Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Product Description
Version: 1.2
ZTE CORPORATION
NO. 55, Hi-tech Road South, ShenZhen, P.R.China
Postcode: 518057
Tel: +86-755-26771900
Fax: +86-755-26770801
URL: http://ensupport.zte.com.cn
E-mail: support@zte.com.cn
LEGAL INFORMATION
Copyright 2011 ZTE CORPORATION.
The contents of this document are protected by copyright laws and international treaties. Any reproduction or
distribution of this document or any portion of this document, in any form by any means, without the prior written
consent of ZTE CORPORATION is prohibited.
Revision History
Revision No.
Revision Date
Revision Reason
1.0
20110131
First Edition
Contents
About This Manual ......................................................................................... I
Declaration of RoHS Compliance ................................................................. I
Chapter 1 System Description .................................................................. 1-1
1.1 Background ....................................................................................................... 1-1
1.2 Overview ........................................................................................................... 1-1
1.3 Product Features................................................................................................ 1-2
1.3.1 Interface Types ........................................................................................ 1-3
1.3.2 Networking Solutions................................................................................ 1-5
1.3.3 Capacity and Integration ........................................................................... 1-5
1.3.4 EPON Functions ...................................................................................... 1-5
1.3.5 GPON Functions ...................................................................................... 1-6
1.3.6 Layer-2 and VLAN Functions .................................................................... 1-6
1.3.7 IP Route .................................................................................................. 1-7
1.3.8 Multicast Services .................................................................................... 1-7
1.3.9 TDM Function .......................................................................................... 1-8
1.3.10 QoS....................................................................................................... 1-8
1.3.11 Security ................................................................................................. 1-9
1.3.12 Reliability ............................................................................................. 1-10
1.3.13 Product Maintenance............................................................................ 1-10
1.4 Working Principle ..............................................................................................1-11
1.4.1 System Function Block Diagram...............................................................1-11
1.4.2 Service Flow .......................................................................................... 1-13
1.5 Safety Instructions............................................................................................ 1-17
Figures............................................................................................................. I
Tables ............................................................................................................ III
Index ...............................................................................................................V
Glossary .......................................................................................................VII
III
IV
Intended Audience
This document is intended for engineers and technicians who perform maintenance
activities on the ZXA10 C300 Optical Access Convergence Equipment.
Summary
Related Documentation
The following documentation is related to this manual:
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Conventions
ZTE documents employ the following typographical conventions.
Typeface
Meaning
Italics
Quotes
Links on screens.
Bold
Menus, menu options, function names, input fields, radio button names,
check boxes, drop-down lists, dialog box names, window names.
CAPS
Typeface
Meaning
Tip: Indicates a suggestion or hint to make things easier or more productive
for the reader.
Meaning
Click
Refers to clicking the primary mouse button (usually the left mouse button) once.
Double-click
Refers to quickly clicking the primary mouse button (usually the left mouse button)
twice.
Right-click
Refers to clicking the secondary mouse button (usually the right mouse button)
once.
III
IV
Declaration of RoHS
Compliance
To minimize environmental impacts and take more responsibilities to the earth we live
on, this document shall serve as a formal declaration that the ZXA10 C300 manufactured
by ZTE CORPORATION is in compliance with the Directive 2002/95/EC of the European
Parliament - RoHS (Restriction of Hazardous Substances) with respect to the following
substances:
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Lead (Pb)
Mercury (Hg)
Cadmium (Cd)
Hexavalent Chromium (Cr (VI))
PolyBrominated Biphenyls (PBBs)
PolyBrominated Diphenyl Ethers (PBDEs)
The ZXA10 C300 manufactured by ZTE CORPORATION meets the requirements of EU 2002/95/EC;
however, some assemblies are customized to client specifications. Addition of specialized,
customer-specified materials or processes which do not meet the requirements of EU 2002/95/EC
may negate RoHS compliance of the assembly. To guarantee compliance of the assembly, the need
for compliant product must be communicated to ZTE CORPORATION in written form.
This declaration is issued based on our current level of knowledge. Since conditions of use are
outside our control, ZTE CORPORATION makes no warranties, express or implied, and assumes no
liability in connection with the use of this information.
II
Chapter 1
System Description
Table of Contents
Background................................................................................................................1-1
Overview ....................................................................................................................1-1
Product Features........................................................................................................1-2
Working Principle .....................................................................................................1-11
Safety Instructions....................................................................................................1-17
1.1 Background
With the development of the society, people have more requirements on
telecommunication services.
Besides traditional voice, TDM and Internet access
services, users require more new broadband services such as IPTV, VOD, online game,
remote education, remote medicine, video conference and video phone, etc. These new
broadband services help carriers to attract more users and get generous profits.
FTTH is the target of the access layer network development. The network solution based
on PON topology meets the network topology characteristics of the access network.
As an optimum transmission medium, optical fiber can provide unlimited bandwidth to
support various services access. The passive ODN device is small and does not need
any active apparatus. It has powerful lighteningfroof and anti-interference capability. The
long distance between OLT and ONU meets the networking requirement of carriers.
ZXA10 xPON passive optical access network is a comprehensive optical solution to adapt
to various networking scenarios. To meet the development tendency of telecommunication
network from IP network to NGN network, ZXA10 xPON passive optical access network
integrates EPON/GPON, Ethernet and xDSL technologies to support the access of various
services.
The ZXA10 C300 passive optical network system is an OLT system based on
GPON/EPON technology. It provides high-bandwidth data access service, VoIP, IPTV
and CATV services to meet different requirements and application scenarios.
1.2 Overview
The ZXA10 C300 is a multi-service optical access system, which supports EPON, GPON,
10G EPON, P2P, and smooth upgrading to NG PON and WDM PON.
The ZXA10 C300 provides the access of large-capacity, high-bandwidth and high-density
triple-play service and backhaul service.
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The ZXA10 C300 provides various networking solutions, including FTTH, FTTB,
FTTC, and FTTCab.
The ZXA10 C300 supports P2P FE/GE optical access.
The ZXA10 C300 supports backhaul access.
Figure 1-1 shows ZXA10 C300 networking diagram (The ZXA10 C300 is in the position of
OLT in the diagram).
Figure 1-1 ZXA10 C300 Networking Diagram
Interface Types
Networking Solutions
Capacity and Integration
EPON Functions
GPON Functions
Layer-2 and VLAN Functions
IP Route
Multicast Services
TDM Function
QoS
Security
Reliability
Product Maintenance
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Interface
Remarks
Network interface
FE electrical interface
GE electrical
GE optical interface
10 GE optical interface
E1 interface
Provides 32 unbalanced E1
interfaces.
T1 interface
Provides 32 balanced T1
interfaces.
BITS interface
1PPS+TOD interface
Synchronization Ethernet
interface
synchronization.
