment shown in
Using test equipment with two (or more) tunable lasers described above, the proposed approach according to the present invention enables a user to test all available optical network paths and to predict the performance of a fully loaded DWDM network in which all available wavelengths are active.
With reference to
For some tests, a jitter and timing impairment generator 210 can be connected to the BERT unit 203a to introduce controlled distortions into the optical signal transmitted at wavelength λ1 by the tunable laser 205a. For amplitude impairment tests, an additional BERT unit 203a′ may be introduced for controlling the signal transmitted by tunable laser 205a′ through variable optical attenuator 209 into the DWDM network 250. The additional BERT unit 203a′ transmits test patterns which may have a bit rate and bit pattern which differs from those of BERT unit 203a.
a illustrates an example of a test setup 300 in which two test equipment units 300a and 300b are used to insert and analyze test signals on the DWDM network 250. The test equipment unit 300a comprises two or more BERT units 303a, 303b, . . . 303n. The tunable laser transmitter 305a operating at a target wavelength λ1 is modulated by the BERT unit 303a with a test signal before being multiplexed by a DWDM multiplexer 306a onto the DWDM network 250 via optical fiber 307. Similarly, one or more of the remaining tunable laser transmitters 305b, . . . 305n, may inject a similar or different test pattern at wavelengths λ2, . . . λn, respectively, into the DWDM multiplex unit 306a, which combines them for transmission to the DWDM network 250 via the optical fiber 307. The respective test patterns may function as additional test signals or as distortion signals to simulate degraded network conditions due to faulty components or similar.
A multi-wavelength signal from the DWDM network 250 is received through optical fiber 307 by the DWDM demultiplex unit 306b, which splits the multi-wavelength signal into its constituent wavelength signal channels. One of the signal channels at a target wavelength λ1 is transmitted over an optical channel 307a to a receiver 313 in the test equipment unit 300b. The test equipment unit 300b may be located locally with the test equipment units 300a, or at a remote location and vice versa.
A suitable protocol is implemented to configure various settings on the test equipment units 300a and 300b, such as target wavelengths, signal levels, timing, distortion wavelengths, distortion levels, etc., according to a particular selected setup, as well as to generate a test report at the conclusion of tests. The test report contains details of the test setup and measurement results for test equipment units 300a and 300b.
The test equipment unit 300a comprising the two or more BERT units 303a, 303b, . . . 303n can be preferably combined with the tunable lasers 205a, 205b, . . . 205n and the DWDM multiplex unit 306a into a single portable test generator unit 350. A complementary test receiver unit 360 could include the DWDM demultiplex unit 306b, the receiver 313 and the test equipment unit 300b.
An embodiment for receiving multiple wavelengths simultaneously for analysis is shown in
Another embodiment of a DWDM test setup 300″ involving the generation of multi-wavelength test signals is illustrated in
The present invention provides a network operator with the capability to validate, troubleshoot and certify the network before customer traffic is deployed, as well as predicting the effects of introducing an additional signal channel at a specific new wavelength while other wavelengths of the network are already in-service. The test equipment is capable of transmitting and receiving single wavelength signals to and from the DWDM multiplexers as well as to transmit and receive multiple wavelength signals within a DWDM network.
An example pseudo-algorithm 400 is now described on hand
During a test setup step 401 the network operator configures a list of m target wavelengths λT1, λT2, . . . λTm and k distortion wavelengths λD1, λD2, . . . λDk. As a default, both the target wavelength list and the distortion wavelength list may include all available DWDM wavelengths as used in the DWDM network 250 (e.g. ITU grid). Although the following algorithm refers to only one distortion wavelength, λD1, for reasons of simplicity, when more than two tunable lasers are used, the algorithm can be modified to include multiple distortion wavelengths.
The first target wavelength in the list, λT1, is selected in step 402 for emission by tunable laser 305a on test equipment unit 300a for transmission onto the DWDM network 250 via an optical fiber 307. The tunable laser 305a may be set by a programmable controller using suitable software commands or algorithms. The remote or local test equipment unit 300b is configured to measure and record results pertinent to the first target wavelength, λT1, which is selected by an optical filter (not shown) or demultiplexed in the demultiplexer 306.
One distortion wavelength in the list, λD1, is then selected in step 403 for emission by a second tunable laser 305b on test equipment unit 300a for transmission onto the DWDM network 250 via an optical fiber 307. The distortion wavelength λD1 will cause noise impairments and intermodulation distortion on the selected target wavelength, λT1.
Impairments such as jitter, attenuation, etc. are introduced on the target wavelength, λT1 using, for instance, the previously described jitter and timing impairment generator 210 connected to BERT unit 303a test equipment unit 300a.
The effects of the distortion wavelength, λDI, as well as the impairments introduced on the target wavelength λT1 are measured in step 404 with BERT measurements and Eye Diagram measurements on test equipment unit 300b′ and relevant results such as BER rate, signal to noise ratio (SNR) and similar are determined.
When testing at the selected distortion wavelength, λD1, is completed, the next available distortion wavelength is selected from the list and the testing repeated until all distortion wavelengths in the list λD1, λD2, . . . λDk have been tested against the first target wavelength, λT1.
Once all testing has been completed for the first target wavelength, λT1, the next target wavelength in the list is selected and testing executed for all k distortion wavelengths λD1, λD2, . . . λDk. Testing is continued until all m target wavelengths λT1, λT2, . . . λTm have been covered.
In step 405 a final DWDM network test report is produced, which typically contains the list of target wavelengths, the list of distortion wavelengths, the list of test signals, and measurement results for the received signal for each combination of target and distortion wavelengths.
A variation of the above algorithm makes use of the setup illustrated in
The present invention claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/987,898 filed Nov. 14, 2007, which is incorporated herein by reference for all purposes.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60987898 | Nov 2007 | US |