Patent Document

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     The present invention relates generally to the field of digital communication systems more particularly to phase recovery in a synchronous communication system. 
     The use of fiber optic communications continues to grow worldwide at a rapid pace. existing communications systems do not include digital and systems and methods for phase recovery to accommodate the expanding number of individual users. 
     Currently, fiber optic communication systems distribute signals, from a central office, through a fiber distribution system, to a number of different customers each at different distances from the central office. These systems use asymmetric bandwidths for both the downstream data (from the central office to the customer) and the upstream data (from the customer to the central office) directions. As an example, a communication system, such as Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) system, uses a downstream link of 622.08 Mb/s and upstream data path of 155.52 Mb/s. 
     However, a problem arises in such ATM systems as the bursts of information travel along the upstream data link from the customers, at different distances, to the central office because the differences in distance create phase delays in the upstream data received at the central office. Additionally, this problem is usually compounded because many fiber optic communication systems use time division multiple access (TDMA) coding schemes. Under a TDMA coding scheme, the timing arrangement requires each customer to input a time variation in a time slot so that the information arrives at the central office in a timely fashion. This requirement is necessary because in a TDMA system if two or more customers from different directions send data through the upstream link, the customer that is farther away has to send his information sooner so that it falls in a time slot behind the customer that is closer. Again as in the non-TDMA case, each packet of incoming TDMA data at the central office is going to have a phase difference from the others. Thus recovering a clock reference from the upstream data is crucial for the proper synchronization and recovery of the upstream data because the recovered upstream data clock reference eliminates the effects of the phase delays on the upstream data. 
     A phase locked looped (PLL) has been used to recover this type of upstream data. An ATM type of system, as an example, requires that each packet of incoming data contains a preamble that allows a PLL to realign itself to each packet of incoming data. However, PLLs have numerous problems. The main problem is inadequate speed of signal acquisition. A PLL must adjust quickly to the incoming data packet when the size of the preamble is only a few bits long for an efficient transmission. 
     The customer premises equipment (CPE) units (telephones, PBX switches, etc.) receive the downstream clock, divide it by four to get the upstream clock, and then send the upstream data information back, in a synchronized fashion, to the central office equipment. The process of sending the upstream data information back to the central office introduces phase delays that effect the speed of signal acquisition of the PLL. 
     Thus, there is a need to develop an all digital phase recovery system (ADPRS) and method that uses the high speed downstream data clock to derive the upstream data clock in a fashion that is all-digital and would adapt very rapidly to the phase of each different packet of data as it comes in. However, at present, there is no such implementation. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     The invention and methods are directed to recovering the phase of the upstream data link in a communication system using an all-digital method. While the following examples are directed to an ATM communication system the invention and methods described apply equally well to non-ATM systems. 
     In this invention, the above problems discussed in the background of the prior art are solved, and a number of technical advances are achieved in the art by use of the downstream clock in deriving the upstream clock. 
     In accordance with one aspect of the present invention, the upstream data transmission is accomplished by using the clock derived from the downstream data transmission. The invention provides, for subsequent processing, a lower speed clock with a fixed data phase relationship that prevents false byte alignment because the invention realigns the phase on each received cell independent of which CPE transmitted the cell. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     The advantages of this invention will become apparent upon reading the following detailed description and upon reference to the drawings in which: 
     FIG. 1 shows an example of a block diagram for an ATM type of communication system in accordance with the invention using a central office switch and a number of customer premise units (CPE); 
     FIG. 2 shows the ADPRS of FIG. 6 in combination with the elements of the system in FIG. 1; 
     FIG. 3 is an illustration of a time slot structure for the upstream data format as defined by an ATM system and used in the communication system of FIG. 11; 
     FIG. 4 is a functional block diagram of the ADPRS of FIG. 2 in accordance with the invention; 
     FIG. 5 is a flow chart showing the steps performed by the ADPRS of FIG. 2; 
     FIG. 6 is a circuit diagram of the ADPRS of FIG. 2 in accordance with the invention; and 
     FIG. 7 is a comparative timing of the waveforms at the various inputs and outputs of the digital circuit of FIG.  6 . 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION 
     Referring to FIG. 1, an example of a digital communication system that incorporates the present invention. The digital communication system is shown including a central office switch  2  and a plurality of CPE units  4 ,  6  and  8 . The central office switch  2  has a plurality of clock recovery (CR) circuits  10 ,  12 , and  14 . Each CR circuit  10 ,  12  and  14  is connected to the CPE units  4 ,  6  and  8  through a passive optical network (PON). As an example, CR  10  is connected to the set of CPE units  4  through PON  16 . CR  12  is connected to the set of CPE units  6  through PON  18 . CR  14  is connected to the set of CPE units  8  through PON  20 . Thus, the upstream data is transmitted from the individual CPE units to the corresponding CR circuit at which the upstream data is recovered and processed by the central office switch  2 . The path of the downstream data from the central office switch  2  to each of the CPEs through the PONs is not shown. 
