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Re: [802.3_NGEPON] 10/01/15 NG-EPON Consensus building meeting notes



Frank,

 

10G-EPON uses exactly the same MAC as is used in 10G point-to-point. This MAC runs at exactly 10Gb/s, no matter what the actual data throughput. The PHY adds an overhead due to FEC, so the effective throughput is lower. The data is throttled above MAC to make sure it does not overrun PHY capacity. But the MAC spits bits (idles if there is no data) out at exactly 10Gb/s. In other words, the data path in 10G-EPON runs at 10Gb/s.

 

Since the PAR scope is the upper bound and what the project is allowed to cover (as David clarified on the call), the existing scope limits us to only 25G and 100G MACs and nothing else.

If we don’t add 50G MAC, then we will have the MAC and the entire data path running at either 25Gb/s or 100Gb/s, no matter how many wavelengths are activated. This is what we try to avoid. We need to allow another generation between 25G and 100G.

 

Glen

 

From: frank effenberger [mailto:frank.effenberger@xxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Friday, October 02, 2015 10:27 AM
To: STDS-802-3-NGEPON@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [802.3_NGEPON] FW: 10/01/15 NG-EPON Consensus building meeting notes

 

It bounced for some reason…

 

From: frank effenberger
Sent: Friday, October 02, 2015 1:18 PM
To: 'Curtis Knittle'; STDS-802-3-NGEPON@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: 10/01/15 NG-EPON Consensus building meeting notes

 

Sorry we missed the call. 

 

I would note that explicitly adding 50G at this time invites “no” votes right now, as there are no other 50G MAC projects. 

The existing idea was that the 100G PHY would be made in such a way as to allow reduced rate (i.e., fewer channel) operation.  Why does this not suffice? 

Also, such degradation would not require seeking special permission from the parent group.  As a case in point, 10GEPON actually is a 8.7GEPON.  We chose to do FEC sub-rating.

So the actual MAC rate is lower than normal, using the forcing of larger inter-packet gaps.  Again, why do we think the reduce rate 100G would be any different? 

 

Thanks,

Frank E.

 

 

From: Curtis Knittle [mailto:C.Knittle@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Friday, October 02, 2015 12:20 PM
To: STDS-802-3-NGEPON@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [802.3_NGEPON] 10/01/15 NG-EPON Consensus building meeting notes

 

Folks,

Please let me know if I need to add to or revise the notes below. Note, Marek’s contribution for the meeting is attached.

 

Curtis

 

 

 

10/01/2015

IEEE 802.3 NG-EPON Study Group Work Items and Socialization

 

·         Review of Guidelines for IEEE-SA meetings.

o   https://development.standards.ieee.org/myproject/Public/mytools/mob/preparslides.pdf

o   Has anyone not seen these Guidelines? Everyone has seen the guidelines

·         November meeting

o   Study Group meeting times (tentative but likely):

§  Tuesday, 11/10, 1 pm – 5:30 pm

§  Wednesday, 11/11, 9 am – 5:30 pm

§  Thursday, 11/12, 9:00 am – 12:00 pm

·         CSD/PAR/Objectives timeline

·         Deliverables for Plenary

o   Comments due from 802 by 6:30 pm 11/10. Comments resolved by 6:30 pm 11/11

·         Critical/Baseline decisions (reference Marek’s presentation attached to email)

o   Pros and cons of channel bonding at different sublayers – below MII, above MII, above MAC

o   Terminology

o   Fiber data (see slide 8)

o   Channel model (see slide 8)

o   See Marek’s presentation for additional key baseline decisions

·         Leads for areas

o   Group was asked to consider high level areas for which a lead would be identified to drive the contributions and decisions for that area. Examples are architecture, features, baseline, etc.

o   This would be different from creating ad hoc committees. While less formal than ad hocs, there would be improved organization with leads identified

o   Task force members can contribute wherever they want – there are no restrictions.

·         Miscellaneous

o   Scope of PAR: might need to add something to the scope to allow for rates between 25G and 100G, or something about degraded rates. Exceeding the scope by doing 50G, for example, when we’ve only mentioned 25G and 100G, could bring some “no” votes because it doesn’t match the scope.

§  Two augmentations to the scope: intermediate MAC rates, “symmetric and/or asymmetric operation” (like in .3av)

o   Risk: if we don’t change the scope, then we risk not getting approval in 2 years when we do sponsor ballot. If we do change the PAR, people might think it’s too big of a change and vote no. The commenting process is used to make changes to the PAR all the time. We need to make sure we have a good story regarding these changes.

o   Group initially considered scope as a minimum, which allowed operation at 50 Gbps, but it turns out this is not the case. The scope places upper bounds on the project.

o   Proposed scope change: The scope of this project is to amend IEEE Std 802.3 to add physical layer specifications and management parameters for symmetric and/or asymmetric operation at 25 Gb/s, 50 Gb/s, and 100 Gb/s MAC data rates on point-to-multipoint passive optical networks.

 

 

 

Name

Employer/Affiliation

Alan Brown

CommScope

Bill Powell

ALU

Bruce Chow

Corning

Barry Colella

Source Photonics

Curtis Knittle

CableLabs

David Law

HP

Derrick Cassidy

BT

Doug Jones

Comcast

Duane Remein

Huawei

Ed Harstead

ALU

Fernando Villarruel

Cisco

Francois Menard

Aeponyx

Glen Kramer

Broadcom

Hesham ElBakoury

Huawei

Jeff Finkelstein

Cox

Jorge Salinger

Comcast

Kevin Bourg

Corning

Kevin Noll

TWC

Marek Hajduczenia

Bright House Networks

Mark Laubach

Broadcom

Michael Peters

Sumitomo

Mike Emmendorfer

Arris

Moiz Lokhandwala

TWC

Phil Miguelez

Comcast

Philip Oakley

Virgin Media

Ryan Hirth

Broadcom

Ryan Tucker

Charter

Saif Rahman

Comcast

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Curtis Knittle

Director, Optical Technologies

 

CableLabs

858 Coal Creek Circle

Louisville, CO 80027

Office: 303-661-3851

Mobile: 303-589-6869

Email: c.knittle@xxxxxxxxxxxxx