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Type
Interface
Remarks
Service interface
EPON interface
The point-to-multipoint
architecture and the passive
fiber transmission mode are
used. Both the upstream and
downstream rate can reach up
to 1.25 Gbps.
GPON interface
It supports various
upstream/downstream rates of
10 Gbps/10 Gbps, 1 Gbps/10
Gpbps, and 1 Gbps/1 Gbps.
Maintenance interface
Serial port
Environment monitoring
interface
SD interface
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Multi-play solution
Multi-play users, including Internet access users, VoIP users, and video users, are
connected to the ZXA10 C300 through ONT. The ZXA10 C300 transmits service
packets to the upper-layer device after service processing.
GPON
Single shelf
Single shelf
Single cabinet
Single cabinet
The ZXA10 C300 has non-blocked switching capability so it can provide more than
80 Gbps bandwidth at the upstream direction.
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ITU-T standards
GPON equipment technical specifications required by China CCSA, China Telecom,
China Unicom, and China Mobile
G.984.2 protocol
FEC
Management and maintenance functions:
SCB
Data encryption of AES and Triple Churning
DBA
ONU registration and authorization
ODN protection of TYPE A/B/C/D
Measurement and diagnosis of the fiber link
The rate of 1.244 Gbps at the upstream direction and the rate of 2.488 Gbps at the
downstream direction
Supports 32K MAC address, which can be extended to 256K MAC address table.
Supports the IEEE 802.1Q protocol.
Each PON interface supports 4K VLANs. The VLAN ID ranges from 1 to 4094.
Supports the tag and untag of VLAN ID, VLAN transparent, N:1 VLAN aggregation,
VLAN priority tag, and VLAN filter.
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1.3.7 IP Route
The ZXA10 C300 can run in the layer-3 switch state. The IP package is transferred to the
next-hop equipment by its destination IP address and the query of the IP route table. The
IP route table can be configured statically or obtained dynamically by the RIP/OSPF/IS-IS
protocol.
The ZXA10 C300 supports the following:
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Static route
ECMP (Equal Cost Multiple Path)
RIP
OSPF
PIM-SM
The ZXA10 C300 supports the access of the VoIP services of different ONUs under a
same OLT or different IADs under a same ONU. The ZXA10 C300 supports VoIP services
interaction.
According to the general networking plan, the devices of access network are required to
be separated from each other. The access subscribers interwork with each other through
the uplink router. Such a network has high security and is easy to be planned. The layer-2
devices are separated and they interwork with each other through a layer-3 device.
Interworking through layer-3 handles the ARP address resolution and packet forwarding.
The interworking is realized in the following methods:
l The uplink router enables the ARP proxy function, the OLT implements layer-2
separation, and the uplink router implements interworking through layer-3.
l The uplink router does not enable the ARP proxy function, the OLT implements layer-2
separation, the OLT or the convergence switch enables the ARP agent function (based
on the VoIP VLAN, not for all subscribers). The OLT takes place of the uplink router
to return the MAC address of the router. Packets are forwarded by the uplink routers
at layer 3.
l The uplink router does not enable the ARP proxy function, the OLT enables the layer-3
function, that is, the OLT implements the functions of ARP proxy and layer-3 data
forwarding between the VoIP subscribers under the OLT.
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Multicast Protocols
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IGMP V1/V2/V3
IGMP Proxy and IGMP Snooping
Multicast Services
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User Management
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Multiple authentication modes for multicast users to meet the requirements of different
multicast operators
Controllable multicast to control users access to multicast groups
Multicast package
Adaptive
Differential
1.3.10 QoS
The ZXA10 C300 provides the network services with different service qualities, namely,
the high QoS guarantee. The ZXA10 C300 supports:
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Traffic priority mapping and congestion avoidance based on single-rate and dual-rate
three-color maker algorithms
DBA, allocating the bandwidth dynamically according to the change of user traffic
The minimum allocated bandwidth is 256 Kbps. The minimum dispatched granularity
is 64 Kbps.
1.3.11 Security
The ZXA10 C300 guarantees subscriber validity and network security. ZXA10 C300
provides system security measures and user security measures.
System Security
The ZXA10 C300 provides the following system security measures:
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User Security
The ZXA10 C300 provides the following user security measures:
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1.3.12 Reliability
The carrier-class reliability is taken into consideration in system design to ensure reliable
running of the ZXA10 C300.
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The ZXA10 C300 uses the backplane to connect all the components. The control and
switching card processes service signals, clock signals, and control signals, and then
sends them to the destination card. The ZXA10 C300 has the following cards:
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The control and switching card contains the system control module, data switching module,
TDM switching module, and clock module.
The system contains the clock bus, control bus, and data bus.
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Clock bus
It provides clock to each card.
The system provides two external clock input/output ports for clock synchronization.
Control bus
It provides the communication channel for the control and switching card and service
cards, implementing system management and control.
Data bus
It implements service data interaction.
Upstream
1. ONT data packets are mapped or VLAN translated according to UNI+ VLAN+,
and CoS information, and are tagged with different CoS information.
2. By using the DBA algorithm, OLT sends data packets to the OLT PON card
according to LLID.
3. The OLT PON card implements VLAN translate on data packets and configures
the VLAN work mode.
If the VLAN works in 1:1 mode, the PON card checks whether it is required to limit
the MAC address quantity. If the MAC address quantity is not limited, the PON
card transfers data packets to the main control card. If the address quantity is
limited, the PON card performs address learning and then transfers data packets
to the main control card.
If the VLAN works in N:1 mode, the PON card performs address learning and
checks the address quantity. If the address quantity exceeds the limit, the PON
card discards data packets. If the address quantity does not exceed the limit, the
PON card transfers data packets to the main control card.
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4. The main control card checks the VLAN mode. If the VLAN works in 1:1 mode,
the main control card finds the destination port from the SVLAN + CVLAN list and
transfers data packets to the destination uplink port. If the VLAN works in N:1
mode, the main control card performs MAC address learning, and then transfers
data packets to the uplink port of the uplink card.
5. The uplink card does not make any processing on the service data. It only
performs the optical-to-electrical conversion, and then transmits data to the
upper-layer network.
Downstream
1. Data packets are transmitted to the main control card. The main control card
checks the VLAN work mode.
If the VLAN works in 1:1 mode, the main control card finds the destination PON
card from the SVLAN + CVLAN list and transfers data packets to the destination
PON card.
If the VLAN works in N:1 mode, the main control card queries the MAC address
and transfers data packets to the destination PON card.
2. PON card checks the VLAN work mode.
If the VLAN works in 1:1 mode, the PON card queries the SVLAN + CVLAN list and
implements VLAN translate, and then transmits data packets to the destination
bridge port. After getting a LLID at the destination bridge port, data packets are
transmitted to the destination PON port.
