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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series
Product Description
Document Version: 21 October 2009
Notice This document contains information that is proprietary proprietary to Ceragon Networks Ltd. No part of this publication may be reproduced, reproduced, modified, or distributed without prior written authorization of Ceragon Networks Ltd. This document is provided as is, without warranty warranty of any kind.
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Ceragon Networks , FibeAir and CeraView are registered trademarks of Ceragon Networks Ltd. Other names mentioned in this publication are owned by their respective holders.
Trademarks TM
TM
TM
TM,
CeraMap , ConfigAir , PolyView , EncryptAir trademarks of Ceragon Networks Ltd.
TM
TM
TM
CeraMon , EtherAir , and MicroWave Fiber , are
Other names mentioned in this publication are owned by their respective holders.
Statement of Conditions The information contained in this document is subject to change without notice. Ceragon Networks Networks Ltd. shall not be liable for errors contained herein or for incidental or consequential damage in connection with the furnishing, performance, or use of this document or equipment supplied with it.
Information to User Any changes or modifications of equipment not expressly approved by the manufacturer could void the user’s authority to operate the equipment and the warranty for such equipment. equipment. Copyright © 2009 by Ceragon Networks Ltd. All rights reserved.
Ceragon Networks Ltd. 24 Raoul Wallenberg St. Tel Aviv 69719, Israel Tel: 972-3-645-5733 Fax: 972-3-645-5499 Email:
[email protected]
www.ceragon.com
Ceragon Networks Inc. 10 Forest Avenue, Paramus, NJ 07652, USA Tel: 1-201-845-6955 Toll Free: 1-877-FIBEAIR Fax: 1-201-845-5665 Email:
[email protected] [email protected]
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
Ceragon Networks (UK) Ltd. 4 Oak Tree Park, Burnt Meadow Road North Moons Moat, Redditch, Worcestershire B98 9NZ, UK Tel: 44-(0)-1527-591900 Fax: 44-(0)-1527-591903 Email:
[email protected] [email protected] Ceragon Networks APAC (S'pore) Pte Ltd 100 Beach Road #27-01/03 Shaw Towers Singapore 189702 Tel.: 65 65724170 Fax: 65 65724199
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Contents Introducing FibeAir IP-10 ..................................................... ........................ ......................................................... .......................................... .............. 4
Features .................................................... ........................ ......................................................... ......................................................... .......................................... .............. 5
Advantages..................................................... Advantages......................... ........................................................ ......................................................... ................................... ...... 11
Applications.................................................................. Applications..................................... ......................................................... ................................................. ..................... 12
System Overview ........................................................ ............................ ......................................................... .................................................. ..................... 13
FibeAir IP-10 & FibeAir RFUs................................. RFUs... ........................................................... ...................................................... ......................... 22
Carrier Grade Ethernet ......................................................... ........................... ........................................................... ........................................ ........... 23
Wireless Network Synchronization ..................................................... ......................... .................................................... ........................ 37
Integrated Nodal Solution .................................................... ........................ ......................................................... ........................................ ........... 43
Cross Connect (XC) ........................................................... .............................. .......................................................... ........................................... .............. 48
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Typical Configurations ....................................................... ......................... ................................. ... 62
Specifications................................................. Specifications..................... ........................................................ ......................................................... ................................... ...... 75
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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Introducing FibeAir IP-10 FibeAir IP-10 is Ceragon's comprehensive high capacity IP and Migration-to-IP network solution. The innovative IP-10 was designed as a native Ethernet microwave radio platform that can integrate smoothly in any network, while providing a broad range of software-configurable licensed channel schemes. IP-10 follows in the tradition of Ceragon's Native2, which allows your network to benefit from both native TDM and native Ethernet using the same radio. Flexible bandwidth sharing between the TDM and Ethernet traffic ensures optimal throughput for all your media transfer needs. With the Metro Ethernet Networking trend growing, IP-10 is poised to fill in the gap and deliver high capacity IP communication quickly, easily, and reliably.
nXT1/E1 n X T1/E1
MEN ETH
Control
IP-10 features impressive market-leading throughput capability together with advanced networking functionality. Some of the quick points that place IP-10 at the top of the wireless IP offerings: Supports all licensed bands, from 6 to 38 GHz Supports channel bandwidths of from 7 MHz to 56 MHz Supports throughputs of from 10 to 500 Mbps per radio carrier (QPSK to 256 QAM) Incorporates advanced integrated Ethernet switching capabilities In addition, using unique Adaptive Coding & Modulation (ACM), your network benefits from non-stop, dependable, capacity deliverance.
FibeAir IP-10 G-series
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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Features Highest Spectral Efficiency Modulations: QPSK to 256 QAM Radio capacity: o
ETSI – up to 50/100/220/280/500 Mbps over 7/14/28/40/56 MHz channels
o
FCC – up to 70/140/240/320/450 Mbps over 10/20/30/40/50 MHz channels
All licensed bands: L6, U6, 7, 8, 10, 11, 13, 15, 18, 23, 26, 28, 32, 38 GHz Highest scalability: From 10 Mbps to 500 Mbps, using the same hardware, including t he same ODU/RFU! Configurations: 1+0 or 1+1 Hot Standby (fully redundant) TDM Voice Transmission with Dynamic Allocation - With the n x E1/T1 option, only enabled E1/T1 ports are allocated with capacity. The remaining capacity is dynamically allocated to the Ethernet ports to ensure maximum Ethernet capacity.
FibeAir IP-10 Capac Capacity ity v s. Channel Bandwi Bandwidth dth 600 500 ] s p 400 b M [ y 300 t i c a p 200 a C
t y a c i t p a s t C e h h g H i g
l n n e a h n y C a t a
h d t h i d w d B a n
100 0 7
10
14
20
28/30
40
50
56
Channel Bandwidth [MHz] Fib FibAir Air IP-1 P-10
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
Legacy PDH PDH
Legacy gacy SDH SDH
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Native2 Microwave Radio Technology At the heart of the IP-10 solution is Ceragon's market-leading Native2 microwave technology. With this technology, the microwave carrier supports native IP/Ethernet traffic together with optional native PDH. Neither traffic type is mapped over the other, while both dynamically share the same overall bandwidth. This unique approach allows you to plan and build optimal all-IP or hybrid TDM-IP backhaul networks which make it ideal for any RAN (Radio Access Network) evolution path selected by the wireless provider (including Green-Field 3.5G/4G all-IP installations). In addition, Native2 ensures: Very low link latency of <0.15 msecs @ 400 Mbps. Very low overhead mapping for both Ethernet and TDM traffic, to the microwave radio frame. High precision native TDM synchronization distribution.
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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Adaptive Coding & Modulation ACM employs the highest possible modulation during changing environmental conditions, which may be from QPSK to 256 QAM. The benefits of this dynamic feature include: Maximized spectrum usage Increased capacity over a given bandwidth 8 modulation/coding work points (~3 db system gain for each point change) Supports both Ethernet and T1/E1 traffic Hitless and errorless modulation/coding changes, based on signal quality T1/E1 traffic has priority over Ethernet traffic An integrated QoS mechanism enables intelligent congestion management to ensure that your high priority traffic is not affected during link fading. Each T1/E1 is assigned a priority to enable differentiated T1/E1 dropping during severe link degradation.
rea al t i m e Vo i c e & re Vo s er v i c es al t im e n- rea No n-re s er v ic es
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Weak FEC
Strong FEC
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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Integrated Layer-2 Switching IP-10 supports two modes for Ethernet switching: Smart Pipe - In this mode, Ethernet switching functionality is disabled and only a single Ethernet interface is enabled for user traffic. The unit effectively operates as a point-to-point Ethernet microwave radio. Metro Switch - In this mode, Ethernet switching functionality is enabled.
The following table lists the different aspects of IP-10 functionality.
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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QoS-Aware Dynamic Congestion Management (with ACM) Four priority (CoS) queues Advanced CoS classifier: 802.1p, VLAN ID, IPv4 / IPv6 (DSCP/TOS/TC). Advanced ingress traffic policing/rate-limiting per port/CoS Flexible scheduling: Strict Priority, Weighted Round Robin, or hybrid. Traffic shaping 802.3x flow control (for loss-less) operation
Intelligent Ethernet Header Compression (patent-pending) Improves effective throughput by up to 45%! Does not affect user traffic.
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Ethernet packet size (bytes)
Capacity increase by compression
64
45 %
96
29%
1 28
22 %
2 56
11 %
512
5%
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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Extensive Radio Capacity/Utilization Statistics Statistics are collected at 15-minute and 24-hour intervals Historical statistics are stored and made available when needed Capacity/ACM statistics: - Maximum modulation in interval - Minimum modulation in interval - # of seconds seconds in an interval, during which active modulation modulation was below the user-configured threshold Utilization statistics: - Maximal radio link utilization in an interval - Average radio link utilization in an interval - # of seconds seconds in an interval, during which radio link utilization was above the user-configured threshold
In-Band Management IP-10 can optionally be managed in-band, via its radio and Ethernet interfaces. This method of management eliminates the need for a dedicated interface and network. In-band management uses a dedicated management VLAN, which is user-configurable.
Native TDM Base Station Timing & Synchronization Each T1/E1 trail carries a native TDM clock, which is compliant with strict cellular application requirements (2G/3G), and is suitable as a base station timing source. This eliminates the need for timing-over-packet techniques for base station synchronization.
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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Advantages IP-10 has many advantages that cover the many aspects of flexible and reliable network building.
Incomparable Economic Value The IP-10 pay-as-you-grow concept reduces network costs. Each network node is optimized individually, with future capacity growth in mind. Whenever needed, additional functionality is enabled via upgrade license, using the same hardware. Using this flexible economic approach, a full duplex throughput of more than 400 Mbps over a single channel can be achieved.
Experience Counts IP-10 was designed with continuity in mind. It is based on Ceragon’s well-established and field-proven IP-MAX Ethernet microwave technology. With Ceragon's large install base, years of experience in high-capacity IP radios, and seamless integration with all standard IP equipment vendors, IP-10 is poised to be an IP networking standard-bearer. 2
Native
With Native2, you get optimal all-IP or hybrid TDM-IP backhaul networking - ideal for any RAN evolution path!
User-Management Traffic Integration In-Band Management significantly simplifies backhaul network design and maintenance, reducing both CapEx and OpEx. It also dramatically improves overall network availability and reliability, enabling support for services with stringent SLA (Service Level Agreement).
Unique Full Range Adaptive Modulation Provides the widest modulation range on the market from QPSK to 256 QAM with multi-level real-time hitless and errorless modulation shifting changing dynamically according to environmental conditions while ensuring zero downtime connectivity.
