Abstract:
A network element of an optical communications network. The network element comprises an electronic router for forwarding traffic between a set of client access ports and a plurality of I/O ports. A respective EO interface is coupled to each one of the plurality of I/O ports. Each EO interface terminates a respective optical channel. A directionally independent access (DIA) node is configured to selectively route each optical channel between its respective EO interface and a selected one of at least two optical fiber links of the optical communications network.

Description:
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS 
     This application is based on, and claims benefit of, U.S. Provisional patent Application No. 61/313,172, filed Mar. 12, 2010, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference. 
    
    
     MICROFICHE APPENDIX 
     Not Applicable. 
     TECHNICAL FIELD 
     The present invention relates generally to optical communication systems, and in particular to a Shared Photonic Mesh network. 
     BACKGROUND 
     Today&#39;s Fibre optic transmission systems are employing recent advances in optical switching technology to provide reconfiguration at the optical layer. The networks created in the photonic domain have evolved from simple point-to-point and ring architectures to more arbitrary topologies. That is to say that it is possible to redirect the individual channels within a dense wavelength division multiplexed (DWDM) system onto different transmission fibres. This is what is commonly referred to as the photonic mesh architecture. 
     One of the purported benefits of mesh architectures is the ability to more efficiently use network resources to provide resiliency. This is a well known benefit of internet protocol (IP) router architectures which lend themselves readily to such topologies. The corresponding increased reliance on more complex routing and switching nodes in the network drives more cost into these nodes. 
     The increase in use of optical switching promises to alleviate some of this additional cost by eliminating the need for multiple transponder interfaces. It is also desirable to keep the signals in the optical domain for as much of their transit distance in the system because of the inherent power efficiency of optical components. Optical components have power dissipation several orders of magnitude smaller than the equivalent functions in the electronic domain. However; it is a practical reality that optical switching, especially those which are cost effective and low power, have switching speeds several orders of magnitude slower than their electrical counterparts. Therefore, although there is a potential savings in cost (both capital and energy), there is a penalty in the performance of such an entirely optical network in terms of reconfiguration speed. 
     A motivation of this invention is to eliminate as many transponder interfaces as possible while maintaining overall system availability and keeping a low switching time for failure events. 
     There are different types of failures which may lead to the need to reconfigure the network. It is possible to categorize these in two groups. The first is span failures (which include fibre cuts, line amplifier failures, etc.) which make a link between the routers unavailable. The second is equipment failures at the routing nodes which make individual ports on the nodes unavailable. The first type of failure tends to be the dominant one in most long haul networks. 
     Two factors contribute to this fact. First, recent advances in transponder technology allow for the use of 1000&#39;s of km of fibre optic transmission in the optical domain with out the need for electrical regeneration. This elimination of electro-optical (EO) interfaces drives down the failures due to this equipment. In addition, network operators may find it difficult to repair broken fibres in some locations. Underwater cables are an example where it may take a long time for the fibre to be repaired in the case of a break. Also, it is costly to provide the level of service required to ensure a mean time to repair (MTTR) on fibre cable. It is much simpler to ensure a low MTTR for equipment located in the central office (CO). 
     Prior to the introduction of photonic switches, all reconfiguration had to be performed in the electronic domain.  FIG. 1  shows an example of a network  2  where all switching/routing nodes are interconnected in a mesh fashion. In the illustration of  FIG. 1 , the network  2  is divided into an Internet Protocol/Multi-Protocol Label Switching (IP/MPLS) layer  4  and an optical transport layer  6 . The optical transport layer  6  comprises the physical infrastructure of the network, and comprises physical switching nodes  8  (such as, for example, Reconfigurable Optical Add/Drop Multiplexers (ROADMs)) interconnected by DWDM optical channels  10  routed through optical fiber links  12 . The IP/MPLS layer  4  comprises a respective router  14  for each physical switching node  8  of the optical transport layer  6 , and provides path computation and protection switching for traffic flows through the network  2 . Typically, each router provides electronic switching capacity between a set of client access ports (not shown) and a set of I/O ports connected to EO interfaces that transmit and receive optical signals through the optical transport layer  6  The IP/MPLS layer  4  typically represents each optical channel  10  as a connection  16  extending between a pair of electro-optical (EO) interfaces, and comprising working (W) and protection (P) transport capacity. For simplicity of illustration, each of the connections  16  corresponds with a respective fiber link  12  in the optical transport layer  6 . However, it will be appreciated that this will frequently not be the case. For example, consider an optical channel  10  that extends through the optical transport layer  6  between nodes A and E, which passes through node B without terminating. In this case, corresponding connection  16  in the IP/MPLS layer  4  would extend directly between router A and router E, and bypass router B. 