If the VLAN works in N:1 mode, the PON card gets the MAC address and VLAN
value of data packets. The PON card queries the MAC address. If it is successful,
the PON card sends data packets to the destination bridge port and implements
VLAN translate. Then, it gets LLID and transfers data packets to the EPON
interface.
3. Data packets are transmitted to the ONT through ODN. The ONT filters the
unnecessary data packets according to the LLID list. It queries the MAC address
or LLID, and UNI table to find the destination UNI interface. Then, it implements
VLAN translate and sends data packets to the UNI interface.
Multicast Service
IGMP is used to control the multicast service flow.
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adds/deletes the multicast port. Multicast data packets query the multicast table,
and then copy the data packets and transmit them to PON port.
4. Multicast data packets are transmitted to the ONT in SCB mode. In the EPON
system, each PON port has an LLID which is only in the downstream direction.
Multicast data packets are transmitted from the OLT to ONT according to the LLID.
5. The ONT also uses the IGMP snooping or IGMP proxy protocol to process multicast data packets. IGMP adds/deletes multicast table items. Multicast data packets query the multicast table, and then copy the data packets and translate the
multicast VLAN to user VLAN. Finally, multicast data packets are transmitted to
users from the UNI interface.
PTP downstream multicast service processing is the same as that on the PON card.
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TDM Service
TDM service includes service traffic processing and clock processing.
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Upstream
1. TDM data stream is encapsulated into data packets according to the
PWE3/MEF/ITU-T standard and tagged with a time stamp. Then, data
packets are encapsulated into Ethernet data packets and tagged with
CVLAN. The ONT maps data packets to relevant LLID according to C-VLAN.
2. Ethernet data packets are tagged with SVLAN on the PON card and
transmitted to the main control card in 1:1 mode. The main control card
sends Ethernet data packets to the TDM processing card according to
SVLAN + CVLAN in 1:1 mode. The TDM processing card resumes Ethernet
data packets to TDM data stream and maps them to the E1/T1 interface or
E1/T1 time slot of STM1/4. Finally, The TDM data stream is transmitted to
the TDM line interface in the E1/T1 or STM-1/4 format.
Downstream
1. TDM data stream is sent to the CES processing card from the E1/T1 or
STM-1/4 interface. The CES card encapsulates the TDM data stream
into data packets according to the PWE3/MEF/ITU-T standard and tag the
packets a time stamp. Then, the CES card encapsulates data packets into
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Ethernet data packets and tags them with CVLAN + SVLAN, and then sends
the data packets to the main card.
2. The main control card sends Ethernet data packets to the EPON card in 1:1
mode according to SVLAN + CVLAN.
3. EPON card bridges the data packets to the relevant according to the LLID in
1:1 mode and sends them to the PON port after removing the SVLAN. The
ONT finds the CES resumption processing module according to CVLAN. The
CES resumption processing module resumes Ethernet data packets to TDM
data stream and sends it to the E1/T1/E3/T3 interface.
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Clock processing
The EPON system supports two TDM data stream clock resumption modes:
Adaptive
If the public reference clock does not exist, adaptive clock resumption can be used
to synchronize the clock. The disadvantage is that the clock is not so accurate or
stable because of loss of packets or transmission delay.
Differential
Differential clock resumption is used to put the difference of the transmitting clock
and public reference clock into the time stamp of data packets. Compared with
adaptive clock resumption, differential clock resumption provides more stable
and accurate clock. The disadvantage is that it needs a clock link between CES
gateway devices.
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Precautions
The precautions introduced below are only supplementary to the local installation safety
specifications.
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Take extra care while working with the equipment to avoid any injury or equipment
damage.
Only qualified and trained engineers should be assigned for the operation.
Read the installation guide before equipment installation.
Arrange power cables according to cabling requirements. Use blue cable for -48 V,
black cable for -48 V grounding. Use a multi-meter to measure the voltage before
power-ON. Power cables should bear the power supply for full-configured cabinet.
Use yellow cable for grounding. Make sure that the connection is reliable and the
grounding resistance is less than 1 ohm.
Use fiber sheath to protect the fiber pigtail. The bending radius should not be too
small. Do not bundle fiber pigtails too tightly. Do not place any cable on fiber pigtails.
Connect user cables properly.
Wear the antistatic wrist strap while inserting or removing a card. Insert the card in
the proper slot.
For ease of use and future maintenance, mark both ends of a cable.
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Chapter 2
System Architecture
Table of Contents
Hardware Structure ....................................................................................................2-1
Software Architecture .................................................................................................2-8
Product Outline
Cabinet
Shelf
Cards
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2.1.2 Cabinet
Cabinet Types
The ZXA10 C300 uses the following cabinets as listed in Table 2-1.
Table 2-1 Cabinet Types
Cabinet
Dimensions
Weight (Empty)
19-inch cabinet
60 kg
19D03H22
Depth)
21-inch cabinet
21D03H22
Depth)
21-inch cabinet
21D06H22
Depth)
80 kg
110 kg
Cabinet Configuration
The cabinet can hold two ZXA10 C300 shelves at maximum. Figure 2-3 shows the ZXA10
C300 cabinet configuration.
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2.1.3 Shelf
The ZXA10 C300 uses the IEC 19-inch shelf and ETSI 21-inch shelf.
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Other slots are for subscriber line cards, such as PON, PTP, and TDM cards.
Card
Description
0, 1
4.5U
29
cards
10, 11
12 17
cards
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Slot
Card
Description
18
19, 20
GUSQ)
To enhance the system reliability, the system can be configured with two control and
switching cards, which work in 1:1 mode.
Other slots are for service line cards, such as PON, PTP, and TDM cards.
Table 2-3 lists the card configuration in the ETSI 21-inch shelf.
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Card
Description
0, 1
4.5U
29
cards
10, 11
12 19
cards
20
interface, management
interface, monitoring interface,
and N:1 protection interface
21, 22
GUSQ)
To enhance the system reliability, the system can be configured with two control and
switching cards, which work in 1:1 mode.
2.1.4 Cards
The ZXA10 C300 uses the cards which are listed in Table 2-4.
Table 2-4 ZXA10 C300 Cards
Type
Name
Description
SCXL
SCXM
XUTQ
HUTQ
HUGQ
GDFO
GUFQ
GUTQ
GUSQ
card
Uplink card
interface card
CES card
CTLA
CTBB
CTTB
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Type
Name
Description
Subscriber card
ETGO
FTGH
ETXD
ETTD
GTGO
GTGQ
CICG
Backplane
MWEA
21-inch backplane
MWIA
19-inch backplane
Power card
PRWG
Fan component
FAN-C300
Fan component
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CLI module
This module implements Console and Telnet NM function.
