Two-Fiber Blsrs; Figure 5-1 A Four-Node, Two-Fiber Blsr - Cisco ONS 15327 User Documentation

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Bidirectional Line Switched Rings
Two-fiber BLSRs can support up to 32 ONS 15327s, but switch times are slightly longer for rings
Note
containing more than 16 nodes. BLSRs with 16 or fewer nodes will meet the GR-1230 switch time
requirement.

5.2.1 Two-Fiber BLSRs

In two-fiber BLSRs, each fiber is divided into working and protect bandwidths. For example, in an
OC-48 BLSR
protection. Working traffic (STSs 1 – 24) travels in one direction on one fiber and in the opposite
direction on the second fiber. The Cisco Transport Controller (CTC) circuit routing routines calculate
the "shortest path" for circuits based on many factors, including requirements set by the circuit
provisioner, traffic patterns, and distance. For example, in
Node 1 typically will travel on Fiber 1, unless that fiber is full, in which case circuits will be routed on
Fiber 2 through Node 3 and Node 2. Traffic from Node 0 to Node 2 (or Node 1 to Node 3), may be routed
on either fiber, depending on circuit provisioning requirements and traffic loads.
Figure 5-1
Node 3
Cisco ONS 15327 User Documentation, R3.3
5-2
(Figure
5-1), STSs 1 – 24 carry the working traffic, and STSs 25 – 48 are reserved for
A four-node, two-fiber BLSR sample traffic pattern
Node 0
OC-48 Ring
Node 2
Chapter 5
Figure
5-1, circuits going from Node 0 to
STSs 1-24 (working)
STSs 25-48 (protect)
STSs 1-24 (working)
STSs 25-48 (protect)
Node 1
SONET Topologies
= Fiber 1
= Fiber 2
June 2002

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