Guaranteed Ultra Low Latency (< 0.15 ms @ 400Mbps) Suitable for delay-sensitive applications, such as VoIP and Video over IP.
Extended Quality of Service (QoS) Support Enables smart packet queuing and prioritization.
Fully Integrated L2 Ethernet Switching Functionality Functionality Including VLAN based switching, MAC address learning, QinQ and STP/RSTP/MSTP support.
Multiple Network Topology Support Mesh, Ring, Chain, Point-to-Point.
Longer Transmission Distances, Smaller Antennas Reduces network costs and enables a farther reach to the other end.
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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Applications Mobile backhaul Cellular Networks FibeAir IP-10 family supports both Ethernet and TDM for cellular backhaul network migration to IP, within the same compact footprint. The system is suitable for all migration scenarios where carrier-grade Ethernet and legacy TDM services are required simultaneously. WiMAX Networks Enabling connectivity between WiMAX base stations and facilitating the expansion and reach of emerging WiMAX networks, FibeAir IP-10 provides a robust and cost-efficient solution with advanced native Ethernet capabilities. FibeAir IP-10 family offers cost-effective, high-capacity connectivity for carriers in cellular, WiMAX and fixed markets. The FibeAir IP-10 platform supports multi-service and converged networking requirements for both legacy and the latest data-rich applications and services.
Converged Fixed/Wireless Networks Ceragon’s FibeAir IP-10 delivers integrated high speed data, video and voice traffic in the most optimum and cost-effective manner. Operators can leverage FibeAir IP-10 to build a converged network infrastructure based on high capacity microwave to support multiple types of service. FibeAir IP-10 is fully compliant with MEF-9 & MEF-14 standards for all service types (EPL, EVPL and ELAN) making it the ideal platform for operators looking to provide high capacity Carrier Ethernet services meeting customers demand for coverage and stringent SLA.
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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System Overview General Split-mount architecture (IDU and RFU/ODU) Compatible with all existing Ceragon RFUs/ODUs. Dimensions o
Height: 42.6 mm (1RU)
o
Width: 439 mm (<19")
o
Depth: 188 mm (fits in ETSI rack)
DC input voltage nominal rating: -48V
IP-10 Front Panel and Interfaces
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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Interfaces Main Interfaces: 5 x 10/100Base-T 2 x GbE combo ports: 10/100/1000Base-T or SFP 1000Base-X 16 x T1/E1 (optional) RFU/ODU interface, N-type connector Additional Interfaces: TDM T-Card Slot options: o
16 x E1
o
16 x T1
o
1 x STM-1/OC-3 16 x E1/T1 T-Card
STM-1/OC-3 Mux T-Card
The T-cards are field-upgradable, and add a new dimension to the FibeAir IP-10 migration flexibility. Terminal console AUX package (optional): o
Engineering Order Wire (EOW)
o
User channel (V.11 Asynchronous, RS-232)
External alarms (4 inputs & 1 output) PROT: Ethernet protection control interface (for 1+1 HSB mode support)
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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In addition, each of the FE traffic interfaces can be configured to support an alternate mode of operation: MGT: Ethernet out-of-band management (up to 3 interfaces) WS: Ethernet wayside
Available Assembly Options * TDM options: o
Ethernet only (no TDM)
o
Ethernet + 16 x E1 + T-Card Slot
o
Ethernet + 16 x T1 + T-Card Slot
With or without AUX package (EOW, User channel) XPIC support Sync unit * Contact Ceragon support for available combinations.
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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Adaptive Coding and Modulation Adaptive Coding and Modulation refers to the automatic adjustment that a wireless system can make in order to optimize over-the-air transmission and prevent weather-related fading from causing communication on the link to be disrupted. When extreme weather conditions, such as a storm, affect the transmission and receipt of data and voice over the wireless network, an ACM-enabled radio system automatically changes modulation allowing real-time applications to continue to run uninterrupted. Varying the modulation also varies the amount of bits that are transferred per signal, thereby enabling higher throughputs and better spectral efficiencies. For example, a 256 QAM modulation can deliver approximately four times the throughput of 4 QAM (QPSK). Ceragon Networks employs full-range dynamic ACM in its new line of high-capacity wireless backhaul product - FibeAir IP-10. In order to ensure high transmission quality, Ceragon solutions implement hitless/errorless ACM that copes with 90 dB per second fading. A quality of service awareness mechanism ensures that high priority voice and data packets are never “dropped”, thus maintaining even the most stringent service level agreements (SLAs). The hitless/errorless functionality of Ceragon’s ACM has another major advantage in that it ensures that TCP/IP sessions do not time-out. Lab simulations have shown that when short fades occur (for example if a system has to terminate the signal for a short time to switch between modulations) they may lead to timeout of the TCP/IP sessions – even when the interruption is only 50 milliseconds. TCP/IP timeouts are followed by a drastic throughput decrease over the time it takes for the TCP sessions to recover. This may take as long as several seconds. With a hitless/errorless ACM implementation this problem can be avoided. So how does it really work? Let's assume a system configured for 128 QAM with ~170 Mbps capacity over a 28 MHz channel. When the receive signal Bit Error Ratio (BER) level arrives at a predetermined threshold, the system will preemptively switch to 64 QAM and the throughput will be stepped down to ~140 Mbps. This is an errorless, virtually instantaneous switch. The system will then run at 64 QAM until the fading condition either intensifies, or disappears. If the fade intensifies, another switch will take the system system down to 32 QAM. If on the other hand the weather condition improves, improves, the modulation will be switched back to the next higher step (e.g. 128QAM) and so on, step by step .The switching will continue automatically and as quickly as needed, and can reach during extreme conditions all the way down to QPSK.
Rx level
256 QAM 99.9 % 128 QAM 99.95 % 64 QAM 99.99 % 32 QAM 99.995 % 16 QAM 99.999 % QPSK
200 170
200 140
100
200
1 20
200 Mbps
Capacity (@ 28 MHz channel)
Unavailability
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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Adaptive Modulation and Built-in Quality of Service Ceragon's Adaptive Modulation has a remarkable synergy with the equipment's built-in Layer 2 Quality of Service mechanism. Since QoS provides priority support for different classes of service, according to a wide range of criteria (see below) it is possible to configure the system to discard only low priority packets as conditions deteriorate. The FibeAir IP-10 plat form can classify packets according to the most external header, VLAN 802.1p, TOS / TC - IP precedence and VLAN ID. All classes use 4 levels of prioritization with user selectable options between strict priority queuing and weighted fair queuing with user configurable weights. If the user wishes to rely on external switches QoS, Adaptive Modulation can work with them via the flow control mechanism supported in the radio.
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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Quality of Service (QoS) Traffic Classification and policing
The system examines the incoming traffic and assigns the desired priority according to the marking of the packets (based on the user port/L2/L3 marking in the packet). In case of congestion in the ingress port, low priority packets will be discarded first. The user has the following classification options: Source Port VLAN 802.1p VLAN ID IPv4 TOS/DSCP IPv6 Traffic Class After classification traffic policing/rate-limiting can optionally be applied per port/CoS. Queuing and Scheduling
The system has four priority queues that are served according to three types of scheduling, as follows: Strict priority: all top priority frames egress towards the radio until the top priority queue is empty. Then, the next lowest priority queue’s frames egress, and so on. This approach ensures that high priority frames are always transmitted as soon as possible. Weighted Round Robin (WRR): each queue can be assigned with a user-configurable weight from 1 to 32. Hybrid: One or two highest priority queues as "strict" and the other according to WRR
Shaping is supported per interface on egress.
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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Ethernet Statistics The FibeAir IP-10 platform stores and displays statistics in accordance with RMON and RMON2 standards. The following groups of statistics can be displayed: Ingress line receive statistics Ingress radio transmit statistics Egress radio receive statistics Egress line transmit statistics The statistics that can be displayed within each group include the following: Ingress Line Receive Statistics Sum of frames received without error Sum of octets of all valid received frames Number of frames received with a CRC error Number of frames received with alignment errors Number of valid received unicast frames Number of valid received multicast frames Number of valid received broadcast frames Number of packets received with less than 64 octets Number of packets received with more than 12000 octets (programmable) Frames (good and bad) of 64 octets Frames (good and bad) of 65 to 127 octets Frames (good and bad) of 128 to 256 octets Frames (good and bad) of 256 to 511 octets Frames (good and bad) of 512 to 1023 octets Frames (good and bad) of 1024 to 1518 octets Frames (good and bad) of 1519 to 12000 octets
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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Ingress Radio Transmit Statistics Sum of frames transmitted to radio Sum of octets transmitted to radio Number of frames dropped Egress Radio Receive Statistics Sum of valid frames received by radio Sum of octets of all valid received frames Sum of all frames received with errors Egress Line Transmit Statistics Sum of valid frames transmitted to line li ne Sum of octets transmitted Notes: •
Statistic parameters are polled each second, from system startup.
•
All counters can be cleared simultaneously.
•
The following statistics are displayed every 15 minutes (in the Radio and E1/T1 performance monitoring windows):
•
Utilization - four utilizations: ingress line receive, ingress radio transmit, egress radio receive, and egress line transmit
•
Packet error rate - ingress line receive, egress radio receive
•
Seconds with errors - ingress line receive
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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End-To-End Network Management Ceragon provides state-of-the-art management based on SNMP and HTTP. Integrated Web Based Element Manager: Each device includes an HTTP based element manager that enables the operator to perform element configuration, RF, Ethernet, and PDH performance monitoring, remote diagnostics, alarm reports, and more. PolyView™ is Ceragon's NMS server that includes CeraMap™ its friendly and powerful client graphical interface. PolyView can be used to update and monitor network topology status, provide statistical and inventory reports, define end-to-end traffic trails, download software and configure elements in the network. In addition, it can integrate with Northbound NMS platforms, to provide enhanced network management.
The application is written in Java code and enables management functions at both the element and network levels. It runs on Windows 2000/2003/XP/Vista and Sun Solaris.
Integrated IP-10 Web EMS and PolyView NMS
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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FibeAir IP-10 & FibeAir RFUs FibeAir IP-10 is based on the latest Ceragon technology, and can be installed together with any FibeAir RFU, including: FibeAir 1500HP (FibeAir RFU-HP) FibeAir 1500HS (FibeAir RFU-HS) FibeAir 1500SP (FibeAir RFU-SP) FibeAir 1500P (FibeAir RFU-P) FibeAir RFU-C FibeAir RFUs support multiple capacities, frequencies, modulation schemes, and configurations for various network requirements. The RFUs operate in the frequency range of 6-38 GHz, and support capacities of from 10 Mbps to 500 Mbps, for TDM and IP interfaces. For more information, see the relevant RFU Product Description.