STP
LACP
IGMP snooping protocol (V1/V2/V3)
MAC address management
VLAN management
Priority management
IEEE802.3x flow control
TCP
UDP
ARP
IP
ICMP
Static route
ACL
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IP address binding
MAC address binding
Port mirroring
Traffic flow control
Broadcast suppression
Port status management
Port bandwidth limit
Port priority control
User log management
MAC address aging management
User port loop-back test
Ping test
The bearer subsystem is responsible for service chip driver. It isolates the upper-level
software system from the hardware platform so that the specific hardware structure
is unnecessary to be considered in service-layer design. The bearer subsystem
communicates with the upper-layer module through the MUX interface.
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Chapter 3
SD interface
It is used to back up data by using the SD card.
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100BASE-Tx Interface
1000BASE-Tx Interface
1000BASE-Lx Interface
1000BASE-Sx Interface
10GBASE-L Interface
10GBASE-S Interface
10GBASE-E Interface
E1 Interface
T1 Interface
STM-1 Interface
STM-4 Interface
EPON Interface
GPON Interface
P2P FE Optical Interface
P2P GE Optical Interface
100BASE-Tx Interface
Table 3-1 lists 100BASE-Tx interface specifications.
Table 3-1 100BASE-Tx Interface Specifications
Property
Remarks
Interface type
RJ-45
Interface rate
100 m
Cable type
Category-5 twisted-pairs
Standards
IEEE 802.3u
1000BASE-Tx Interface
Table 3-2 lists 1000BASE-Tx interface specifications.
Table 3-2 1000BASE-Tx Interface Specifications
Property
Remarks
Interface type
RJ-45
Interface rate
100 m
Standards
IEEE 802.3ab
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1000BASE-Lx Interface
Table 3-3 lists 1000BASE-Lx interface specifications.
Table 3-3 1000BASE-Lx Interface Specifications
Property
Remarks
Interface type
LC
Interface rate
1000 Mbps
Central wavelength
1310 nm
-9.5 dBm
Extinction ratio
8.2 dB
-31 dBm
Standards
IEEE 802.3z
1000BASE-Sx Interface
Table 3-4 lists 1000BASE-Sx interface specifications.
Table 3-4 1000BASE-Sx Interface Specifications
Property
Remarks
Interface type
LC
Interface rate
1000 Mbps
Central wavelength
850 nm
-9.5 dBm
Extinction ratio
9 dB
-17 dBm
Standards
IEEE 802.3z
10GBASE-L Interface
Table 3-5 lists 10GBASE-L interface specifications.
Table 3-5 10GBASE-L Interface Specifications
Property
Remarks
Interface type
LC
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Property
Remarks
Interface rate
Central wavelength
1310 nm
-6 dBm
Extinction ratio
6 dB
-14.4 dBm
Standards
IEEE 802.3-2005
10GBASE-S Interface
Table 3-6 lists 10GBASE-S interface specifications.
Table 3-6 10GBASE-S Interface Specifications
Property
Remarks
Interface type
LC
Interface rate
Central wavelength
850 nm
-7.3 dBm
Extinction ratio
3 dB
-9.9 dBm
Standards
IEEE 802.3-2005
10GBASE-E Interface
Table 3-7 lists 10GBASE-E interface specifications.
Table 3-7 10GBASE-E Interface Specifications
Property
Remarks
Interface type
LC
Interface rate
Central wavelength
1550 nm
-1 dBm
Extinction ratio
8.2 dB
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Property
Remarks
-14 dBm
Standards
IEEE 802.3-2005
E1 Interface
Table 3-8 lists E1 interface specifications.
Table 3-8 E1 Interface Specifications
Property
Remarks
Interface type
Interface rate
2.048 Mbps
Impedance
120 ohm
T1 Interface
Table 3-9 lists T1 interface specifications.
Table 3-9 T1 Interface Specifications
Property
Remarks
Interface type
Interface rate
1.544 Mbps
Impedance
100 ohm
STM-1 Interface
Table 3-10 lists STM-1 interface specifications.
Table 3-10 STM-1 Interface Specifications
Property
Remarks
Interface type
SFP
Interface rate
155.520 Mbps
76 km (1310 nm)
96 km (1550 nm)
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Property
Remarks
Cable type
Optical fiber
Central wavelength
1310 nm/1550 nm
MLM
-28 dBm
-8 dBm
Standards
ITUG.703/G.957/G.783/G.813/G.825
STM-4 Interface
Table 3-11 lists STM-4 interface specifications.
Table 3-11 STM-4 Interface Specifications
Property
Remarks
Interface type
SFP
Interface rate
622.08 Mbps
76 km (1310 nm)
96 km (1550 nm)
Cable type
Optical fiber
Central wavelength
1310 nm/1550 nm
MLM
-28 dBm
-8 dBm
Standards
ITUG.703/G.957/G.783/G.813/G.825
EPON Interface
Table 3-12 lists EPON interface specifications.
Table 3-12 EPON Interface Specifications
Property
Remarks
Interface type
SC/PC
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Property
Remarks
Interface rate
40 km
Difference distance
20 km
Central wavelength
Upstream: 1310 nm
Downstream: 1490 nm
Splitting ratio
1:64
-6 dBm (PX20+)
Standards
GPON Interface
Table 3-13 lists GPON interface specifications.
Table 3-13 GPON Interface Specifications
Property
Remarks
Interface type
SC/PC
Interface rate
60 km
Difference distance
20 km
Central wavelength
Upstream: 1310 nm
Downstream: 1490 nm
Extinction ratio
10 dB
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Property
Remarks
Standards
Remarks
Interface type
LC/PC
Interface rate
100 Mbps
15 km
Central wavelength
Upstream: 1310 nm
Downstream: 1490 nm
9 dBm to 3 dBm
Extinction ratio
> 9 dB
-3 dBm
Standards
ITU-T G.957
Remarks
Interface type
LC/PC
Interface rate
1000 Mbps
15 km
Central wavelength
Upstream: 1310 nm
Downstream: 1490 nm
9 dBm to 3 dBm
Extinction ratio
> 9 dB
-3 dBm
Standards
ITU-T G.957
l
l
Standard Name
IEEE 802.2
IEEE 802.3
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Standard No.
Standard Name
IEEE 802.3u
IEEE 802.3x
IEEE 802.3z
IEEE 802.3ad
IEEE 802.1d
MAC bridges
IEEE 802.1p
IEEE 802.1q
IEEE 802.1w
IEEE 802.1x
IP Protocol Standards
Table 3-17 lists the IP protocol standards.
Table 3-17 IP Protocol Standards
Standard No.
Standard Name
RFC768
UDP protocol
RFC783
RFC791
IP protocol
RFC792
ICMP protocol
RFC793
TCP protocol
RFC826
ARP
RFC854
Telnet protocol
RFC894
RFC2131
DHCP
Standard Name
RFC1157
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Standard No.