     FIG. 2 shows an ADPRS  22  in combination with the elements of the system in FIG.  1 . As an example, the ADPRS  22  is inside the CR  10 . The figure shows the ADPRS  22  connected to the central office switch  2  and the PON  16 . The central office switch  2  sends the PON  16  the downstream data  24  so that it can be transmitted to the corresponding CPEs of FIG.  1 . The PON  16  sends the ADPRS  22  an upstream data  26 . The central office switch  2  also sends the ADPRS  22  a downstream clock (CLK  28 ) to process the received upstream data  26 . When the ADPRS  22  receives the upstream data  26  and the CLK  28 , the ADPRS  22  produces a recovered upstream data clock (CLK OUT  30 ), a recovered output from the upstream data (DATA OUT  32 ), a start of cell (SOC  34 ) indicator, and preamble (PR  38 ) sequence. The CLK OUT  30 , DATA OUT  32 , SOC  34 , and PR  38  are all sent to the central office switch  2  for processing. 
     In FIG. 3 an example of a time slot frame  48  structure is shown for the upstream data  26  format of FIG.  2 . The frame  48  is one millisecond long and is composed of  324  cell slots each 60 bytes long for a total frame length of 19,440 bytes. Each cell slot has five sub-cells. The first three sub-cells are each two bytes and have the guard band (GB)  36 , the PR  38 , and a delimiter (DL)  40 . A fourth sub-cell is a one byte data indicator (DI)  42  and a fifth sub-cell is a fifty three byte asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) cell  44 . 
     The upstream data  26  of FIG. 2 is transmitted via the ATM cell  44 . The other sub-cells  36 ,  38 ,  40 , and  42  transmit the header information for the system. The GB  36  is defined as all zeros and keeps the cell slots from interfering with each other. The PR  38  is filled with the binary pattern 1010101010101010 and is used for the phase recovery. Finally, the DL  40  is filled with a value of 1011001111010000 and identifies the byte alignment while the DI  42  identifies the type of cell being transmitted. 
     FIG. 4 is a functional block diagram of the ADPRS  22  of FIG. 2 in accordance with the invention. FIG. 4 shows a phase circuit  50 , a combination circuit  60 , and a phase alignment circuit  66 , which are the main sub-circuits of the ADPRS  22 . 
     The phase circuit  50  generates a sequence of phase signals  52 . The phase circuit  50  generates N phase signals  54 ,  56 , and  58 . For illustration purposes N is chosen to be four. The phase signals  52  are inputted into a combination circuit  60  that combines the individual phase signals (such as  54 ,  56 , and  58 ) with a data packet  62  and produces a selected phase signal  64  that is closest to the data packet  62 . 
     The data packet  62  is the time slot frame  48  structure in FIG. 3 of the upstream data  26  of FIG.  2 . The selected phase signal  64  is input into a phase alignment circuit  66  that aligns the data packet  62  with the selected phase signal  64  and produces a aligned phase data sequence  68 . The aligned data sequence is the DATA OUT  32  of FIG.  2 . 
     FIG. 5 is a flow chart showing the steps performed by the FIG. 4 elements of the ADPRS  22  of FIG.  2 . The phase circuit  50  of FIG. 4 performs the first step. The phase circuit  50  generates a sequence of phase signals  52  in step  70 . The combination circuit  60  of FIG. 4 then performs multiple steps. The combination circuit  60  compares the phase signals  52  with the data packet  62  and selects a phase signal in step  76 . Next a test is performed in decision step  78  to see if the selected phase signal is closest to the data packet  62 . If the answer is no, the decision step  78  sends the process back to step  76  and select another phase signal to test. If the answer is yes, the decision step  78  sends the selected phase signal to the phase alignment circuit  66  that aligns the data packet with the selected phase signal in step  80 , produces the aligned phase data  68  of FIG. 4, and ends the process at step  82 . 