IP-10 works with
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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Carrier Grade Ethernet Carrier Ethernet is a high speed medium for MANs (Metro Area Networks). It defines native Ethernet packet access to the Internet and is today being deployed more and more in wireless networks. The first native Ethernet services to emerge were point to point-based, followed by emulated LAN (multipoint to multipoint-based). Services were first defined and limited to metro area networks. They have now been extended across wide area networks and are available worldwide from many service providers. The term "carrier Ethernet" implies that Ethernet services are "carrier grade". The benchmark for carrier grade was set by the legacy TDM telephony networks, to describe services that achieve "five nines (9.9999%)" uptime. Although it is debatable whether carrier Ethernet will reach that level of reliability, the goal of one particular standards organization is to accelerate the development and deployment of services that live up to the name. Carrier Ethernet is poised to become the major component of next-generation metro area networks, which serve as the aggregation layer between customers and core carrier networks. A metro Ethernet network, which uses IP Layer 3 MPLS forwarding, is currently the primary focus of carrier Ethernet activity. The standard service types for Carrier Ethernet include: E-Line Service This service is employed for Ethernet private lines, virtual private lines, and Ethernet Internet access.
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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E-LAN Service This service is employed for multipoint L2 VPNs, transparent LAN service, foundation for IPTV, and multicast networks.
Metro Ethernet Forum (MEF) The Metro Ethernet Forum (MEF) is a global industry alliance started in 2001. In 2005, the MEF committed to this new carrier standard, and launched a Carrier Ethernet Certification Program to facilitate delivery of services to end users. The MEF 6 specification defines carrier Ethernet as "A ubiquitous, standardized, carrier-class Service and Network defined by five attributes that distinguish it from familiar LAN based Ethernet". The five attributes include: Standardized Services Quality of Service (QoS) Service Management Scalability Reliability
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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The Benefits For service providers, the technology convergence of Carrier Ethernet ensures a decrease in CAPEX and OPEX. Access networks employ Ethernet to provide backhaul for IP DSLAMs, PON, WiMAX, and direct Ethernet over fiber/copper. Flexible Layer 2 VPN services, such as private line, virtual private line, or emulated LAN, offer new revenue streams. For Enterprises, a reduction in cost is achieved through converged networks for VoIP, data, video conferencing, and other services. In addition, Ethernet standardization reduces network complexity.
FibeAir IP-10 Carrier Ethernet Solution Ceragon's FibeAir IP-10 includes a built-in Carrier Ethernet switch. The switch operates in one of two modes: Metro Switch - Carrier Ethernet is active. IP-10
Ethernet User Interfaces
Radio Interface
Carrier Ethernet Switch
Metro Met ro Swit Switch ch Mo Mode de Smart Pipe - Carrier Ethernet is not active.
IP-10
Ethernet User Interface
Radio Interface
Smart Sm art Pip Pipe e Mod Mode e ®
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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Using Smart Pipe, only a single Ethernet interface is enabled for user traffic and IP-10 acts as a point-topoint Ethernet microwave radio. FibeAir IP-10 is equipped with an extensive Carrier Ethernet feature set which eliminates the need for an external switch.
MEF Certified The Metro Ethernet Forum (MEF) runs a Certification Program with the aim of promoting the deployment of Carrier Ethernet in Access Networks, MANs, and WANs. The program offers certification for Carrier Ethernet equipment supplied to service providers. The program covers the following areas: MEF-9: Service certification MEF-14: Traffic management and service performance FibeAir IP-10 is fully MEF-9 & MEF-14 certified for all Carrier Ethernet services (E-Line & E-LAN).
IP-10 Carrier Ethernet Functionality IP-10 meets all Carrier Ethernet Service specifications, in each category: Standardized Services
MEF-9 and MEF-14 certified for all service types (EPL, EVPL, and ELAN)
Scalability
- Up to 500 Mbps per radio carrier - Integrated non-blocking non-blocking switch with 4K VLANs - 802.1ad provider bridges bridges (QinQ) - Scalable nodal solution - Scalable networks (1000s of of NEs)
Quality of Service (QoS)
- Advanced CoS classification - Advanced traffic policing/rate-limiting - CoS based packet queuing/buffering - Flexible scheduling schemes - Traffic shaping
Reliability
- Highly reliable & integrated design - Fully redundant 1+1 HSB & nodal configurations configurations - Hitless ACM (QPSK - 256 QAM) for enhanced radio link availability - Wireless Ethernet Ring (RSTP based)
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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- 802.3ad link aggregation - Fast link state propagation - <50 msec msec restoration time (typical) Service Management
- Extensive multi-layer management capabilities - 802.1ag Ethernet Ethernet service OA&M - Advanced Ethernet statistics
Integrated QoS Support QoS is a method of classifications and scheduling employed to ensure that Ethernet packets are forwarded and discarded according to their priority. QoS works by slowing unimportant packets down, or, in cases of extreme network traffic, discarding them entirely. This leaves room for important packets to reach their destination as quickly as possible. Basically, once the router knows how much data it can queue on the modem at any given time, it can "shape" traffic by delaying unimportant packets and "filling the pipe" with important packets first, then using any leftover space to fill the pipe in descending order of importance. Since QoS cannot speed up packets, it takes the total available upstream bandwidth, calculates how much of the highest priority data it has, puts that in the buffer, and then goes down the line in priority until it runs out of data to send, or the buffer fills up. Any excess data is held back or "re-queued" at the front of the line, where it will be evaluated in the next pass. Importance is determined by the priority of the packet. The number of levels depends on the router. As the names imply, Low/Bulk priority packets get the lowest priority, while High/Premium packets get the highest priority. QoS packets may be prioritized by a number of criteria, including generated by applications themselves, but the most common techniques are MAC Address, Ethernet Port, and TCP/IP Port. FibeAir IP-10 supports comprehensive QoS services: Supports four CoS/priority queues per switch port Advanced CoS/priority classification based on L2/L3 header fields: - Source Port - VLAN 802.1p - VLAN ID - IPv4 DSCP/TOS, DSCP/TOS, IPv6 IPv6 TC - Highest priority to BPDUs Advanced ingress traffic rate-limiting per CoS/priority Flexible scheduling scheme per port: - Strict priority (SP)
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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- Weighted Round Robin (WRR) (WRR) - Hybrid, any combination combination of SP & WRR Shaping per port Smart Pipe Mode QoS Traffic Flow
The following illustration shows the QoS flow of traffic with IP-10 operating in Smart Pipe mode.
Metro Switch Mode QoS Traffic Flow
The following illustration shows the QoS flow of traffic with IP-10 operating in Metro Switch mode.
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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Wireless Carrier Ethernet Rings Carrier-class Ethernet rings offer topologies built for resiliency, redundancy throughout the core, distribution and access, and a self-healing architecture that can repair potential problems before they reach end users. Such rings are designed for increased capacity, performance, and scalability, with beneficial increased value, stability, and a reduction in costs. By implementing Carrier-Class Ethernet rings, providers are able to expand their LANs to WANs. FibeAir IP-10 is a superb choice for Carrier Ethernet ring development.
Basic IP-10 Wireless Carrier Ethernet Ring The following illustration is a basic example of an IP-10 wireless Carrier Ethernet ring.
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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IP-10 Wireless Carrier Ethernet Ring with "Dual-Homing" (redundant site connection to fiber aggregation network)
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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IP-10 Wireless Carrier Ethernet Ring - 1+0
IP-10 Wireless Carrier Ethernet Ring - Aggregation Site
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RSTP (Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol) ensures a loop-free topology for any bridged LAN. Spanning tree allows a network design to include spare (redundant) links for automatic backup paths, needed for cases in which an active link fails. The backup paths can be included with no danger of bridge loops, or the need for manual enabling/disabling of the backup links. Bridge loops must be avoided since they result in network "flooding". RSTP algorithms are designed to create loop-free topologies in any network design, which makes it suboptimal to ring topologies. In a general topology, there can be more than one loop, and therefore more than one bridge with ports in a blocking state. For this reason, RSTP defines a negotiation protocol between each two bridges, and processing of the BPDU (Bridge Protocol Data D ata Units), before each bridge propagates the information. This "serial" processing increases the convergence time. In a ring topology, after the convergence of RSTP, only one port is in a blocking state. We can therefore enhance the protocol for ring topologies, and transmit the notification of the failure to all bridges in the ring (by broadcasting the BPDU). Ceragon's IP-10 G supports Wireless Carrier Ethernet Ring topologies. A typical ring constructed by IP10 is shown in the following illustration. Ceragon's IP-10 supports native Ethernet rings of up to 500 Mbps in 1+0, and can reach Gigabit capacity in a 2+0 configuration with XPIC. Ceragon's ring solution enhances the RSTP algorithm for ring topologies, so that failure fail ure propagation is much faster than the regular RSTP. Instead of serially propagation link by link, the failure is propagated in parallel to all bridges. In this way, the bridges that have ports in alternate states immediately place them in the forwarding state. The following illustration shows an example of such a ring.
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Switch A is the Root, and before the failure, the protocol converges so that a port in switch C is the alternate port, and is therefore in the failure state. When a failure in the link between switches E and A occurs, switch E senses it and sends a notification (using standard BPDU) to all bridges. Switch D receives the message, and changes the role of the port from alternate to designated, and places it in the forwarding state. In addition, Ceragon's enhancement handles unidirectional failures in the radio. For example, in a "regular RSTP", a failure in the link between E and A will be seen only by the root bridge. In this case, bridge E will acknowledge the failure only upon the next BPDU. Ceragon's protocol enhancement informs bridge E immediately about the failure. This allows us to build wireless Ethernet rings with a protection time that is typically less than 50 msec for four nodes, and less than 100 msec for eight to ten nodes.
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End to End Multi-Layer OA&M (Operations, Administration, and Management) FibeAir IP-10 provides complete OA&M functionality at multiple layers, including: Alarms and events Maintenance signals (LOS, AIS, RDI, …) Performance monitoring Maintenance commands (Loopbacks, APS commands, …)
Connectivity Fault Management (CFM) The IEEE 802.1ag standard defines Service Layer OAM (Connectivity Fault Management). The standard facilitates the discovery and verification of a path through 802.1 bridges and local area networks (LANs). In addition, the standard: •
Defines maintenance domains, their constituent maintenance points, and the managed objects required to create and administer them.
•
Defines the relationship between maintenance domains and the services offered by VLAN-aware bridges and provider bridges.
•
Describes the protocols and procedures used by maintenance points to maintain and diagnose connectivity faults within a maintenance domain.
•
Provides means for future expansion of the capabil ities of maintenance points and their t heir protocols.
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IEEE 802.1ag Ethernet CFM (Connectivity Fault Management) protocols consist of three protocols that operate together to aid in debugging Ethernet networks: continuity check, link trace, and loopback. FibeAir IP-10 utilizes these protocols to maintain smooth system operation and non-stop data flow.
