Physical Layer
2-15
Physical Layer
The physical layer is responsible for transmitting and
receiving ATM cells over a physical medium. It is also
responsible for checking the integrity of the bits being
transferred over a physical media, and for making
sure that they are error-free.
The ATM Module is compliant with both
SONET STS-3c
and
SDH STM-1
physical layer standards.
These standards are similar, and most devices allow
you to use either framing standard on each link in the
ATM network.The same framing standard must be
used at each end of the link.
Many users prefer to use the same framing standard
throughout their network (for example SONET STS-3c).
The physical layer is sub-divided into:
■
Path
— SONET and SDH are capable of carrying
traffic for a number of uppers layers, and ATM is
only one of those layers. Each upper layer uses its
own
Path
through the SONET/SDH layer.
■
Line
— A
line
is the whole path between one ATM
device and the adjacent ATM switch or ATM
end-station.
■
Section
— When ATM is used for telephone
networks, a
line
may cover a large distance,
requiring optical repeaters to boost the signal
along its way. The part of a
line
between an optical
repeater and the adjacent repeater or switch is
known as a
section
.
SONET STS-3c
Synchronous Optical Network (SONET) is the physical
layer most often associated with ATM. SONET provides,
through a framing structure, the mechanism for the
transport of ATM cells. Data can be transferred at
155.52Mbps.
SDH STM-1
SDH STM-1 is a physical layer similar to the SONET layer,
but with some differences in frame fields. SDH STM-1 is
the physical layer commonly used in Europe.
The physical layer and ATM layers in the network
provide simple performance monitoring functions
between ATM devices; providing basic information
about the health of the link. These functions are
known as “Operation and Maintenance (OAM)”
functions.
Summary of Contents for OPTIONS ATM OC-3c
Page 1: ...8271 Nways Ethernet LAN Switch ATM OC 3c Module User s Guide...
Page 6: ......
Page 10: ...4 ABOUT THIS GUIDE...
Page 23: ...Asynchronous Transfer Mode ATM Layer 2 11 Figure 2 7 Switching Cells using VPI and VCI values...
Page 28: ...2 16 CHAPTER 2 NETWORK LAYER CONCEPTS...
Page 31: ...Extending VLANs into the ATM Network 3 3 Figure 3 3 Extending VLANs into the ATM Network...
Page 32: ...3 4 CHAPTER 3 VIRTUAL LAN CONCEPTS...
Page 39: ...Campus Configuration 5 3 Figure 5 2 Campus and Cost Sensitive Network...
Page 50: ...7 2 CHAPTER 7 ACCESSING MANAGEMENT FEATURES Figure 7 1 Screen Map...
Page 80: ...9 14 CHAPTER 9 MONITORING THE ATM MODULE...
Page 87: ...Safety Notices A 7 IEC 950 SELV SELV...
Page 88: ...A 8 APPENDIX A SAFETY INFORMATION...
Page 90: ...B 2 APPENDIX B SCREEN ACCESS RIGHTS...
Page 94: ...C 4 APPENDIX C ATM MODULE TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS...
Page 98: ...D 4 APPENDIX D TROUBLESHOOTING Figure D 1 Troubleshooting Flow Diagram...
Page 120: ...E 2 APPENDIX E TECHNICAL SUPPORT AND SERVICE...
Page 136: ...2 BIBLIOGRAPHY...
Page 140: ...4 INDEX...