     FIG. 6 is a circuit diagram of the ADPRS  22  in FIG. 2 for the invention. As an example based on G 3 , the circuit uses the downstream data link 622.08 MHz as the downstream clock source (CLK)  28 . At initialization, a four bit shift register  84  is loaded with the binary values 0001  86  at the terminals D 0   a , D 1   a , D 2   a , and D 3   a  respectively by reset  88  which is synchronous with CLK  28 . The outputs Q 0   a , Q 1   a , Q 2   a , and Q 3   a  of the shift register  84  containing phase information PH 0 , PH 1 , PH 2 , and PH 3  are feed into the corresponding input terminals D 0   b , D 1   b , D 2   b , and D 3   b  of a four bit holding latch  90 . The corresponding outputs of the shift register  84  and the four bit latch  90  are first individually combined in separate AND gates (PH 0  AND Q 3   b  at gate  92 , PH 1  AND Q 0   b  at gate  94 , PH 2  AND Q 1   b  at gate  96 , and PH 3  and Q 2   b  at gate  98 ) and then combined again in a four bit OR gate  100 . The output of OR gate  100  is then used to enable a detector circuit  102  while PHO enables a flip-flop B  104  and a flip-flop C  106 . Both flip-flop B  104  and flip-flop C  106  use CLK  28 . The upstream data  26  is input into the D terminal of the detector circuit  102 . Then, the DL  40  output (binary sequence 1011001111010000) of the detector circuit  102  is input into an AND gate  108  which is ANDed with a stretched PR  110  from a pulse stretcher  112  and the PR  38 . The Q B  (the data closest to center bit) output of the detector circuit  102  is input into the D terminal of flip-flop C  106 . The Q terminal of flip-flop C  106  produces the DATA OUT  32  and the Q terminal of flip-flop B  104  produces the SOC  34  information. The detection circuit  102  also produces the PR  38  which is input into a flip-flop E  114  and the pulse stretcher  112 . 
     Flip-flop E  114  always has a one value at the D terminal and is clocked by PR  38 . The output of flip-flop E  114  is combined with the reset  88  in OR gate  116  and then input into a SET input of a flip-flop A  118 . Flip-flop A  118  always has a zero value at the D terminal and is clocked by an INCLK  120 . INCLK  120  is generated by the combining of the inverse of CLK  28  with the upstream data  26  in an AND gate  116 . INCLK  120  also clocks the four bit holding latch  90 . The output of flip-flop A  118  is input into the enablement of the four bit holding latch  90  and clear terminal of flip-flop E  114 . 
     The PH 0  and PH 2  values from the shift register  84  are combined in AND gate  124  and input into the enablement of flip-flop D  126 . The D input terminal of flip-flop D  126  is connected to the PH 2  value of the shift register  84  and the flip-flop D  126  output CLK OUT  30 . 
     After reset, the initialization binary value 0001 86, initially loaded into the shift register  84 , rotates through four binary values in the shift register  84  providing the phase encoding (phase signals of FIG. 4) for PH 0 , PH 1 , PH 2 , and PH 3 . PH 1  corresponds to the initial binary value 0001 86. When the upstream data  26  goes to a high state the PR  38  value goes high for two bits which clocks flip-flop E  114 . Flip-flop E  114  has a one value at its D terminal so it then sets flip-flop A  118  high when INCLK  120  is high. INCLK  120  only goes high when data is present because it is the result of upstream data  26  being ANDed with the inverse of CLK  28 . Once flip-flop A  118  goes high it enables the latch  90  and clears the flip-flop E  114 . 
     Once the latch  90  is enabled it accepts the phase signals PH 0 , PH 1 , PH 2 , and PH 3  from the shift register  84  and holds onto the phase value until the next PR  38  is received by the system. Until the next PR  38  is received, the shift register  84  counts through all the phases without loading the latch  90 . The combinatorial gates  92 ,  94 ,  96 ,  98 , and  100  the counted phase value of the shift register  84  with the stored phase value in the latch  90 . A high value at OR gate  100  will only be produced when the counted phase value of the shift register  84  matches the stored phase value of the latch  90 . 
