5-20
Cisco ONS 15327 User Documentation, R3.3
June 2002
Chapter 5 SONET Topologies
Unidirectional Path Switched Rings
Step 7
Disable the ring on the current node:
a.
Click the
Provisioning > Ring
tabs.
b.
Highlight the ring and click
Delete
.
c.
On the confirmation message, confirm that this is the ring you want to delete. If so, click
Yes
.
Step 8
If an OC-N card is a timing source, select the
Provisioning > Timing
tabs and set timing to Internal.
Step 9
Place the ports on the card out of service:
a.
Double-click the card.
b.
On the
Provisioning > Line
tabs in the Status section, choose
Out of Service
for each port.
Step 10
Physically remove the card.
Step 11
Insert the card into its new slot and wait for the card to boot.
Step 12
To delete the card from its former slot, right-click the card in node view and select
Delete
from the list
of options.
Step 13
Place the port(s) back in service:
a.
To open the card, double-click or right-click the card and select
Open
.
b.
Click the
Provisioning
tab.
c.
From Status choose
In Service
.
d.
Click
Apply
.
Step 14
Follow the steps described in the
“Setting Up BLSRs” section on page 5-7
to reenable the ring using the
same cards (in their new slots) and ports for east and west. Use the same BLSR Ring ID and Node ID
that was used before the trunk card was moved.
Step 15
Recreate the circuits that were deleted. See the
“Create an Automatically Routed Circuit” procedure on
for instructions.
Step 16
If you use line timing and the card you are moving is a timing reference, reenable the timing parameters
on the card. See the
“Set Up ONS 15327 Timing” procedure on page 3-13
for instructions.
5.3 Unidirectional Path Switched Rings
UPSRs provide duplicate fiber paths around the ring. Working traffic flows in one direction and
protection traffic flows in the opposite direction. If a problem occurs in the working traffic path, the
receiving node switches to the path coming from the opposite direction.
CTC automates ring configuration. UPSR traffic is defined within the ONS 15327 on a circuit-by-circuit
basis. If a path-protected circuit is not defined within a 1+1 or BLSR line protection scheme and path
protection is available and specified, CTC uses UPSR as the default.
shows a basic UPSR configuration. If Node ID 0 sends a signal to Node ID 2, the working
signal travels on the working traffic path through Node ID 1. The same signal is also sent on the protect
traffic path through Node ID 3. If a fiber break occurs (
), Node ID 2 switches its active
receiver to the protect signal coming through Node ID 3.
Because each traffic path is transported around the entire ring, UPSRs are best suited for networks where
traffic concentrates at one or two locations and is not widely distributed. UPSR capacity is equal to its
bit rate. Services can originate and terminate on the same UPSR, or they can be passed to an adjacent
access or interoffice ring for transport to the service-terminating location.
Summary of Contents for ONS 15327
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Page 30: ...Figures xxviii Cisco ONS 15327 User Documentation June 2002 ...
Page 44: ...Procedures xlii Cisco ONS 15454 Installation and Operations Guide R3 2 June 2002 ...
Page 540: ...Glossary GL 16 Cisco ONS 15327 User Documentation R3 3 June 2002 ...