Blsr Bandwidth - Cisco ONS 15454 Reference Manual

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Chapter 12
SONET Topologies and Upgrades
Figure 12-6
Node 3

12.2.3 BLSR Bandwidth

BLSR nodes can terminate traffic coming from either side of the ring. Therefore, BLSRs are suited for
distributed node-to-node traffic applications such as interoffice networks and access networks.
BLSRs allow bandwidth to be reused around the ring and can carry more traffic than a network with
traffic flowing through one central hub. BLSRs can also carry more traffic than a path protection
operating at the same OC-N rate.
BLSRs. The capacity is the OC-N rate divided by two, multiplied by the number of nodes in the ring
minus the number of pass-through STS-1 circuits.
Table 12-2
OC Rate
OC-12
OC-48
OC-192
1. N equals the number of ONS 15454 nodes configured as BLSR nodes.
2. PT equals the number of STS-1 circuits passed through ONS 15454 nodes in the ring (capacity can vary
Table 12-3
OL-9217-01
Four-Fiber BLSR Ring Switch
Span 4
Span 5
Span 6
Span 3
Two-Fiber BLSR Capacity
Working Bandwidth
STS1-6
STS 1-24
STS 1-96
depending on the traffic pattern).
shows the bidirectional bandwidth capacities of four-fiber BLSRs.
Node 0
Span 8
OC-48 Ring
Span 7
Node 2
Table 12-2
shows the bidirectional bandwidth capacities of two-fiber
Protection Bandwidth
STS 7-12
STS 25-48
STS 97-192
Cisco ONS 15454 Reference Manual, R7.0.1
12.2 12.2.3 BLSR Bandwidth
Span 1
Node 1
Span 2
= Working fibers
= Protect fibers
Ring Capacity
1
2
6 x N
– PT
24 x N – PT
96 x N – PT
12-9

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