     The IP/MPLS layer  4  ensures end to end survivability against all failures including optical layer equipment failures and network fiber cuts through the use of additional capacity. This “restoration capacity” is determined using off-line planning tools by running link failure analysis and/or engineered by keeping router trunk utilization below a threshold of 50%. The amount of restoration bandwidth determines the level of network survivability. 
     This type of network uses the same mechanism to protect the system against both span and equipment failures. This is inefficient, since there are many more EO interfaces in place to protect against span failures than are needed for equipment redundancy, especially at high-degree nodes (those with more than two directions intersecting at them). 
     Techniques which enable the elimination of as many transponder interfaces as possible while maintaining overall system flexibility and keeping a low switching time for reconfiguration events remain highly desirable. 
     SUMMARY 
     Accordingly, an aspect of the present invention provides a network element of an optical communications network. The network element comprises an electronic router for forwarding traffic between a set of client access ports and a plurality of I/O ports. A respective EO interface is coupled to each one of the plurality of I/O ports. Each EO interface terminates a respective optical channel. A directionally independent access (DIA) node is configured to selectively route each optical channel between its respective EO interface and a selected one of at least two optical fiber links of the optical communications network. 
    
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
       Representative embodiments of the invention will now be described by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which: 
         FIG. 1  is a block diagram schematically illustrating elements of a communications network utilizing electronic traffic switching and optical transport, known in the art; 
         FIG. 2  is a block diagram schematically illustrating elements of a communications network communications network utilizing electronic traffic switching and optical layer restoration, in accordance with a representative embodiment of the present invention; 
         FIG. 3  is a block diagram schematically illustrating a first step in a protection/restoration process in accordance with a representative embodiment of the present invention, implemented in the network of  FIG. 2 ; 
         FIG. 4  is a block diagram schematically illustrating a second step in a protection/restoration process in accordance with a representative embodiment of the present invention, implemented in the network of  FIG. 2 ; and 
         FIG. 5  is a block diagram schematically illustrating elements of a directionally independent access node in accordance with a representative embodiment of the present invention usable in the embodiments of  FIGS. 2-4 . 
     
    
    
     It will be noted that throughout the appended drawings, like features are identified by like reference numerals. 
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION 
     In very general terms, the present invention provides methods and systems in which shared electro-optic (EO) interfaces and optical switching technology are used to create a resilient mesh network with a minimum of redundant EO interfaces. This is particularly effective in networks where span availability is a major contributor to the system unavailability. 
     A first representative embodiment is shown in  FIG. 2 . Each node includes a conventional electronic router, which in this case is augmented with a directionally independent access (DIA) node  18  that provides colourless directionally independent access for all of the channels terminating at that location. This arrangement is also compatible with a ROADM where wavelengths can be reconfigured when transiting the node. 
     The DIA node  18  enables any optical channel  10  that terminates at the node to be routed through any fiber link  12  attached to the node. Therefore, it is not necessary for the node to have as many EO interfaces as there are channels supported by that node. Instead, the node can be configured with the minimum number of EO interfaces required to support client facing ports and to protect for router equipment failures. Span protection can be achieved by the optical reconfiguration of the DIA node  18 . This is a two step process. 
       FIG. 3  shows how the first step in system recovery to a span failure. In the scenario of  FIG. 3 , a span failure occurs on the fiber span we connecting nodes A and B in the Optical transport layer  6 , indicated by an X in the drawing. The span failure is detected by the routers  14  in the IP-MPLS layer as a connection failure affecting the connection  16  between the affected routers  14   a  and  14   b . In response to the detected connection failure, the routers A and B implement a conventional protection switching operation to electronically switch the affected traffic to designated protection capacity in the connections AC and CB, using a protection path that is either predetermined or computed following detection of the failure. As a result, the affected traffic flows are re-routed to pass through router C, which restores the traffic flow between routers A and B while bypassing the failed connection  16 , and thus the failed fiber link  12 . 