FibeAir IP-10 Carrier Ethernet Services Example The following is a series of illustrations showing how FibeAir IP-10 is used to facilitate Carrier Ethernet Services. The second and third illustrations show how IP-10 handles a node failure.
Carrier Ethernet Services Based on IP-10
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Carrier Ethernet Services Based on IP-10 - Node Failure
Carrier Ethernet Services Based on IP-10 - Node Failure (continued)
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Wireless Network Synchronization Synchronizing the network is an essential part of any network design plan. Event timing determines how the network is managed and secured, and provides the only frame of reference between all devices in the network. Several unique synchronization issues need to be addressed for wireless networks: Phase/Frequency Lock Applicable to GSM and UMTS-FDD networks. - Limits channel interference between carrier frequency bands. - Typical performance performance target: frequency frequency accuracy of < 50 ppb. Sync is the traditional technique used, with traceability to a PRS master clock carried over PDH/SDH networks, or using GPS. Phase Lock with Latency Correction Applicable to CDMA, CDMA-2000, UMTS-TDD, and WiMAX networks. - Limits coding time division overlap. - Typical performance target: frequency accuracy of < 20 - 50 ppb, phase difference of < 1-3 msecs. GPS is the traditional technique used.
Wireless IP Synchronization Challenges Wireless networks set to deploy over IP networks require a solution for carrying high precision timing to base stations. Throughout the globe, legacy SDH/PDH based TDM networks are being fragmented, leading to “islands of TDM”. Traditional TDM services are being carried over packet networks using Circuit Emulation over Packet techniques (CESoP). Two new approaches are being developed in an effort to meet the challenge of migration to IP: Various ToP (Timing over Packet) techniques Synchronous Ethernet
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ToP (Timing over Packet) ToP refers to the distribution of frequency, phase, and absolute ti me information across an asynchronous packet switched network. The timing packet methods may employ a variety of protocols to achieve distribution, such as IEEE1588, NTP, or RTP.
Synchronous Ethernet (SyncE) SyncE is standardized in ITU-T G.8261 and refers to a method whereby the clock is delivered on the physical layer. The method is based on SDH/TDM timing, with similar performance, and does not change the basic Ethernet standards.
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Ceragon's Native2 Sync Solution Ceragon's synchronization solution ensures maximum flexibility by enabling t he operator to select any combination of techniques suitable for the network. Combinations of the following techniques can be used: Synchronization using native E1/T1 trails “ToP-aware” transport SyncE
Synchronization using Native E1/T1 Trails Using this technique, each T1/E1 trail carries a native TDM clock, which is compliant with GSM and UMTS synchronization requirements.
Ceragon's IP-10 implements PDH-like mechanism for providing the high precision synchronization of the native TDM trails. This implementation ensures high-quality synchronization while keeping cost & complexity low since it eliminates the need for sophisticated centralized SDH-grade "clock unit" at each node. System is designed to deliver E1 traffic and recover E1 clock, complying with G.823 “synchronization port” jitter and wander. That means that user can use any (or all) of the system’s E1 interfaces in order to deliver synchronization reference via the radio to remote site (e.g. Node-B). Each trail is independent of the other, meaning that IP-10 does not imply any restrictions on the source of the TDM trails. (Meaning that each trail can have its own clock, and no synchronization between trails is assumed). ®
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Each E1 trail is mapped independently over the radio frame and the integrated cross-connect elements. Timing can be distributed over user traffic carrying T1/E1 trails or dedicated “timing” trails. This method eliminates the need to employ emerging ToP techniques.
ToP-Aware Transport Ceragon's integrated advanced QoS classifier supports the identification of standard ToP control packets (IEEE1588v2 packets), and assigns to them the highest priority/traffic class.
This ensures that ToP control packets will be transported with maximum reliability and minimum delay, to provide the best possible timing accuracy.
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SyncE The SyncE technique supports synchronized Ethernet outputs as the timing source to an all-IP RBS. This method offers the same synchronization quality provided over E1 interfaces to legacy RBS. Ceragon's SyncE supports two modes:
“Sync from Co-Located E1” Mode The clock for SyncE interfaces can be derived from any co-located traffic-carrying E1 interface at the BTS site.
“Native Sync Distribution” Mode Synchronization is distributed natively over the radio links. In this mode, no TDM trails or E1 interfaces at the tail sites are required! Synchronization is provided by the E1/STM-1 clock source input at the fiber hub site (SSU/GPS).
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Integrated Nodal Solution Up to six IP-10 Native2 radios can be stacked with FibeAir IP-10 operating within nodal enclosures. This configuration supports any combination of 1+0, 1+1, and 2+0/XPIC. Nodal solution features: 2
Integrated Native networking functionality between all ports/radios Native Ethernet switching Native E1/T1 cross-connect Up to 75 E1s or 84 T1s per radio carrier Full high-availability support Cross-connect/switching elements Control/management elements Radio carriers TDM/Ethernet interfaces
IP-10 Nodal Design Each IDU can be configured as a "main" or "extension" unit. The role an IDU plays is determined during installation by its position in the traffic interconnection topology. A main unit includes the following functions: Central controller, management TDM traffic cross-connect Radio and line interfaces An extension unit includes the following functions: Radio and line interfaces IP-10 design for the nodal solution is based on a "blade" approach. Viewing the unit from the rear, each IDU can be considered a "blade" within a nodal enclosure.
IP-10 Rear View
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IP-10 Nodal Enclosure
A "blade" can operate as a stand-alone unit at a tail site.
The "rack chassis" is also modular, for optimum economical future upgrade, network design flexibility, and efficient installation, maintenance, and expansion.
The solution is modular and forms a single unified nodal device, with a common Ethernet Switch, common E1 Cross-Connect, single IP address, and a single element to manage.
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IP-10 Stacking Method IP-10 can be stacked using 2RU nodal enclosures. Each enclosure includes two slots for hot-swappable 1RU units. Additional nodal enclosures and units can be added in the field as required, without affecting traffic. Up to six 1RU units (three adapters) can be stacked to form a single unified nodal device. Using the stacking method, units in the bottom nodal enclosure act as main units, whereby a mandatory active main unit can be located in either of the two slots, and an optional standby main unit can be installed in the other slot. The switchover time is <50 msecs for all traffic affecting functions. Units located in nodal enclosures other than the one on the bottom act as expansion units. Radios in each pair of units can be configured as either dual independent 1+0 links, or single fully-redundant 1+1 HSB links.
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Nodal Enclosure Design The following photos show the Nodal Enclosures and how they are stacked.
Extension Nodal Enclosure
Main Nodal Enclosure
Scalable Nodal Enclosure The nodal enclosure is a scalable unit. Each enclosure can be added to another enclosure for modular rack installation.
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E1/T1 Cross-Connect E1/T1 VC (Virtual Container) trails are supported, based on the integrated E1/T1 cross-connect. The XC (cross-connect) function is performed by the active main unit. If a failure occurs, the backup main unit takes over (<50 msecs down time). The XC capacity is 150 E1 VCs or 168 T1 VCs. Each E1/T1 interface or "logical interface" in a radio in any unit in the stack can be assigned to any VC. The XC is performed between two interfaces or "logical interfaces" with the same VC. XC functionality is fully flexible. Any pair of E1/T1 interfaces, or radio "logical interfaces", can be connected. Each VC is timed independently by the XC.
Ethernet Bridging Ethernet traffic in an XC configuration is supported by interconnecting IDU switches with external cables. Traffic flow (dropping to local ports, sending to radio) is performed by the switches, in accordance with learning tables. Other than an extra FE port, dual GBE ports, and link-aggregation, no other functionality is required for XC operation. The FE protection port is static (only used for protection, not traffic). Its switching is performed electrically. If the unit is a stand-alone, an external connection is made through the front panel. If the unit is connected to a backplane, the connection is through the backplane, while the front panel port is unused. The GBE ports are dual: RJ-45 electrical or SFP optical (default). Optical ports can optionally be configured as 100FX. Ethernet traffic is not affected when a unit is connected to a backplane.
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Cross Connect (XC) The FibeAir IP-10 Cross Connect (XC) is a high-speed circuit connection scheme for transporting both Ethernet and TDM traffic from any given port "x" to any given port "y". The system is composed of several inter-connected (stacked) IDUs, with integrated and centralized TDM traffic switching and Ethernet bridging capability. The XC capacity is 75 E1 VCs (Virtual Containers) or 84 T1 VCs, whereby each E1/T1 interface or "logical interface" in a radio in any unit of the stack can be assigned to any VC.
XC Features Cross Connect system highlights include: E1/T1 trails are supported based on the integrated E1/T1 cross-connect XC capacity is 180 E1/T1 trails XC is performed between any two physical or logical interfaces in the node, including: - E1/T1 interface - Radio “VC” (75 “VCs” “VCs” supported per radio carrier) - STM1/OC3 mux VC12 Each trail is timed independently by the XC XC function is performed by the “active” main unit In a failure occurs, backup main unit takes over (<50 msecs down time) Modularity and flexibility Modular design: pay-as-you-grow Simplicity, with minimum components (IDU, backplane) Supports XPIC, Multi-Radio, and Diversity
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XC Basics Integrated TDM Cross Connect is performed by defining end to end trails. Each trail consists of segments represented by Virtual Containers (VCs). The XC functions as the forwarding mechanism between the two ends of a trail. The following illustration shows the basic XC concept.
Basic XC Operation
As shown in the illustration, trails are defined from one end of a line to the other. The XC forwards signals generated by the radios to/from the IDUs based on their designated VCs. As in the example, The cross connect may forward signals on Trail C from Radio 1, VC 3 to Radio 4, VC 1.
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The cross connect function provides connectivity for the following types of configurations: Line to Radio
Radio to Radio
STM1/OC3 Interface
E1/T1 Interface
Line to Line STM1/OC3 Interface
E1/T1 Interfaces
E1/T1 trails are supported based on the integrated E1/T1 cross-connect (XC). The XC capacity is 180 E1/T1 bi-directional VC trails. XC is performed between any two physical or logical interfaces in the node (in any main or expansion unit) such as E1/T1 interface, radio VC (75 VCs supported per radio carrier), and STM1/OC3 mux VC11/VC12. The function is performed by the “active” main unit. If a failure occurs, the backup main unit takes over (<50 msecs down time). Each VC trail is timed independently by the XC. For each trail, the following end-to-end OA&M functions are supported: Alarms and maintenance signals (AIS, RDI, etc.) Performance monitoring counters (ES, SES, UAS, etc.) Trace ID for provisioning mismatch detection. A VC overhead is added to each VC trail to support the end-to-end OA&M functionality and synchronization justification requirements.