Standard Name
RFC1213
RFC1757
RFC1907
GR-474-CORE
RFC2819
Standard Name
IEEE 802.3ah
Specifications V2.1
Specifications V2.1
Standard Name
ITU-T G.984.1
ITU-T G.984.2
ITU-T G.984.3
ITU-T G.984.4
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Chapter 4
Device Management
Table of Contents
System Management .................................................................................................4-1
CLI Mode ...................................................................................................................4-1
NMS Mode .................................................................................................................4-3
Prerequisites
Before this operation, make sure that:
l
l
l
l
Context
To log in to the ZXA10 C300 through HyperTerminal, perform the following steps:
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Steps
1. Connect cables.
Use a console cable to connect the console port on the control and switching card to
the computer serial port.
2. Log in to the ZXA10 C300.
a. In Windows, choose Start > Programs > Accessories > Communications >
HyperTerminal.
b. In the Connection Description dialog box, enter the connection name and click
OK. In the Connect To dialog box, select COM1 or COM2, and then click OK.
c.
Set Bits per second to 9600, Data bits to 8, Parity to None, Stop bits to 1, and
Flow control to None. Click OK.
d. The HyperTerminal window is displayed, and the system enters the ZXAN> mode.
Carry out the enable command and type the enable password (zte) to enter the
ZXAN# mode.
End of Steps
Result
Login through HyperTerminal is successful.
Prerequisites
Before this operation, make sure that:
l
l
Context
To log in to the ZXA10 C300 through Telnet, perform the following steps:
Steps
1. Connect cables.
l In the out-of-band networking mode, use a crossover cable to connect the
computer network port to the Q port (out-of-band NM port) on the control and
switching card.
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If the network connection is normal, the login dialog box is displayed. Type the
user name and password (zte) to enter the privileged mode.
End of Steps
Result
Login through Telnet is successful.
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Advantage: Flexible networking, no need for any additional devices and cost savings.
Disadvantage: Inability to perform maintenance if the service channel is faulty.
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Chapter 5
Networking Application
Table of Contents
Overview ....................................................................................................................5-1
FTTH..........................................................................................................................5-2
FTTB..........................................................................................................................5-3
FTTCab......................................................................................................................5-5
FTTO .........................................................................................................................5-6
Video Monitoring ........................................................................................................5-7
Wireless Communication Base Station Access...........................................................5-8
Network Optimization .................................................................................................5-9
5.1 Overview
Various broadband and narrowband technologies are used to provide access to different
subscribers. The PON technology is applicable for residential areas, houses, and
buildings due to its high bandwidth and convenient maintenance. It can also be used
for the construction of old transmission systems, application of base stations, and
construction of the existing access devices.
The ZXA10 system is one of the fixed network 3G (F3G) access solutions. Figure 5-1
shows the ZTE F3G access solution.
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The MSAN/MSAG, xDSL, and EPON/GPON can form a network independently or they
can form a network together. For example, the PON terminal SFU/SBU forms a network
together with other ZTE devices, such as IAD, Home Gateway, and Ethernet switch.
The ZXA10 PON and the ZTE MSAG devices are used together to provide FTTx solutions.
5.2 FTTH
FTTH provides fiber access to subscriber homes. In this scenario, the central office
equipment ZXA10 C300 (OLT) is located in the central equipment room. The OLT
connects to the upper-layer device in N*GE mode and to the ONUs in the downlink
direction through splitters. The splitters are located in the residential district equipment
room or in the corridor optical distribution boxy. The ONUs are located at the corridors or
in the houses.
Different types of ONUs provide different interfaces to meet different service access
requirements. An ONU connects to the phone through the POTS interface and connects
to the IAD or the family gateway through the FE interfaces. It provides video, audio, and
data services, such as Internet, IPTV, CATV, and VoIP services.
FTTH is suitable for new residential areas, villas, or for rebuilding network access devices
in old buildings . Figure 5-2 shows the FTTH networking.
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5.3 FTTB
FTTB provides fiber access to buildings. In this scenario, the central office equipment
ZXA10 C300 (OLT) is located in the central equipment room. The OLT connects to the
upper-layer device in N*GE mode and to the ONUs in the downlink direction through
splitters. Splitters are located in basements or corridor optical distribution boxes. One
splitter is shared by several floors in a building. The fibers are connected to floors
in level-1 or level-2 splitting mode. ONUs are located at the distribution boxes, weak
electricity wells, or on the walls.
Different types of ONUs provide different interfaces to meet different service access
requirements. An ONU connects to the phone through the POTS interface and connects
to the IAD or the family gateway through the FE interfaces. It provides video, audio, and
data services, such as Internet surfing, IPTV, CATV, and VoIP services.
Figure 5-3 shows the FTTB networking.
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FTTB + xDSL
Figure 5-4 shows the FTTB + xDSL networking.
Figure 5-4 FTTB + xDSL Networking
Distribute the fiber terminals in buildings or corridors. The MDU device provides the
xDSL interface to connect to the subscriber homes through twisted-pairs. This mode
uses the ADSL2+ or VDSL technology and can fully use the existing cable resources.
ZTE CORPORATION provides MDU devices with medium and small capacities. For
example, the ZXDSL 9806H supports 96 ADSL/ADSL2+/SHDSL ports or 64 VDSL2
ports and connects to the OLT through the PON port. It uses the existing network
resources to provide service access for subscribers.
l
FTTB + LAN
Figure 5-5 shows the FTTB + LAN networking.
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Distribute the fiber terminals in buildings or corridors. The MDU device provides
multiple Ethernet interfaces or VoIP ports. Due to the distance restriction of Category
5 cable, the distance from the ONU to the subscribers cannot exceed 100 m.
ZTE CORPORATION provides MDU/MTU devices with medium and small capacities.
For example, the ZXA10 F820 supports 24 10 Mbps/100 Mbps Ethernet ports, 16 E1
ports, or 32 POTS ports to meet the requirements of various services access.
5.4 FTTCab
FTTCab provides fiber access to distribution boxes. In this scenario, the central office
equipment ZXA10 C300 (OLT) is located in the central equipment room. The OLT connects
to the upper-layer device in N*GE mode and to the ONUs in the downlink direction through
splitters.
The MDU is located in the curb distribution box. It connects to the WAN through xPON
device in the upstream direction, and to the subscribers through traditional twisted-pairs
or Category 5 cables in the downstream direction. Each access device covers 800 to
1000 broadband subscribers. The ADSL2+, VDSL2, SHDSL, or LAN access mode is used
according to the users requirements on the upstream and downstream bandwidth and the
distance to the access node. For the users in the commercial business or in the information
districts who ask for more bandwidth, the optical fiber can be taken into consideration.
Figure 5-6 shows the FTTCab networking.