     As may be appreciated, this first switching event is handled entirely in the electronic domain (that is, in the IP/MPLS layer  4 ) which means that the system response time is very fast. However, the network is now in a state where it is vulnerable to a second failure, affecting either network equipment or a fiber span, which could cause an outage. Even without a second failure, the network links carrying the traffic switched from the failed link are now more heavily loaded, which leaves the network less resilient to peaks or bursts of traffic as are common to routed networks. The probability of a second failure occurring increases with the time spent in this condition. In the prior art, if the system doesn&#39;t have adequate additional bandwidth for multiple failures, one must take this time to be the MTTR for a span failure. On the other hand, this additional bandwidth drives cost in EO interfaces and in router/switch capacity. 
     The present invention avoids this problem by re-routing the EO interface which was facing the failed direction (fiber span) onto another fibre direction through the reconfiguration of the DIA nodes  18  as may be seen in  FIG. 4 . Thus, at nodes A and B, the EO interfaces that terminate optical channels  10  affected by the span failure are identified. The DIA nodes  18   a  and  18   c  are then reconfigured so that new optical channels can be set up between the identified EO interfaces, which traverse fiber links AC and CB, and pass through the DIA mode  18   c  at node C. The EO interfaces may be re-tuned to new channel wavelengths, as required to support the new channels  10 . Once these new optical channels  10  have been set up and validated (in a conventional manner), they can be advertised to the IP/MPLS layer  4  a working connections between nodes A and B. As a result, routers  14   a  and  14   b  in the IP/MPLS layer recognise that the connection AB  16  has been restored, and so can switch the protection traffic back onto working transport capacity of that connection. One other interesting benefit of this approach, which should be evident from the  FIGS. 3 and 4 , is that the network topology presented to the IP/MPLS layer  4  remains the same before and after restoration. This is because the re-routed channels  10  pass through DIA node  18 C without terminating at that node, and therefore appear as a direct connection  16  in the IP/MPLS layer  4 . 
     Transport networks such as the type described above sometimes also have a sensitivity to the latency of the transport of data between the router ports which terminate any given connection. In some embodiments of the present invention there is provided a route calculation for the optical layer restoration, where the delay or latency is considered in the selection of the restoration path. In a system where the is a rich fibre interconnect and where there is an abundance of router bypass at the optical layer, there will often be photonic restoration paths which will have lower latency than the path that the data will take through the IP/MPLS restoration path. Thus, for example, a controller (which may be co-located with a node or at a central location, as desired) may compute two or more candidate routes through the optical transport layer  6  for the new channel, and estimate the latency for each route. based on this information, the controller may then select the best route (for example the route having the lowest latency) and set up the new channel over the selected route. This embodiment has the additional advantage of restoring not only the network to a pre-failure level of utilization and resiliancy, but it also restores it to a more comparable overall latency. 
     The two step process outlined above is beneficial in that the electrical protection switching step provides a rapid response to network failures, and then the second step enables the restoration of the protection-switched traffic back onto working transport capacity that bypasses the failed span. While a second fiber span failure could cause an outage, the probability of such an event is very much lower than the probability of a failure affecting IP/MPLS layer network equipment (such as EO interfaces, routers etc.). Consequently, this approach yields a very low “effective MTTR” which can dramatically improve the availability of the network as a whole. 
       FIG. 5  schematically illustrates a possible directionally independent access (DIA) node  18  usable in the present invention. In the embodiment of  FIG. 5 , the DIA node  18  comprises a network of three Wavelength Selective Switches WSSs  20 , which are interconnected between a set of EO interfaces  22 , and two transmission fiber pairs defining respective bidirectional optical links  12  between the DIA node  18  and counterpart DIA nodes  18  connected to other nodes  8  of the network. Other configurations, which may provide interconnection to more than two transmission fibre pairs, are possible, and may be used, if desired. 