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The following illustration is an example of XC aggregation: STM1/OC3 Interface
IP-10 Integrated XC IP-10 integrated STM1/OC3 Mux MW Radio Link
E1/T1 interfaces
E1/T1 interfaces
E1/T1 interfaces
XC operation is implemented using two-unit backplanes, which provide the interconnectivity. Up to three backplanes, consisting of six IDUs, can be stacked to provide an expandable system. Each modular shelf holds two IDUs. The shelf includes extension connectors located at its top and bottom panels, which allow stacking of up to three shelves (the base shelf is different from the two extension shelves), holding up to six IDUs, which exchange TDM traffic and compose a network node. Each pair of IDUs in a single modular shelf has access to Multi-Radio and XPIC interfaces between them. A node composed of identical IDUs that behave in a different way, is formed by inserting the IDUs in the stackable shelves and providing each IDU with an indication of its place in the stack. Each IDU uses different LVDS (Low-Voltage Differential Signaling) interfaces, depending on its place in the stack and system configuration.
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XC Operation The integrated XC supports E1/T1 VC (Virtual Container) trails. The function of the XC is performed by the “active” main unit. If a failure occurs, the backup main unit takes over within <50 msecs. The XC function is performed between two logical interfaces with the same VC (Virtual Container). The functionality is fully flexible, so that any pair of E1/T1 interfaces, or radio logical interfaces, can be connected. Each VC is timed independently by the XC.
TDM XC TDM cross-connect is implemented by transporting all received TDM traffic from each IDU to the main XC unit placed in a pre-determined slot (or to two protected XC units). The main unit performs XC of individual E1/T1 streams between the other IDUs and its own interfaces, and sends back E1/T1 streams. Each unit then directs each stream to its interfaces or radio. Using dedicated LVDS (Low Voltage Differential Signal) serial interfaces, the TDM streams are transported via the backplane between the XC and downlink IDUs. The interfaces carry the E1s/T1s in a proprietary TDM frame containing each E1/T1 in a separate time-slot (TS). The interfaces are point-to-point between each downlink IDU and the main XC. There is an additional, parallel LVDS infrastructure from each unit to the main XC stand-by unit for protection purposes. Each of the main XC units has its own local clock, which is distributed to each of the downlink units through an LVDS interface. Downlink units align traffic to the clock received from the active XC. East-West configuration between the two XC units (adjacent) is achieved by configuring the second (upper) unit in the main backplane to behave like a regular downlink. This is the case if the XC units are not configured in protection. For this purpose, additional LVDS traffic and clock channels are set up between them. The IDU’s behavior as a main XC or a downlink depends on its position (main or extension backplane, and upper/lower position in the backplane) which is detected by hardware through backplane slot ID pins, as well as by user configuration. In addition, an IDU can be configured as a stand-alone unit.
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The XC process involves two stages: 1. The XC sends received E11/T1s to downlink units in LVDS (Low-Voltage Differential Signaling) time slots, which then discard the unnecessary slots. 2. Each unit (XC included) maps each relevant LVDS time slot to radio VCs or or line interfaces. For each line interface, the user defines which time slot it is mapped to, and for each radio, which radio VCs it transports (enabled radio VCs) and which time slot it is mapped to. Two interfaces mapped to the same time slots are known as a trail a trail . Each IDU has several LVDS interfaces, some of which are disabled at the downlink units. All LVDS traffic is synchronized to a single clock provided by the active XC unit. The clock is transmitted to the downlink units via the LVDS infrastructure. TDM Trail Status Handling Due to the fact that XC system users can build networks and define E1/T1 trails across the network, additional PM (performance monitoring) is necessary. A trail is defined as E1/T1 data delivered unchanged from one line interface to another, through one or more radio links. In each XC node, data can be assigned to a different VC number, but its identity across the network is maintained by a “Trail ID” defined by the user. Additional PM functionality provides end-to-end monitoring over data sent in a trail over the network.
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Wireless SNCP IP-10 supports an integrated VC trail protection mechanism called Wireless SNCP (Sub network Connection Protection). With Wireless SNCP, a backup VC trail can optionally be defined for each individual VC trail. For each backup VC, the following needs to be defined: Two “branching points” from the main VC that it is protecting. A path for the backup VC (typically separate from the path of the main VC that it is protecting). For each direction of the backup VC, the following is performed independently: At the first branching point, duplication of the traffic from the main VC to the backup VC. At the second branching point, selection of traffic from either the main VC or the backup VC. - Traffic from the backup VC is used if a failure is detected in main VC. - Switch-over is performed within <50 msecs. Wireless SNCP operation is shown in the following illustration.
E1
IP-10 B
Main VC
Backup VC
IP-10 A
E1
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For each main VC trail, the branching points can be any XC node along the path of the trail.
IP-10 D IP-10 B
IP-10 A
IP-10 C
E1 #2
E1 #2 E1 #1
IP-10 B
E1 #1
Support for Wireless SNCP in a Mixed Wireless-Optical Network Wireless SNCP is supported over fiber links li nks using IP-10 STM-1/OC-3 mux interfaces. This feature provides a fully integrated solution for protected E1/T1 services over a mixed wireless-optical network.
IP-10 Integrated XC IP-10 D
IP-10 integrated STM-1/OC-3 mux STM1/OC3 fiber link
IP-10 A
IP-10 C
E1 #2
MW radio link
IP-10 B
E1 #1
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TDM Rings SNCP replaces a failed sub network connection with a standby sub network connection. In the FibeAir product line, this capability is provided at the points where trails leave sub networks. The switching criterion is based on SNCP/I. This protocol specifies that automatic switching is performed if an AIS or LOP fault is detected in the working sub network connection. If neither AIS nor LOP faults are detected, and the protection lockout is not in effect, the scheme used is 1+1 singled-ended. The NMS provides Manual switch to protection and Protection lockout commands. A notification is sent to the management station when an automatic switch occurs. The status of the selectors and the sub network connections are displayed on the NMS screen.
Wireless SNCP Advantages Flexibility - All network topologies are supported (ring, mesh, mesh, tree) - All traffic distribution patterns are supported (excels in hub traffic concentration) concentration) - Any mix of protected and non-protected trails is supported - No hard limit on the number of nodes nodes in a ring - Simple provisioning provisioning of protection Performance - Non traffic-affecting switching to protection (<50 msec) - Switch to protection is done at the E1/T1 VC trail level, works perfectly with ACM (no need to switch the entire traffic on a link) - Optimal latency under protection Interoperability - Protection is done at the end points, independent independent of equipment/vendor networks - Interoperable with networks that use other types of protection protection (such as BLSR)
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XC Management XC system management enables users to control the XC node as an integrated system, and provides the means for the exchange of information between the IDUs. Several methods can be used for IP-10 XC management: Local terminal CLI CLI via telnet Web based management SNMP Local remote channel, for configuration of a small set of parameters in the remote unit In addition, the management system provides access to other network equipment through in-band or out-ofband network management. The XC node is managed in an integrated manner through centralized management channels. The main unit’s CPU is the node’s central controller, and all management frames received from or sent to external management applications must pass through it. The node has a single IP management address, which is the address of the main unit (two addresses in case of main unit protection). To ease the reading and analysis of several IDU alarms and logs, the system time should be synchronized to the main unit’s time. As an additional resource, an extra data channel is included in the backplane LVDS infrastructure, through which basic management data is sent by IDUs to the XC unit (and vice-versa). The data provided over the channel includes: IP addresses Basic alarm information In addition, an SDH management channel (management through the STM-1 interface) allows control from an SDH network, without the need for additional Ethernet interfaces.
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XC Management Highlights Centralized IP Access - A single IP address must be configured and node is reached through through it, two addresses if main units are protected - All management management frames must reach main units - Management mode mode (in band/out of band) is defined by main unit’s mode Centralized Management Channels - SNMP main agent represents the entire node - NMS represents the node node as a single single unit unit - Web agent allows access to all elements from main main window - CLI/Telnet access from main unit’s CLI Feature Configuration - Some management management is done through the main unit only: TDM XC, user user registration, login, alarms - Other features are configured individually in each extension unit: radio parameters, Ethernet Ethernet switch configuration
Ethernet XC Management XC management connects main units to all extension units, and main units to each other. It also connects the CPU to the Mezzanine. In protection mode, management frames will arrive at a standby XC unit only through the protection interface, coming from its mate.
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In-Band/Out of Band All management frames arrive at the main unit’s CPU. The management mode (in-band/out of band) is determined by the mode of the main unit. The mode of the extension units is irrelevant, since they can only be reached through the internal management network. If the main unit is configured as in-band, frames will arrive through the traffic switches by standard layer two DA-based bridging. If the main unit is configured as out of band, there is no built-in channel for remote management frames to arrive at the CPU. Two possible solutions are suggested for this: 1. Install an external external Ethernet switch, which will allow frames incoming through the wayside channel to be distributed to all units. 2. Implement an IP router in the extension unit's CPU. This will allow management frames frames to be routed to the internal LAN, reaching the main unit’s CPU. For out of band, there is no wayside network. Access from remote sites is obtained through the wayside channel. Access from the remote link to an extension unit requires an external switch.
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Protection The XC protection mechanism is an extension of the one used for non-XC IDUs. Each pair of protected IDUs makes its own decisions regarding data and switching. User and Ethernet traffic protection is implemented through Y cables or via the protection panel. TDM traffic protection is implemented through dual LVDS interfaces on the backplane. XC protection configurations include LVDS interface monitoring for AIS generation and SNCP support. They also include an Ethernet line protection disabling option, whereby the user can configure Ethernet interfaces for non-protection. In this setup, local failures will not affect all node traffic. Signaling is performed between units in a shelf to indicate their active or standby status.
Protection Design The XC protection method runs by the following rules: An IDU may exchange traffic with a protection pair (even if it itself is not protected). Main units must know which pairs are protected, to send identical traffic to protected extension pairs. Each unit is the master clock for its LVDS interfaces. Extension units send traffic to both main units. All units must know from which LVDS interface to receive traffic. The following illustration shows how the basic XC protection operates.
Main Active
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The following information is sent through LVDS interfaces (by all units): Protected or not protected Activity: active/standby In addition, main units inform extensions through separate hardware interfaces. This is required for extension units to align with active LVDS, since the main units provide the LVDS clock. The signal is encoded to prevent the system from being “stuck” due to faulty hardware. If an XC switch occurs, downlink units will synchronize to the new clock within 50 msec. Main units read the LVDS from both extension units to determine active/standby status. They also receive traffic from the active unit. Note: If a switch is detected, an idle window will open to prevent “switch cascades”.
