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Deploying GPON Tutorial: Joseph P. Brenkosh Jimmie V. Wolf

sandia labs

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
59 views24 pages

Deploying GPON Tutorial: Joseph P. Brenkosh Jimmie V. Wolf

sandia labs

Uploaded by

Norm Lanum
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 24

SAND2015-3435C

Photos placed in horizontal position


with even amount of white space
between photos and header

Deploying GPON Tutorial


Joseph P. Brenkosh
Jimmie V. Wolf
Sandia National Laboratories is a multi-program laboratory managed and operated by Sandia Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of Lockheed Martin
Corporation, for the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration under contract DE-AC04-94AL85000. SAND NO. 2011-XXXXP
Topics To Be Covered

• Introduction to GPON
• Selecting GPON Equipment
• Building the Fiber Optic Infrastructure
• Installing and Managing GPON
• GPON Troubleshooting
• GPON Power Consumption
• Lessons Learned
• Future GPON Technologies at SNL

2
Introduction to GPON

• Gigabit Passive Optical Network (GPON)


• Access layer technology
• Based on ITU-T G.984 standards
• Uses active and passive components
• Supports triple play services (voice, video, and data)
• VLAN based
• Downstream encrypted with AES-128

3
GPON Topology

4
GPON Downstream Operation

5
GPON Upstream Operation

6
Selecting GPON Equipment I
• Optical Line Terminal (OLT)
• Number of GPON modules per shelf (2 – 16)
• Number of GPON ports per module (4)
• Number of controller modules for redundancy (1-2)
• Number and bandwidth of uplinks (8 X 1 Gbps, 4 X 10 Gbps)
• Switching capacity (200 Gbps – 2.56 Tbps)
• Split Ratio 1:32
• Optical Budget 28 dB
• ONTs supported (128 – 2048)
• Power: AC and DC options

7
Selecting GPON Equipment II
• Optical Network Terminal (ONT)
• Number and bandwidth of ports (1 – 24 10/100/1000
Mbps)
• Power: AC, DC, and battery backup
• Wall mounting or desk mounting

8
Building the Fiber Optic Infrastructure
• Needed wherever GPON is to be deployed
• Uses single-mode fiber
• New advances make the installation easier
• Better fiber
• Pre-terminated fiber is preferred
• Bend-insensitive fiber eases deployment
• Angled Polished Connectors have lower loss
• PON devices (Specifically designed for PON)
• Passive Optical Splitter
• Fiber Distribution Hub (FDH)
• Remote Distribution Terminal (RDT)
• Fiber Splitter Box (FSB)
• Should be tested before GPON deployment
9
Passive Optical Splitter
• Distributes the GPON transmission to ONTs
• No power or cooling required
• Virtually unlimited MTBF
• Common sizes: 1X8, 1X16, 1X32, 2X32
• Higher split ratios allow for more ONTs per GPON port
• Higher split ratios decrease the available bandwidth per ONT
and distance

10
Fiber Distribution Hub (FDH)
• All passive
• Houses passive optical splitters
• Connects to Rapid Fiber Distribution Terminals
• Factory terminated connections
• Placed indoors or outdoors
• Lockable cabinet
• 72 to 864 fiber capacity

11
Rapid Fiber Distribution Terminal (RDT)
• Used to connect FDH to ONT drop cables
• Placed in the plenum
• Built-in spool with 2 MTP® or MPO terminated 12 count fiber
cables
• SC/APC connectors are used on ONT drop cables

12
Fiber Splitter Box (FSB)
• A mini Fiber Distribution Hub
• Useful for lower count locations
• Wall mounted

13
GPON Building Deployment

14
Installing and Managing GPON
• Preliminary setup
• Carefully plan locations of the OLTs, FDHs, RDTs, FSBs, and ONTs
• Physically deploy and test the fiber optic infrastructure
• Install the OLTs and ONTs
• Provision VLANs and route points on routers and or switches
• Install GPON management software on management platform
• OLT Provisioning
• Perform initial turn up
• Add the OLT to the GPON management application
• Provision other information such as DHCP, Radius, SNMP, NTP, and Protection Group
• Provision Uplinks
• ONT Provisioning
• Discover and register the ONT
• Assign the ONT Port to a VLAN
• Assign profiles for various parameters (QoS, security, LLDP, etc.)
• Connect computers to the ONTs and test
15
Panorama ONT Connections Screenshot

16
OLT Command Line Provisioning Screenshot

17
Protecting GPON

• Important to have control of fiber optic


infrastructure and all devices
• Access control lists on ONTs
• MAC address limiting to prevent flooding overflow
• 802.1X
• Unexpected ONT detection
• Upstream broadcast rate limiting and filtering

18
QoS for GPON

• Uses 802.1P for QoS


• Based on VLAN-ID, 802.1p bit, or ToS/DSCP
• Can mark 802.1p
• Has ToS/DSCP to 802.1p mapping

19
GPON Troubleshooting

• Conventional light meters will not work because ONT


will not transmit unless it receives grant from OLT
• Need inline GPON light meters
• Panorama or other GPON manager Alarm reporting
• Tcpdump on GPON port
• GPON Analyzer
• Sniff uplink

20
GPON Power Consumption

• Tellabs OLT fully populated at peak load: 1200 Watts


• Tellabs ONT:
• 4.1 Watts idle
• 6.7 Watts peak load
• When fully realized, SNL New Mexico will reduce
power consumption by 1 Million KWh annually
• Will save $87K in annual power costs

21
Lessons Learned I
• Over 14,000 ONTs installed in 270 buildings
• 17 OLTs installed
• GPON implementation provides a total cost savings
of $20M over 5 years in CapEx and OpEx
• Keep installation crew ahead of provisioning crew
• Don't assume office access, space, or power
• Wall mounting is preferred in unclassified areas
• Upgrading the core network at the same time can
cause difficulties
• A network upgrade will be blamed for almost all IT
problems 22
Lessons Learned II
• Be sure you can replace the legacy network,
otherwise you will now be supporting and providing
power for two networks
• Retain smaller decommissioned switches to replace
larger switches supporting a limited number of
legacy ports that can not be migrated such as server
rooms and labs
• Firmware upgrades should be tested thoroughly
prior to implementation on production networks
• Scripting or bulk provisioning is important for large
deployments
23
Future GPON Technologies at SNL

• XG-PON2 (10 Gbps GPON)


• NG-PON2 (40 Gbps TWDM-PON)

24

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