     The detector circuit  102  is enabled when the counted phase value of the shift register  84  matches the stored phase value of the latch  90 . Once enabled the detector circuit  102  processes the upstream data  26  input and extracts the PR  38  cell, the DL  40  cell, and the Q B . The extracted PR  38 , from the detector circuit  102 , is input into the pulse stretcher  112  and used to clock flip-flop E  114 . The Q B  is used to align the DATA OUT  32  when the phase value of the shift register  84  is at binary value 1000 86. 
     The DL  40  and the stretched PR  110  are ANDed in AND gate  108  to produce a high value at flip-flop B&#39;s  104  D terminal only when both DL  40  and stretched PR  110  match which corresponds to the start of new cell. Flip-flop B  104  will produce a high SOC  34  value when both DL  40  and the stretched PR  110  match and the PH 0  is high. 
     The first, PH 0 , and third, PH 2 , phase values of the shift register  84  are combined in OR gate  124  and input into flip-flop D  126  to produce the CLK OUT  30 . Flip-flop flip-flop D  126  is enabled only when either PH 0  or PH 2  is high. Thus the flip-flop D  126  is active at one fourth the rate of CLK  28 . PH 2  is chosen as the input to flip-flop D  126  because PH 0  would give a false input at reset. 
     FIG. 7 is a comparative timing of the waveforms at the various inputs and outputs of the digital circuit of FIG.  6 . The waveforms for the CLK  28 , the phase encoded values PH 0 , PH 1 , PH 2 , PH 3 , the upstream data  26 , INCLK  120 , PR  38 , flip-flop E  114 , flip-flop A  118 , the latch  90 , the detector circuit  102  enable from OR gate  100 , flip-flop B  104 , DATA OUT  32 , and CLK OUT  30 . 
     The CLK  28  is shown having set period. In G 3  this frequency would be 622.08 Mb/s. The encoded phase values PH 0 , PH 1 , and PH 2 , and PH 3  are shown having a period a fourth as fast as CLK  28 . As the shift register  84  in FIG. 4 counts through the different phase signals, the signal waveforms of the different phases change by one period of CLK  28 . Thus, PH 1  lags PH 0  by one CLK  28  period, PH 2  lags PH 1  by one CLK  28  period, and PH 3  lags PH 2  by one CLK  28  period. 
     In FIG. 7, the diagram shows that when the upstream data  26  is high the FNCLK  120  signal is generated which has the same period as CLK  28  but inverse in amplitude. Initially when the upstream data  26  is high, a PR  38  signal is produced for two CLK  28  periods. As the PR  38  goes high it generates a high signal in flip-flop E  114 . Flip-flop E  114  sets flip-flop A  118  high which in turn quickly clears flip-flop E  114  back to a zero value. Flip-flop A  118  enables the latch  90  to accept the new phase value from the shift register  84  of FIG.  4 . As an example, if the old phase value in the latch  90  was PH 0  (OPV=1) the new phase value would be PH 3  (NPV=3) because the high value of flip-flop A  118  lines up with the high value of PH 3 . 
     The OR gate  100  is shown producing a high value every four periods of CLK  28 . This is a result of the shift register  84  of FIG. 4 counting through all four phase values before matching the stored phase value in the latch  90 . Once the OR gate  100  (detector circuit  102  enablement) output is ANDed with the stretched PR  110  of FIG. 4, flip-flop B  104  produces a pulse, corresponding to the SOC  34  of FIG. 4, that is aligned with the PR  52  and has a period one eighth the CLK  28 . DATA OUT  32  is then shown to align to the output of flip-flop B  104 . CLK OUT  30  is aligned to DATA OUT  32  and of one-fourth the period of CLK  28 . 
     While the specification in this invention is described in relation to certain implementations or embodiments, many details are set forth for the purpose of illustration. Thus, the foregoing merely illustrates the principles of the invention. For example, this invention may have other specific forms without departing from its spirit or essential characteristics. The described arrangements are illustrative and not restrictive. To those skilled in the art, the invention is susceptible to additional implementations or embodiments and certain of the details described in this application can be varied considerably without departing from the basic principles of the invention. It will thus be appreciated that those skilled in the art will be able to devise various arrangements which, although not explicitly described or shown herein, embody the principles of the invention and are thus within its spirit and scope.

Technology Category: 5