All data is made available to the software, including alarms for protection mode mismatches and errors, and interrupts upon protection switch.
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Typical Configurations 1+0
1 IP-10, 1 RFU unit required
Integrated Ethernet switching can be enabled for multiple local Ethernet interfaces support
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1+1 HSB
2 IP-10, 2 RFU units required
Integrated Ethernet switching can be enabled for multiple local Ethernet interfaces support
Redundancy covers failure of all control and data path components
Local Ethernet & TDM interfaces protection support via Y-cables or protection-panel
<50mSecs switch-over time
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1+0 with 32 E1s/T1s
1+0 with 64 E1s/T1s
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2+0/XPIC Link, with 64 E1/T1s, “no Multi-Radio” Mode
Ethernet traffic
Each of the 2 units:
Feeding Ethernet traffic independently to its radio interface.
Can be configured independently for “switch” or “pipe” operation
No Ethernet traffic is shared internally between the 2 radio carriers
TDM traffic
Each of the 2 radio interfaces supports separate E1/T1 services
E1/T1 Services can optionally be protected using SNCP
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2+0/XPIC Link, with 64 E1/T1s, “Multi-Radio” Mode
Ethernet traffic
One of the units is acting as the "master" unit and is feeding Ethernet traffic to both radio carriers
Traffic is distributed between the 2 carries at the radio frame level
The "Master" IDU can be configured for switch or pipe operation.
The 2nd ("Slave") IDU has all its Ethernet interfaces and functionality effectively disabled.
TDM traffic
E1/T1 services are duplicated over both radio carriers and are 1+1 HSB protected
2+0/XPIC Link, with 32 E1/T1s + STM1/OC3 Mux Interface, no Multi-Radio, up to 150 E1s/168 T1s over the radio
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1+1 HSB with 32 E1s/T1s
1+1 HSB with 64 E1s/T1s
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1+1 HSB with 75 E1s or 84 T1s
1+1 HSB Link with 16 E1/T1s + STM1/OC3 Mux Interface (Up to 75 E1s/84 T1s over the radio)
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Native2 2+2/XPIC/Multi-Radio MW Link, with 2xSTM1/OC3 Mux (up to 150 E1s/168 T1s over the radio)
Nodal Configurations Chain with 1+0 Downlink and 1+1 HSB Uplink, with STM1/OC3 Mux
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Node with 2 x 1+0 Downlinks and 1 x 1+1 HSB Uplink
Chain with 1+1 Downlink and 1+1 HSB Uplink, with STM1/OC3 Mux
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Native2 Ring with 3 x 1+0 Links + STM1/OC3 Mux Interface at Main Site
Native2 Ring with 3 x 1+1 HSB Links + STM-1 Mux Interface at Main Site
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FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
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Node with 1 x 1+1 HSB Downlink and 1 x 1+1 HSB Uplink, with STM1/OC3 Mux
Native2 Ring with 4 x 1+0 Links, with STM1/OC3 Mux
®
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
72
Native2 Ring with 3 x 1+0 Links + Spur Link 1+0
Native2 Ring with 4 x 1+0 MW Links and 1 x Fiber Link (5 hops total), with STM1/OC3 Mux
®
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
73
Native2 Ring with 2 x 2+0/XPIC MW Links and 1 x Fiber Link (3 hops total), with 2 x STM1/OC3 Mux
®
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
74
Specifications Radio Specifications General 6-18 GHz Specification
6L,6H GHz
7,8 GHz
11 GHz
13 GHz
15 GHz
18 GHz
Standards Standard s
ETSI, FCC
ETSI
ETSI, FCC
ETSI
ETSI
ETSI, FCC
Operating Frequency Range (GHz)
5.85-6.45, 6.4-7.1
7.1-7.9, 7.78.5
10.7-11.7
12.75-13.3
14.4-15.35
17.7-19.7
Tx/Rx Spacing (MHz)
252.04, 240, 266, 300, 340, 160, 170, 500
154, 161, 168, 182, 196, 245, 300, 119, 311.32
490, 520, 530
266
315, 420, 644, 490, 728
1010, 1120, 1008, 1560
Frequency Stability
+0.001%
Frequency Source
Synthesizer Synthesizer
RF Channel Selection
Via EMS/NMS
System Configurations
Non-Protected (1+0), Protected (1+1), Space Diversity
Tx Range (Manual/ATPC)
20dB dynamic range
23-38 GHz Specification
23 GHz
24-26 GHz
28 GHz
32 GHz
38 GHz
Standards
ETSI, FCC
ETSI, FCC
ETSI, FCC
ETSI, FCC
ETSI, FCC
Operating Frequency Range (GHz)
21.2-23.65
24.2-26.5
27.35-31.3
31.8-33.4
37-40
Tx/Rx Spacing (MHz)
1008, 1200, 1232
800, 900, 1008
350, 500, 1008
812
1000, 1260, 700
Frequency Stability
+0.001%
Frequency Source
Synthesizer Synthesizer
RF Channel Selection
Via EMS/NMS
System Configurations
Non-Protected (1+0), Protected (1+1), Space Diversity
Tx Range (Manual/ATPC)
20dB dynamic range
®
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
75
RFU support Split-Mount installation
FibeAir RFU-C (6–38 GHz)
1
FibeAir RFU-P (11–38 GHz) FibeAir RFU-SP (6–8 GHz) FibeAir RFU-HS (6–8 GHz) FibeAir RFU-HP (6–11 GHz) All-Indoor installation install ation
FibeAir RFU-HP (6–11 GHz)
IDU to RFU connection
Coaxial cable RG-223 (100 m/300 ft), Belden 9914/RG-8 (300 m/1000 ft) or equivalent, N-type connectors (male)
Antenna Connection
Direct or remote mount using the same antenna type. Remote mount: standard flexible waveguide (frequency dependent)
Note: For more details about the different RFUs refer to the RFU documentation.
1
Refer to RFU-C roll-out plan for availability of each frequency. ®
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
76
Capacity 7 MHz (ETSI)
Profile
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Modulation
QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM
Minimum Required Capacity License
Radio Throughput (Mbps)
Number of Supported E1s
10 25 25 25 25 50 50 50
10.5 15 20 25 29 33 38 43
4 6 8 10 12 13 16 18
Ethernet Capacity (Mbps) Min
Max
9.5 14 19 24 28 32 38 42
13.5 20 28 34 40 46 54 60
Note: Ethernet Capacity depends on average packet size.
10 MHz (FCC)
Profile
Modulation
Minimum Required Capacity License
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM
10 25 25 50 50 50 50 50
Radio Throughput (Mbps)
Number of Supported T1s
13 19 29 36 44 51 56 61
7 10 16 20 24 28 31 34
Ethernet Capacity (Mbps) Min Max 13 19 29 35 43 51 55 61
18 27 41 50 62 72 79 88
Note: Ethernet Capacity depends on average packet size.
®
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
77
14 MHz (ETSI)
Profile
Modulation
Minimum Required Capacity License
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM
25 25 50 50 50 100 100 100
Radio Throughput (Mbps)
Number of Supported E1s
21 29 43 50 57 69 80 87
8 12 18 20 24 29 34 37
Radio Throughput (Mbps)
Number of Supported T1s
28 41 58 74 87 101 114 125
15 23 32 41 49 57 65 71
Ethernet Capacity (Mbps) Min Max 20 29 42 49 57 69 81 87
29 41 60 70 82 98 115 125
Note: Ethernet Capacity depends on average packet size.
20 MHz (FCC)
Profile
Modulation
Minimum Required Capacity License
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM
25 50 50 100 100 100 100 150
Ethernet Capacity (Mbps) Min Max 27 41 57 74 87 101 115 126
39 59 82 105 125 145 164 180
Note: Ethernet Capacity depends on average packet size.
28 MHz (ETSI)
Profile
Modulation
Minimum Required Capacity License
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM
50 50 100 100 150 150 150 200
Radio Throughput (Mbps)
Number of Supported E1s
41 55 78 105 130 158 176 186
17 23 33 44 55 68 75 75
Ethernet Capacity (Mbps) Min Max 40 54 78 105 131 160 178 188
58 78 111 151 188 229 255 268
Note: Ethernet Capacity depends on average packet size. ®
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
78
30 MHz (FCC)
Profile
Modulation
Minimum Required Capacity License
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM
50 50 100 100 150 150 200 200
Radio Throughput (Mbps)
Number of Supported T1s
39 63 92 118 142 162 183 198
22 35 52 67 81 84 84 84
Ethernet Capacity (Mbps) Min Max 39 63 93 119 143 164 185 201
56 90 132 170 205 234 264 287
Note: Ethernet Capacity depends on average packet size.
40 MHz (ETSI / FCC)
Profile
Modulation
Minimum Required Capacity License
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM
50 100 100 150 200 200 300 300
Radio Throughput (Mbps)
Number of Supported E1/T1s
56 83 121 151 189 211 240 255
23 / 31 35 / 47 51 / 69 65 / 84 75 / 84 75 / 84 75 / 84 75 / 84
Ethernet Capacity (Mbps) Min Max 56 83 122 153 191 214 243 259
80 119 174 218 274 305 347 370
Note: Ethernet Capacity depends on average packet size.
50 MHz (FCC)
Profile
Modulation
Minimum Required Capacity License
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM
100 100 150 150 200 300 300 "All capacity"
Radio Throughput (Mbps)
Number of Supported T1s
68 106 147 185 238 274 313 337
38 60 84 84 84 84 84 84
Ethernet Capacity (Mbps) Min Max 68 107 148 187 241 278 318 342
97 152 212 267 344 398 454 489
Note: Ethernet Capacity depends on average packet size.
®
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
79
56 MHz (ETSI)
Profile
Modulation
Minimum Required Capacity License
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM
100 100 150 200 300 300 "All capacity" "All capacity"
Radio Throughput (Mbps)
Number of Supported E1s
76 113 150 199 248 297 338 367
32 48 64 75 75 75 75 75
Ethernet Capacity (Mbps) Min Max 76 114 151 202 251 301 343 372
109 163 217 288 358 430 490 532
Note: Ethernet Capacity depends on average packet size.