     As may be seen in  FIG. 5 , each WSS  20  includes a common-IN port  24 , a common-OUT port  26  and set of m switch ports  28 . Each switch port  28  comprises an Add port  28   a  and a Drop port  28   b . In operation, the WSS  20  is designed to selectively switch any wavelength channel from the common-IN port to the Drop port of any one of the switch ports  28 , and to selectively switch any wavelength channel received through the Add port of any given switch port  28  to either the common-OUT port  26  or to the Drop port of any one of the other switch ports  28 . In the DIA node  18  of  FIG. 5 , a first WSS  20   a  hosts a set of EO interfaces  22  which terminate optical channels  10  being added or dropped at the node  8 , and selectively switches these channels to the two branch Wavelength Selective Switches  20   b  and  20   c , each of which is connected to a respective transmission fiber pair  12 . With this arrangement, a wavelength channel received by one branch WSS (say, WSS  20   b ) through its common-IN port  24 , can be selectively switched to either: the first WSS  20   a , which can then switch the received channel through to a local OE interface  22 ; or the other branch WSS  20   c , which can then switch the received channel through to its common-OUT port  26  for transmission to a neighbour node of the network. Conversely, a wavelength channel received by the first WSS  20   a  from a local OE interface  22  can be selectively switched to either one of the branch WSSs  20   b , 20   c , which can then switch the received channel through to its common-OUT port.  26 . for transmission to a neighbour node of the network. 
     In the embodiment of  FIG. 5 , the operation of the first WSS  20   a  and the local OE interfaces  22  is colourless, as described in Applicant&#39;s International patent application Serial No. PCT/CA2009/001455. Thus, in the illustrated embodiment, the common out port  26  is connected to a 1:n power splitter  30 , which receives a set of dropped wavelength channels from the first WSS  20   a  and supplies these channels to each one of a corresponding set of s coherent receivers (cRx)  22   r . Each coherent receiver (cRx) is preferably tuneable, so that it can receive a wavelength channel signal centered a desired carrier wavelength (or frequency). In some embodiments in which tuneable coherent receivers are used, the frequency range of each receiver  22   r  may be wide enough to enable the receiver to tune in any channel of the network. In other embodiments, the dynamic range of each receiver  22   r  may be wide enough to enable the receiver to tune in any one of a subset of channels of the network. In still other embodiments, each receiver may be non-tuneable. Each coherent receiver  22   r  must be designed having a CMRR which enables the receiver to tune in and receive a selected one channel while rejecting each of the other channels presented to it. Conversely, a 1:n power combiner  32  is used to combine channel signals generated by a respective set of transmitters (Tx)  22   t , and supply the resulting wavelength division multiplexed (WDM) signal to the common in port  24  of WSS  20   a . Preferably, each transmitter (Tx)  22   t  is tuneable, so that it can generate a wavelength channel signal centered on a desired carrier wavelength (or frequency). In some embodiments in which tuneable transmitters are used, the dynamic range of each transmitter (Tx)  22   t  may be wide enough to enable the transmitter (Tx)  22   t  to generate any channel of the network. In other embodiments, the dynamic range of each transmitter (Tx)  22   t  may be wide enough to enable the transmitter (Tx) t 22  to generate any one of a subset of channels of the network. In still other embodiments, each transmitter (Tx)  22   t  may be non-tuneable. It should be noted that while only a single set of 1:n power splitters and combiners is described herein, there are other embodiments with combinations of WSS stages combined with power splitter and combiner stages which can support more channels in a colorless fashion, the details of which are described in the referenced international patent application. 
     As noted above, in the embodiment of  FIG. 5 , the EO interfaces  22  are connected to the common-IN and common-OUT port  26 ,  24  if the first WSS  20   a . However, it will be appreciated that this is not essential. In fact, those of ordinary skill in the art will recognise that EO interfaces  22  may be connected to one or more of the switch ports  28 , either alone or in combination with EO interfaces  22  connected to the common ports  24  and  26 . 
     In the foregoing description, the present invention is described with reference to a representative embodiment in which electronic traffic routing functionality is provided by an IP/MPLS layer. However, it will be appreciated that this is not essential. In fact, the techniques of the present invention can be implemented in any network in which a connection-oriented electronic traffic routing layer is over-laid on an optical transport layer. Thus, for example, in alternative embodiments, the electronic traffic routing layer may be implemented using an Ethernet technology, without departing from the scope of the present invention. 
     Although the invention has been described with reference to certain specific embodiments, various modifications thereof will be apparent to those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as outlined in the claims appended hereto.