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5.5 FTTO
FTTO provides fiber access to offices. The central office equipment ZXA10 C300 (OLT)
is located in the central equipment room. The OLT connects to the upper-layer device
in N*GE mode and to the ONUs in the downlink direction through splitters. Splitters are
located in basements or optical distribution boxes according to the subscriber density. The
splitters are connected to offices in level-1 splitting mode. The ONUs are located on the
office desks, on the walls, or outdoors.
In FTTO mode, the ZXA10 C300 is used together with the ZXA10 MSAN devices to
establish the network and supports the services such as ADSL/ADSL2+, PBX, DDN,
and E1 dedicated line. The PON system and MSAN systems are managed through the
NetNumen N31 unified management system.
Figure 5-7 shows the FTTO networking.
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Chapter 6
Technical Specifications
Table of Contents
Technical Parameters.................................................................................................6-1
Performance Specifications ........................................................................................6-3
Protocols and Standards ............................................................................................6-9
Card Dimensions
Table 6-1 lists the card dimensions.
Table 6-1 Card Dimensions
Type
SCXL/SCXM
395.5 mm 25 mm 225 mm
ETGO/FTGH/ETXD/ETT
D/GTGO/GTGQ
XUTQ/HUTQ/HUGQ/
197.75 mm 25 mm 225 mm
GDFO/GUFQ/GUTQ/G
USQ
CTLA/CTTB/CTBB
CICG
PRWG
197.75 mm 25 mm 225 mm
MWEA
MWIA
Operation Voltage
Table 6-2 lists the operation voltage.
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Voltage
DC
Operation Environment
Table 6-3 lists operation environment.
Table 6-3 Operation Environment
Parameters
Description
Ground resistance
< 1 ohm
Ambient temperature
Ambient humidity
5% 95%
Cleanness
Illumination
Atmosphere pressure
Air pollution
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System Performance
Table 6-5 lists the ZXA10 C300 system performance specifications.
Table 6-5 System Performance
Item
Specification
Backplane bandwidth
Switching capacity
Supported VLANs
4K
8K
Hot-swappable
Support
Redundancy backup
Support
System Configuration
Table 6-6 lists the ZXA10 C300 system configuration specifications.
Table 6-6 System Configuration
Item
Specification
Management ports
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Item
Specification
Uplink ports
32 (21-inch shelf)
shelf)
28 (19-inch shelf)
Reliability
Table 6-7 lists the ZXA10 C300 reliability specifications.
Table 6-7 Reliability Specifications
Parameter
Specification
MTBF
127795 hours
MTTR
< 30 mins
System lifetime
20 years
Support
Service Functions
Table 6-8 lists the ZXA10 C300 service functions.
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Function
Wire-speed Layer-2/Layer-3
Wire-speed forwarding.
switching
Layer-2 protocols
Layer-3 protocols
VLAN
Multicast
PIM-SM, PIM-DM
8 K multicast groups
256 multicast VLANs
IGMP V1/V2/V3
IGMP Proxy, IGMP Snooping, IGMP Route
Controlled multicast
Multi VLAN
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Item
Function
IPTV
Active/standby changeover
Ethernet OAM
Flow control
QoS
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Item
Function
Security
EPON port
512 LLID
1:64 split ratio
Maximum transmission distance: 30 km
Maximum difference distance: 20 km
GPON port
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Item
Function
TDM service
Function
Management
Maintenance
SJ-20101224164749-003|2011-01-31(R1.0)
Item
Function
Performance statistics
International Standards
Industry Standards
Enterprise Standards
Standard Name
ETS 300019
IEC 60068
NEBS GR-63-Core
Standard Name
2004/108/EC
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Standard No.
Standard Name
EN 300386
IEC 61000
EN 55022
EN 55024
NEBS GR-1089-Core
Security Standards
Table 6-12 lists the security standards.
Table 6-12 Security Standards
Standard No.
Standard Name
73/23/EEC
EN 60950
ITU-T K.27
ITU K.20
ITU K.44
93/68/EEC
CE Marking Directive
Standard Name
Standard Name
ITU-T G.652
ITU-T G.692
ITU-T G.872
ITU-T G.873
ITU-T G.911
ITU-T M.3010
ITU-T -G.704
ITU-T G.703
ITU-T G.823
ITU-T G.957
ITU-T G.825
RFC2236
IGMPv2
RFC1155
RFC1493
Bridge MIB
RFC1643
SJ-20101224164749-003|2011-01-31(R1.0)
Standard No.
Standard Name
RFC2236
RFC2613
RFC2652
RFC1027
Standard Name
YD/T 1475-2006
YD/Txxxxx -2005
YD/Txxxxx -2005
YD/Txxxx-2005
YD/Txxxx-2005
Standard Name
Q/ZX 04.100.2-2002
Q/ZX 04.100.3-2003
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Standard No.
Standard Name
Q/ZX 04.101.2-2003
Q/ZX 04.101.4-2001
Q/ZX 04.101.5-2000
Q/ZX 04.101.8-2002
Q/ZX 04.103-2001
Q/ZX 04.122-2002
Q/ZX 04.402-2002
Q/ZX 07.101-2002
Q/ZX 07.102-2002
Q/ZX 07.200-2000
Q/ZX 07.212-2002
Q/ZX 12.203.11-2001
Q/ZX 14.001-2000
Q/ZX 14.002-2000
Q/ZX 14.003-2000
Q/ZX 14.004-2002
Q/ZX 23.011-2004
Q/ZX 23.018.1-2006
Q/ZX 23.019-2005
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Chapter 7
Environment Requirements
Table of Contents
Storage Environment..................................................................................................7-1
Transportation Environment .......................................................................................7-3
Operation Environment...............................................................................................7-5
Climate Environment
Table 7-1 lists the ZXA10 C300 storage climate environment requirements.
Table 7-1 Storage Climate Requirements
Name
Requirement
Temperature
-40 to 70
1 /min
Relative humidity
5% 95%
Air pressure
Sun radiation
700 W/m2
Biological Environment
The ZXA10 C300 storage has the following requirements on the biological environment:
l
l
Air Cleanness
The ZXA10 C300 storage has the following requirements on the air cleanness:
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l
l
Unit
Value
Floating dust
mg/m3
5.00
Sediment dust
mg/m2h
20.00
Sands
mg/m3
300.00
The chemical active materials concentration meets the requirements, as listed in Table
7-3.
Table 7-3 Storage Chemical Active Materials Concentration
Chemical Active Material
Unit
Value
SO2
mg/m3
0.30
H2S
mg/m3
0.10
NO2
mg/m3
0.50
NH3
mg/m3
1.00
Cl2
mg/m3
0.10
O3
mg/m3
0.05
Mechanical Stress
Table 7-4 lists the mechanical stress requirements of the ZXA10 C300 storage.