®
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
80
Transmit Power with RFU-C1 (dBm)
Modulation
6-8 GHz
11-15 GHz
18-23 GHz
26-28 GHz
32-38 GHz
QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM
26 26 25 24 24 24 22
24 24 23 22 22 22 20
22 22 21 20 20 20 18
21 21 20 19 19 19 17
18 18 17 16 16 16 14
Transmit Power with RFU-P (dBm)
Modulation
11-15 GHz
18 GHz
23-26 GHz
28-32 GHz
38 GHz
QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM
23 23 23 23 22 22 2 21
23 23 21 21 20 20 19
22 22 20 20 20 20 19
21 21 20 20 19 19 18
20 20 19 19 18 18 17
Transmit Power with RFU-SP/HS/HP3 (dBm) RFU-HP Split-Mount
RFU-HP All-Indoor
RFU-SP
RFU-HS
4
6-8 GHz
6-8 GHz
11 GHz
6-8 GHz
11 GHz
30 30 30 30 29 29 27
30 30 30 30 29 29 27
27 27 27 26 26 26 24
33 33 33 33 32 32 30
30 30 30 29 29 29 27
Modulation
6-8 GHz
QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM
24 24 24 24 24 24 22
1
Refer to RFU-C roll-out plan for availability of each frequency. 20dBm for 11GHz. 3 RFU-HP supports channels with up to 30MHz occupied bandwidth. 4 1dBm higher for 6L GHz. 2
®
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
81
Receiver Threshold (RSL) with RFU-C1 (dBm @ BER = 10-6) Profile 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
1
Modulation QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM
Channel Spacing
7 MHz (ETSI)
10 MHz (FCC)
14 MHz (ETSI)
20 MHz (FCC)
28 MHz (ETSI)
Occupied Bandwidth
6.2 MHz
8.4 MHz
12.2 MHz
17.4 MHz
24.9 MHz
6-15
18
Frequency (GHz) 23 26
-92.0
-91.5
-91.0
-90.0
-90.0
-89.0
-88.5
-88.0
-87.5
-86.5
-86.5
-85.5
-86.5
-86.0
-85.5
-84.5
-84.5
-83.5
-84.0
-83.5
-83.0
-82.0
-82.0
-81.0
-82.5
-82.0
-81.5
-80.5
-80.5
-79.5
-80.5
-80.0
-79.5
-78.5
-78.5
-77.5
-77.0
-76.5
-76.0
-75.0
-75.0
-74.0
-73.5
-73.0
-72.5
-71.5
-71.5
-70.5
-93.5
-93.0
-92.5
-91.5
-91.5
-90.5
-90.0
-89.5
-89.0
-88.0
-88.0
-87.0
-85.5
-85.0
-84.5
-83.5
-83.5
-82.5
-82.0
-81.5
-81.0
-80.0
-80.0
-79.0
-80.0
-79.5
-79.0
-78.0
-78.0
-77.0
-77.5
-77.0
-76.5
-75.5
-75.5
-74.5
-75.5
-75.0
-74.5
-73.5
-73.5
-72.5
-72.0
-71.5
-71.0
-70.0
-70.0
-69.0
-90.5
-90.0
-89.5
-88.5
-88.5
-87.5
-87.0
-86.5
-86.0
-85.0
-85.0
-84.0
-83.5
-83.0
-82.5
-81.5
-81.5
-80.5
-82.0
-81.5
-81.0
-80.0
-80.0
-79.0
-80.5
-80.0
-79.5
-78.5
-78.5
-77.5
-77.5
-77.0
-76.5
-75.5
-75.5
-74.5
-74.5
-74.0
-73.5
-72.5
-72.5
-71.5
-72.0
-71.5
-71.0
-70.0
-70.0
-69.0
-90.0
-89.5
-89.0
-88.0
-88.0
-87.0
-85.0
-84.5
-84.0
-83.0
-83.0
-82.0
-82.5
-82.0
-81.5
-80.5
-80.5
-79.5
-80.0
-79.5
-79.0
-78.0
-78.0
-77.0
-77.5
-77.0
-76.5
-75.5
-75.5
-74.5
-75.0
-74.5
-74.0
-73.0
-73.0
-72.0
-72.0
-71.5
-71.0
-70.0
-70.0
-69.0
-69.0
-68.5
-68.0
-67.0
-67.0
-66.0
-89.0
-88.5
-88.0
-87.0
-87.0
-86.0
-86.0
-85.5
-85.0
-84.0
-84.0
-83.0
-83.0
-82.5
-82.0
-81.0
-81.0
-80.0
-79.0
-78.5
-78.0
-77.0
-77.0
-76.0
-76.5
-76.0
-75.5
-74.5
-74.5
-73.5
-72.0
-71.5
-71.0
-70.0
-70.0
-69.0
-71.0
-70.5
-70.0
-69.0
-69.0
-68.0
-68.5
-68.0
-67.5
-66.5
-66.5
-65.5
28
38
Refer to RFU-C roll-out plan for availability of each frequency. ®
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
82
Note: RSL values are typical.
Profile 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Modulation QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM
Channel Spacing
30 MHz (FCC)
40 MHz (ETSI/ FCC)
50 MHz (FCC)
56 MHz (ETSI)
Occupied Bandwidth
26.9 MHz
34.8 MHz
44.3 MHz
49.1 MHz
Frequency (GHz) 23 26
6-15
18
28
38
-89.0
-88.5
-88.0
-87.0
-87.0
-86.0
-84.5
-84.0
-83.5
-82.5
-82.5
-81.5
-80.5
-80.0
-79.5
-78.5
-78.5
-77.5
-76.0
-75.5
-75.0
-74.0
-74.0
-73.0
-74.5
-74.0
-73.5
-72.5
-72.5
-71.5
-72.0
-71.5
-71.0
-70.0
-70.0
-69.0
-70.0
-69.5
-69.0
-68.0
-68.0
-67.0
-66.0
-65.5
-65.0
-64.0
-64.0
-63.0
-87.0
-86.5
-86.0
-85.0
-85.0
-84.0
-81.5
-81.0
-80.5
-79.5
-79.5
-78.5
-79.0
-78.5
-78.0
-77.0
-77.0
-76.0
-75.5
-75.0
-74.5
-73.5
-73.5
-72.5
-72.0
-71.5
-71.0
-70.0
-70.0
-69.0
-71.0
-70.5
-70.0
-69.0
-69.0
-68.0
-68.5
-68.0
-67.5
-66.5
-66.5
-65.5
-66.0
-65.5
-65.0
-64.0
-64.0
-63.0
-87.5
-87.0
-86.5
-85.5
-85.5
-84.5
-83.0
-82.5
-82.0
-81.0
-81.0
-80.0
-80.0
-79.5
-79.0
-78.0
-78.0
-77.0
-76.5
-76.0
-75.5
-74.5
-74.5
-73.5
-73.5
-73.0
-72.5
-71.5
-71.5
-70.5
-71.0
-70.5
-70.0
-69.0
-69.0
-68.0
-68.5
-68.0
-67.5
-66.5
-66.5
-65.5
-65.5
-65.0
-64.5
-63.5
-63.5
-62.5
-86.5
-86.0
-85.5
-84.5
-84.5
-83.5
-81.5
-81.0
-80.5
-79.5
-79.5
-78.5
-80.5
-80.0
-79.5
-78.5
-78.5
-77.5
-76.0
-75.5
-75.0
-74.0
-74.0
-73.0
-74.0
-73.5
-73.0
-72.0
-72.0
-71.0
-71.0
-70.5
-70.0
-69.0
-69.0
-68.0
-68.5
-68.0
-67.5
-66.5
-66.5
-65.5
-65.5
-65.0
-64.5
-63.5
-63.5
-62.5
Note: RSL values are typical.
®
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
83
Receiver Threshold (RSL) with RFU-P (dBm @ BER = 10-6)
Profile 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Modulation QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM
Channel Spacing
10 MHz (FCC)
14 MHz (ETSI)
20 MHz (FCC)
28 MHz (ETSI)
Occupied Bandwidth
8.4 MHz
12.2 MHz
17.4 MHz
24.9 MHz
11-18
Frequency (GHz) 23-28 31
-93.0
-92.5
-92.5
-91.5
-89.5
-89.0
-89.0
-88.0
-85.0
-84.5
-84.5
-83.5
-81.5
-81.0
-81.0
-80.0
-79.5
-79.0
-79.0
-78.0
-77.0
-76.5
-76.5
-75.5
-75.0
-74.5
-74.5
-73.5
-71.5
-71.0
-71.0
-70.0
-90.0
-89.5
-89.5
-88.5
-86.5
-86.0
-86.0
-85.0
-83.0
-82.5
-82.5
-81.5
-81.5
-81.0
-81.0
-80.0
-80.0
-79.5
-79.5
-78.5
-77.0
-76.5
-76.5
-75.5
-74.0
-73.5
-73.5
-72.5
-71.5
-71.0
-71.0
-70.0
-89.5
-89.0
-89.0
-88.0
-84.5
-84.0
-84.0
-83.0
-82.0
-81.5
-81.5
-80.5
-79.5
-79.0
-79.0
-78.0
-77.0
-76.5
-76.5
-75.5
-74.5
-74.0
-74.0
-73.0
-71.5
-71.0
-71.0
-70.0
-68.5
-68.0
-68.0
-67.0
-88.5
-88.0
-88.0
-87.0
-85.5
-85.0
-85.0
-84.0
-82.5
-82.0
-82.0
-81.0
-78.5
-78.0
-78.0
-77.0
-76.0
-75.5
-75.5
-74.5
-71.5
-71.0
-71.0
-70.0
-70.5
-70.0
-70.0
-69.0
-66.5
-66.0
-66.0
-66.5
32-38
Note: RSL values are typical.
®
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
84
Profile 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Modulation QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM
Channel Spacing
30 MHz (FCC)
40 MHz (ETSI/ FCC)
50 MHz (FCC)
56 MHz (ETSI)
Occupied Bandwidth
26.9 MHz
34.8 MHz
44.3 MHz
49.1 MHz
Frequency (GHz) 23-28 31
32-38
-88.5
-88.0
-88.0
-87.0
-84.0
-83.5
-83.5
-82.5
-80.0
-79.5
-79.5
-78.5
-75.5
-75.0
-75.0
-74.0
-74.0
-73.5
-73.5
-72.5
-71.5
-71.0
-71.0
-70.0
-69.5
-69.0
-69.0
-68.0
-65.5
-65.0
-65.0
-64.0
-87.0
-86.5
-86.5
-85.5
-81.0
-80.5
-80.5
-79.5
-78.5
-78.0
-78.0
-77.0
-75.0
-74.5
-74.5
-73.5
-71.5
-71.0
-71.0
-70.0
-70.5
-70.0
-70.0
-69.0
-68.0
-67.5
-67.5
-66.5
-65.5
-65.0
-65.0
-64.0
-87.0
-86.5
-86.5
-85.5
-82.5
-82.0
-82.0
-81.0
-79.5
-79.0
-79.0
-78.0
-76.0
-75.5
-75.5
-74.5
-73.0
-72.5
-72.5
-71.5
-70.5
-70.0
-70.0
-69.0
-68.0
-67.5
-67.5
-66.5
-66.5
-66.0
-66.0
-63.5
-86.0
-85.5
-85.5
-84.5
-81.0
-80.5
-80.5
-79.5
-80.0
-79.5
-79.5
-78.5
-75.5
-75.0
-75.0
-74.0
-73.5
-73.0
-73.0
-72.0
-70.5
-70.0
-70.0
-69.0
-68.0
-67.5
-67.5
-66.5
-66.5
-66.0
-66.0
-63.5
11-18
Note: RSL values are typical.
®
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
85
Receiver Threshold (RSL) with RFU-SP/HP1 (dBm @ BER = 10-6)
Profile
Modulation
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM
Channel Spacing
10 MHz (FCC)
14 MHz (ETSI)
20 MHz (FCC)
28 MHz (ETSI)
Occupied Bandwidth
8.4 MHz
12.2 MHz
17.4 MHz
24.9 MHz
RFU-SP (6-8 GHz)
RFU-HP (6-11 GHz)
-93.5
-93.5
-90.0
-90.0
-85.5
-85.5
-82.0
-82.0
-80.0
-80.0
-77.5
-77.5
-75.5
-75.5
-72.0
-72.0
-90.5
-90.5
-87.0
-87.0
-83.5
-83.5
-82.0
-82.0
-80.5
-80.5
-77.5
-77.5
-74.5
-74.5
-72.0
-72.0
-90.0
-90.0
-85.0
-85.0
-82.5
-82.5
-80.0
-80.0
-77.5
-77.5
-75.0
-75.0
-72.0
-72.0
-69.0
-69.0
-89.0
-89.0
-86.0
-86.0
-83.0
-83.0
-79.0
-79.0
-76.5
-76.5
-72.0
-72.0
-71.0
-71.0
-67.0
-67.0
Note: RSL values are typical.
1
RFU-HP supports channels with up to 30 MHz occupied bandwidth. ®
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
86
Profile
Modulation
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM QPSK 8 PSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 256 QAM 256 QAM
Channel Spacing
30 MHz (FCC)
40 MHz (ETSI/ FCC)
50 MHz (FCC)
56 MHz (ETSI)
Occupied Bandwidth
26.9 MHz
34.8 MHz
44.3 MHz
49.1 MHz
RFU-SP (6-8 GHz)
RFU-HP (6-11 GHz)
-89.0
-89.0
-84.5
-84.5
-80.5
-80.5
-76.0
-76.0
-74.5
-74.5
-72.0
-72.0
-70.0
-70.0
-66.0
-66.0
-87.5
Not supported
-81.5
Not supported
-79.0
Not supported
-75.5
Not supported
-72.0
Not supported
-71.0
Not supported
-68.5
Not supported
-66.0
Not supported
-87.5
Not supported
-83.0
Not supported
-80.0
Not supported
-76.5
Not supported
-73.5
Not supported
-71.0
Not supported
-68.5
Not supported
-67.0
Not supported
-86.5
Not supported
-81.5
Not supported
-80.5
Not supported
-76.0
Not supported
-74.0
Not supported
-71.0
Not supported
-68.5
Not supported
-67.0
Not supported
Note: RSL values are typical.
®
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
87
Interfaces Ethernet Supported Ethernet Interfaces
5 x 10/100base-T 10/100base-T (RJ-45) 2 x 10/100/1000Base-T (RJ-45) or 1000base-X (SFP)
Supported SFP Types
Optical 1000Base-LX (1310 nm) or SX (850 nm)
E1/T1 Interface Type
E1/T1
Number of Ports
16 x E1/T1 or 16 x E1/T1+16 x E1/T1 on T-Card
Connector Type
MDR 69-pin
Framing
Unframed (full transparency) transparency )
Coding
E1: HDB3 T1: AMI/B8ZS (Configurable)
Line Impedance
120 ohm/100 ohm balanced. Optional 75 ohm unbalanced.
Compatible Standards
ITU-T G.703, G.736, G.775, G.823, G.824, G.828, ITU-T I.432, ETSI ETS 300 147, ETS 300 417, ANSI T1.105, T1.102-1993, T1.231, Bellcore GR253-core, TR-NWT-000499
Auxiliary Channels Wayside Channel
2 Mbps or 64 Kbps, Ethernet 10/100BaseT
Engineering Order Wire
Audio channel (64 Kbps) G.711
User Channel
Asynchronous Asynchronou s V.11/RS-232 up 19.2 kbps
®
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
88
Optical STM-1/OC-3 SFP Transceiver Name
SH1310
LH1310
LH1550
S-1.1
L-1.1
L-1.2
Application Code Operating Wavelength (nm)
1261-1360
1263-1360
1480-580
Transmitter Source Type
MLM
SLM
SLM
7.7
-
-
-
30
30
Min Mean Launched Power (dBm)
-15
-5
-5
Max Mean Launched Power (dBm)
-8
0
0
Min Extinction Ratio (dB)
8.2
10
10
Min Sensitivity (BER of -42 1x10 EOL (dBm)
-28
-34
-34
Min Overload (dBm)
-8
-10
-10
Max Receiver Reflectance (dB)
-
-
-25
96
-
-
Min Optical Return Loss of Cable (dB)
-
-
-20
Max Discreet Reflectance (dB)
-
-
25
Max Optical Path Penalty (dB)
1
1
1
Max RMS Width (nm) Min Side Mode Suppression Ratio (dB)
Receiver
Optical Path between S and R Max Dispersion (ps/nm)
®
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
89
Carrier Ethernet Functionality Functionality Latency over the radio link
< 0.15 mSeconds @ 400 Mbps
"Baby jumbo" Frame Support
Up to 1632Bytes
General
Enhanced link state propagation propagation Enhanced MAC header compression
Integrated Carrier Ethernet Switch
Integrated non-blocking non-blocking switch with 4K active VLANs MAC address learning with 8K MAC addresses 802.1ad provider bridges (QinQ) 802.3ad link aggregation 802.1ag Ethernet service OA&M (CFM) Enhanced link state propagation propagation Enhanced MAC header compression Full switch redundancy (hot stand-by)
QoS
Advanced CoS classification and remarking Advanced traffic policing/rate-limiting policing/rate-limiting Per interface CoS based packet queuing/buffering queuing/buffering (8 CoS served by 4 queues) Flexible scheduling schemes (SP/WRR/Hybrid) Per interface traffic shaping
Ethernet Service OA&M
802.1ag CFM Automatic "Link trace" processing for storing of last known working path
Performance Monitoring
Per port Ethernet counters (RMON/RMON2) Radio ACM statistics Enhanced radio Ethernet statistics (Frame Error Rate, Throughput, Capacity, Utilization)
Supported Ethernet/IP Standards
®
802.3 – 10base-T 802.3u – 100base-T 802.3ab – 1000base-T 802.3z – 1000base-X 802.3ac – Ethernet VLANs 802.1Q – Virtual LAN (VLAN) 802.1p – Class of service 802.1ad – Provider bridges (QinQ) 802.3x – Flow control 802.3ad – Link aggregation 802.1ag – Ethernet service OA&M (CFM) 802.1w – RSTP RFC 1349 – IPv4 TOS RFC 2474 – IPv4 DSCP RFC 2460 – IPv6 Traffic Classes
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
90
MEF Certification
®
MEF-9 & MEF-14 certified for all service types (EPL, EVPL & E-LAN)
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
91
Network Management, Diagnostics, Status, and Alarms
1
Network Management System
Ceragon PolyView NMS
NMS Interface protocol
SNMPv1/v3 XML over HTTP/HTTPS toward PolyView
Element Management
Web based EMS, CLI
Management Channels & Protocols
HTTP/HTTPS Telnet/SSH-2 FTP/SFTP
Authentication, Authorization & Accounting
User access control SYSLOG RADIUS Client support X-509 Certificate
Management Interface
Dedicated Ethernet interfaces interface s (up to 3) or in-band
Local Configuration and Monitoring
Standard ASCII terminal, serial RS-232
In-Band Management
Support dedicated VLAN for management (in "smart pipe" and switch modes)
TMN
Ceragon NMS functions are in accordance with ITU-T recommendations recommendati ons for TMN
External Alarms
5 Inputs: TTL-level or contact closure to ground. 1 output: Form C contact, software configurable.
RSL Indication Indicati on
Accurate power reading (dBm) available at IDU, RFU , and NMS
Performance Monitoring
Integral with onboard memory per ITU-T G.826/G.828
1
Note that the voltage at the BNC port on the RFUs is not accurate and should be used only as an aid ®
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
92
Mechanical Height: 1RU IDU Dimensions
Width: 19" Depth: 188 mm Height: 2RU
I+ Nodal Enclosure Dimensions
Width: 19" Depth: 210 mm
IDU Weight
2.8 kg/6.2 lbs (with T-Card installed)
I+ Nodal Enclosure Weight
1.5 kg/3.3 lbs
Standard compliance Specification
IDU
RFU
EMC
EN 301 489-4, Class B
EN 301 489-4, Class B
Safety
IEC 60950
IEC 60950
Ingress Protection
IEC 60529 IP20
IEC 60529 IP56
Operation
ETSI 300 019-1-3, Class 3.2
ETSI 300 019-1-4, Class 4.1E/ Class 4M5[4]
Storage
ETSI 300 019-1-1, Class 1.2
Transportation Transportation
ETSI 300 019-1-2, Class 2.3
Environmental Specification
IDU
RFU
Operating Temperature
-5 C to +55 C (23 F to 131 F)
-45 C to +55 C (-49 F to 131 F)
Relative Humidity
0 to 95%, Non-condensing
0 to 100%
Altitude
®
3,000m (10,000ft)
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
93
Power Input Standard Input
-48 VDC
DC Input range
-40.5 to -57.5 VDC (up to -57 VDC for USA market)
Optional Inputs
110-220 VAC 24 VDC
Power Consumption Max power consumption IP-10 IDU (basic configuration) configuration)
25W
Max system power consumption RFU-C + IP-10
1+0 with RFU-C 6-26 GHz: 47W 1+0 with RFU-C 28-38 GHz: 51W 1+1 with RFU-C 6-26 GHz: 84W 1+1 with RFU-C 28-38 GHz: 88W
Max system power consumption RFU-P + IP-10
1+0: 65W 1+1: 105W
Max system power consumption RFU-SP + IP-10
1+0: 80W 1+1: 130W
Max system power consumption RFU-HS + IP-10
1+0: 88W 1+1: 134W
Max system power consumption RFU-HP + IP-10
1+0: 105W 1+1: 150W
Additional power consumption for 16 E1/T1 T-card
2.5W
Additional power consumption for STM1/OC3 Mux T-card
5W (including SFP)
Note: All specifications are subject to change without prior notification.` notification.`
®
FibeAir IP-10 G-Series Product Description
94