Table 7-4 Storage Mechanical Stress Requirements
Item
Sub-Item
Range
Sinusoidal vibration
Location drift
1.50 mm
Acceleration
5.00 m/s2
Frequency
2 Hz - 9 Hz
9 Hz - 200 Hz
Impact response
40.00 m/s2
Unsteady impact
spectrum II
Static load
5 kPa
Impact response spectrum: Maximum acceleration responding curve under regulated impact incenti
ve
Impact response spectrum II: Semi-sinusoidal impact response spectrum consistent time is 22 ms.
Static load: Packed equipment top pressure endurance in regulated stacking way
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Climate Environment
Table 7-5 lists the ZXA10 C300 transportation climate environment requirements.
Table 7-5 Transportation Climate Requirements
Name
Requirement
Temperature
-40 to 70
3 /min
Relative humidity
5% 95%
Air pressure
Sun radiation
1120 W/m2
Heat radiation
600 W/m2
Wind speed
30 m/sec
Biological Environment
The ZXA10 C300 transportation has the following requirements on the biological
environment:
l
l
Air Cleanness
The ZXA10 C300 transportation has the following requirements on the air cleanness:
l
l
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Unit
Value
Floating dust
mg/m3
Sediment dust
mg/m2h
3.00
Sands
mg/m3
100
The chemical active materials concentration meets the requirements, as listed in Table
7-7.
Table 7-7 Transportation Chemical Active Materials Concentration
Chemical Active Material
Unit
Value
SO2
mg/m3
0.30
H2S
mg/m3
0.10
NO2
mg/m3
0.50
NH3
mg/m3
1.00
Cl2
mg/m3
0.10
HCl
mg/m3
0.10
HF
mg/m3
0.01
O3
mg/m3
0.05
Mechanical Stress
Table 7-8 lists the mechanical stress requirements of the ZXA10 C300 transportation.
Table 7-8 Transportation Mechanical Stress Requirements
Item
Sub-Item
Range
Sinusoidal
Location drift
3.50 mm
Acceleration
10.00 m/s2
15.00 m/s2
Frequency
2 Hz - 9 Hz
9 Hz - 200 Hz
200 Hz - 500 Hz
Acceleration
1 m2/s3
0.30 m2/s3
0.30 m2/s3
Frequency
10 Hz - 200 Hz
200 Hz - 500 Hz
500 Hz - 1000 Hz
Impact response
300 m/s2
vibration
Random vibration
spectrum density
Unsteady impact
spectrum II
Static load
5 kPa
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Climate Environment
Table 7-9 lists the ZXA10 C300 operation climate requirements.
Table 7-9 Operation Climate Requirements
Name
Requirement
Temperature
3 /min
Relative humidity
5% 95%
Altitude
4000 m
Air pressure
Sun radiation
700 W/m2
Heat dissipation
600 W/m2
Wind speed
5 m/sec
The temperature and humidity values are measure from 1.5 m height above the floor to 0.6 m at the
front of the cabinet without front and back protection panels.
Biological Environment
The ZXA10 C300 operation has the following requirements on the biological environment:
l
l
Air Cleanness
The ZXA10 C300 operation has the following requirements on the air cleanness:
l
l
Unit
Value
Floating dust
mg/m3
0.40
Sediment dust
mg/m2h
15.00
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Unit
Value
Sands
mg/m3
300.00
The chemical active materials concentration meets the requirements, as listed in Table
7-11.
Table 7-11 Operation Chemical Active Materials Concentration
Chemical Active Material
Unit
Value
SO2
mg/m3
0.30
H2S
mg/m3
0.03
NH3
mg/m3
1.00
Cl2
mg/m3
0.10
Mechanical Stress
Table 7-12 lists the mechanical stress requirements of the ZXA10 C300 operation.
Table 7-12 Operation Mechanical Stress Requirements
Item
Sub-Item
Range
Sinusoidal vibration
Location drift
3.50 mm
Acceleration
10.00 m/s2
Frequency
2 Hz - 9 Hz
9 Hz - 200 Hz
Impact response
40 m/s2
Unsteady impact
spectrum II
Static load
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Figures
Figure 1-1 ZXA10 C300 Networking Diagram ........................................................... 1-2
Figure 1-2 System Function Block Diagram ............................................................ 1-12
Figure 2-1 IEC 19-Inch Shelf..................................................................................... 2-2
Figure 2-2 ETSI 21-Inch Shelf................................................................................... 2-2
Figure 2-3 ZXA10 C300 Cabinet Configuration ......................................................... 2-4
Figure 2-4 IEC 19-Inch Shelf Configuration............................................................... 2-5
Figure 2-5 ETSI 21-Inch Shelf Configuration ............................................................. 2-6
Figure 2-6 ZXA10 C300 Software Architecture.......................................................... 2-8
Figure 3-1 ZXA10 C300 Logical Interfaces................................................................ 3-9
Figure 4-1 In-Band Networking Mode........................................................................ 4-4
Figure 4-2 Out-of-Band Networking........................................................................... 4-5
Figure 5-1 ZTE F3G Access Solution........................................................................ 5-2
Figure 5-2 FTTH Networking..................................................................................... 5-3
Figure 5-3 FTTB Networking..................................................................................... 5-4
Figure 5-4 FTTB + xDSL Networking ........................................................................ 5-4
Figure 5-5 FTTB + LAN Networking .......................................................................... 5-5
Figure 5-6 FTTCab Networking................................................................................. 5-6
Figure 5-7 FTTO Networking .................................................................................... 5-7
Figure 5-8 Video Monitoring Networking ................................................................... 5-8
Figure 5-9 Wireless Communication Base Station Access Networking...................... 5-9
Figure 5-10 Network Optimization Networking ........................................................ 5-10
Figures
Tables
Table 1-1 ZXA10 C300 Interface Types..................................................................... 1-3
Table 1-2 Maximum System Capacity ....................................................................... 1-5
Table 2-1 Cabinet Types ........................................................................................... 2-3
Table 2-2 Card Configuration in IEC 19-Inch Shelf .................................................... 2-5
Table 2-3 Cards Configuration in ETSI 21-Inch Shelf ................................................ 2-7
Table 2-4 ZXA10 C300 Cards ................................................................................... 2-7
Table 3-1 100BASE-Tx Interface Specifications ........................................................ 3-2
Table 3-2 1000BASE-Tx Interface Specifications ...................................................... 3-2
Table 3-3 1000BASE-Lx Interface Specifications ...................................................... 3-3
Table 3-4 1000BASE-Sx Interface Specifications ...................................................... 3-3
Table 3-5 10GBASE-L Interface Specifications ......................................................... 3-3
Table 3-6 10GBASE-S Interface Specifications ......................................................... 3-4
Table 3-7 10GBASE-E Interface Specifications ......................................................... 3-4
Table 3-8 E1 Interface Specifications ........................................................................ 3-5
Table 3-9 T1 Interface Specifications ........................................................................ 3-5
Table 3-10 STM-1 Interface Specifications ................................................................ 3-5
Table 3-11 STM-4 Interface Specifications ................................................................ 3-6
Table 3-12 EPON Interface Specifications................................................................. 3-6
Table 3-13 GPON Interface Specifications ................................................................ 3-7
Table 3-14 P2P FE Optical Interface Specifications................................................... 3-8
Table 3-15 P2P GE Optical Interface Specifications .................................................. 3-8
Table 3-16 Ethernet Protocol Standards.................................................................... 3-9
Table 3-17 IP Protocol Standards............................................................................ 3-10
Table 3-18 OAM Protocol Standards ....................................................................... 3-10
Table 3-19 EPON Protocol Standards ..................................................................... 3-11
Table 3-20 GPON Protocol Standards..................................................................... 3-11
Table 6-1 Card Dimensions....................................................................................... 6-1
Table 6-2 Operation Voltage...................................................................................... 6-2
Table 6-3 Operation Environment.............................................................................. 6-2
Table 6-4 ZXA10 C300 Shelf Power Consumption .................................................... 6-2
Table 6-5 System Performance ................................................................................. 6-3
Table 6-6 System Configuration ................................................................................ 6-3
III
IV
Index
A
Reliability............................................ 1-10
E
EPON Functions .................................. 1-5
T
F
FTTB.................................................... 5-3
FTTCab................................................ 5-5
FTTH.................................................... 5-2
FTTO ................................................... 5-6
V
Video Monitoring .................................. 5-7
L
Layer-2 and VLAN Functions................ 1-6
M
Mechanical Stress .................. 7-2, 7-4, 7-6
N
Networking ........................................... 5-1
P
Physical Interface
Specifications .............................. 3-2, 3-9
Product Maintenance ......................... 1-10
Product Outline .................................... 2-1
V
Index
Glossary
ACL
- Access Control List
ADSL
- Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line
AES
- Advanced Encryption Standard
ARP
- Address Resolution Protocol
BFD
- Bidirectional Forwarding Detection
BGP
- Border Gateway Protocol
BITS
- Building Integrated Timing Supply
BSP
- Board Support Package
CAC
- Channel Access Control
CAC
- Call Admission Control
CATV
- CAble TeleVision
CDR
- Call Detail Record
CES
- Circuit Emulation Services
CES
- Channel Element Subsystem
CLI
- Command Line Interface
CO
- Central Office
CPU
- Central Processing Unit
VII
CVLAN
- Customer Virtual Local Area Network
CoS
- Class of Service
DBA
- Dynamic Bandwidth Allocation
DC
- Direct Current
DDN
- Digital Data Network
DHCP
- Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol
DSCP
- Differentiated Services Code Point
DSL
- Digital Subscriber Line
DSLAM
- Digital Subscriber Line Access Multiplexer
DoS
- Denial of Service
EAPS
- Ethernet Automatic Protection Switching
EPON
- Ethernet Passive Optical Network
ETSI
- European Telecommunication Standard Institute
FE
- Fast Ethernet
FEC
- Forward Error Correction
FTP
- File Transfer Protocol
FTTB
- Fiber to the Building
FTTC
- Fiber to the Curb
FTTCab
- Fiber to the Cabinet
VIII
Glossary
FTTH
- Fiber to the Home
FTTO
- Fiber To The Office
GE
- Gigabit Ethernet
GEM
- GPON Encapsulation Method
GPON
- Gigabit Passive Optical Network
IAD
- Integrated Access Device
ICMP
- Internet Control Message Protocol
IEC
- International Electrotechnical Commission
IEEE
- Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
IETF
- Internet Engineering Task Force
IGMP
- Internet Group Management Protocol
IP
- Internet Protocol
IPTV
- Internet Protocol Television
IS-IS
- Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System
ITU-T
- International Telecommunication Union - Telecommunication Standardization
Sector
LACP
- Link Aggregation Control Protocol
LAN
- Local Area Network
LLID
- Logical Link Identifier
MAC
- Medium Access Control
IX
MDU
- Media Distribution Unit
MDU
- Multiple Dwelling Unit
MEF
- Metro Ethernet Forum
MIB
- Management Information Base
MLM
- Multi-Longitudinal Mode
MPCP
- Multi-Point Control Protocol
MSAN
- Multi-Service Access Network
MSTP
- Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol
MTBF
- Mean Time Between Failures
MTTR
- Mean Time To Recovery
NGN
- Next Generation Network
NM
- Network Management
NMS
- Network Management System
OAM
- Operation, Administration and Maintenance
ODN
- Optical Distribution Network
OLT
- Optical Line Terminal
OMCI
- ONT Management Control Interface
ONT
- Optical Network Terminal
ONU
- Optical Network Unit
X
Glossary
OSPF
- Open Shortest Path First
PBX
- Private Branch Exchange
PDH
- Plesiochronous Digital Hierarchy
PIM-SM
- Protocol Independent Multicast - Sparse Mode
PMD
- Physical Medium Dependent
PON
- Passive Optical Network
POTS
- Plain Old Telephone Service
PPPoE
- Point to Point Protocol over Ethernet
PSN
- Packet Switched Network
PTP
- Point-To-Point
PWE3
- Pseudo Wire Emulation Edge-to-Edge
QoS
- Quality of Service
RADIUS
- Remote Authentication Dial In User Service
RIP
- Routing Information Protocol
RMON
- Remote Monitoring
RS
- Recommended Standard
RSTP
- Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol
SBU
- Single Business Unit
SCB
- Selective Call Barring
XI
SDH
- Synchronous Digital Hierarchy
SFP
- Small Form-factor Pluggable
SFU
- Single Family Unit
SNMP
- Simple Network Management Protocol
SP
SSH
- Secure Shell
STM
- Synchronous Transfer Mode
STP
- Spanning Tree Protocol
STP
- Signaling Trace Part
SVLAN
- Service Virtual Local Area Network
TACACS+
- Terminal Access Controller Access-Control System Plus
TCP
- Transfer Control Protocol
TDM
- Time Division Multiplexing
TFTP
- Trivial File Transfer Protocol
TTL
- Time To Live
UAPS
- Uplink Auto Protection Switching
UDP
- User Datagram Protocol
UNI
- User Network Interface
VDSL
- Very High Speed Digital Subscriber Line
XII
Glossary
VLAN
- Virtual Local Area Network
VOD
- Video On Demand
VPN
- Virtual Private Network
VoIP
- Voice over Internet Protocol
WAN
- Wide Area Network
WDM
- Wavelength Division Multiplexing
WRR
- Weighted Round Robin
XIII