WO1997009803A1 - Optical communication system - Google Patents

Optical communication system Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO1997009803A1
WO1997009803A1 PCT/CA1996/000580 CA9600580W WO9709803A1 WO 1997009803 A1 WO1997009803 A1 WO 1997009803A1 CA 9600580 W CA9600580 W CA 9600580W WO 9709803 A1 WO9709803 A1 WO 9709803A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
protection
optical
node
channel
terminals
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/CA1996/000580
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Thomas P. J. Flanagan
Siraj E. Elahmadi
Original Assignee
Northern Telecom Limited
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Northern Telecom Limited filed Critical Northern Telecom Limited
Priority to JP51071597A priority Critical patent/JP3362228B2/en
Priority to DE69627165T priority patent/DE69627165T2/en
Priority to EP96927489A priority patent/EP0848873B1/en
Publication of WO1997009803A1 publication Critical patent/WO1997009803A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04JMULTIPLEX COMMUNICATION
    • H04J14/00Optical multiplex systems
    • H04J14/02Wavelength-division multiplex systems
    • H04J14/0221Power control, e.g. to keep the total optical power constant
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B10/00Transmission systems employing electromagnetic waves other than radio-waves, e.g. infrared, visible or ultraviolet light, or employing corpuscular radiation, e.g. quantum communication
    • H04B10/03Arrangements for fault recovery
    • H04B10/032Arrangements for fault recovery using working and protection systems
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04JMULTIPLEX COMMUNICATION
    • H04J14/00Optical multiplex systems
    • H04J14/02Wavelength-division multiplex systems
    • H04J14/0278WDM optical network architectures
    • H04J14/0283WDM ring architectures
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04JMULTIPLEX COMMUNICATION
    • H04J14/00Optical multiplex systems
    • H04J14/02Wavelength-division multiplex systems
    • H04J14/0287Protection in WDM systems
    • H04J14/0289Optical multiplex section protection
    • H04J14/0291Shared protection at the optical multiplex section (1:1, n:m)
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04JMULTIPLEX COMMUNICATION
    • H04J14/00Optical multiplex systems
    • H04J14/02Wavelength-division multiplex systems
    • H04J14/0287Protection in WDM systems
    • H04J14/0293Optical channel protection
    • H04J14/0295Shared protection at the optical channel (1:1, n:m)
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04JMULTIPLEX COMMUNICATION
    • H04J14/00Optical multiplex systems
    • H04J14/02Wavelength-division multiplex systems
    • H04J14/0287Protection in WDM systems
    • H04J14/0297Optical equipment protection

Definitions

  • This invention relates to communication systems, and is particularly concerned with an optical communication system in which protection is provided against failures, for example due to an optical fiber cable cut.
  • BLSR systems provide effective fault protection, or survivability, for new communication system installations, but can not be easily applied to already-existing (synchronous or asynchronous) communication systems without requiring costly equipment upgrades.
  • BLSR systems have disadvantages in that they have a high utilization of optical fibers, do not provide for 1:N (N > 1) protection (i.e. protection of N working (W) channels using one protection (P) channel), and they are not bit-rate or wavelength transparent (i.e. a change in wavelength or bit rate, such as a change from SONET OC-48 to OC-192 signals for increased capacity, involves a change in equipment).
  • N > 1 protection i.e. protection of N working (W) channels using one protection (P) channel
  • P protection
  • bit-rate or wavelength transparent i.e. a change in wavelength or bit rate, such as a change from SONET OC-48 to OC-192 signals for increased capacity, involves a change in equipment.
  • BLSR systems have the limitations that all nodes around the ring must
  • DCCs digital cross connects
  • OCCs optical cross connects
  • An object of this invention is to provide a communication system which avoids or reduces the above disadvantages of the prior art. Disclosure of the Invention
  • One aspect of this invention provides an optical communication system comprising: a plurality of nodes each comprising two terminals, and a plurality of optical communication links each providing bidirectional communications between a respective pair of terminals in two different nodes, each communication link comprising at least one working channel for normal traffic and a protection channel to which the terminals are arranged to switch the normal ttaffic of a faulty working channel; wherein each node includes an optical switch via which the protection channels are coupled to the respective terminals in normal operation, the optical switches being arranged and controlled so that, in the event that normal traffic of a faulty working channel of a communication link between two terminals is not restored by a switch to the protection channel of that communication link, the normal traffic is communicated between the two terminals via the optical switches and the protection channels of the other communication links.
  • the protection channel of each communication link preferably comprises an optical fiber using two different wavelengths for the two directions of transmission on the channel, a first one of the wavelengths being used in normal operation for transmission in a direction on each protection channel fiber corresponding to a clockwise direction around the ring, and a second one of the wavelengths being used in normal operation for transmission in a direction on each protection channel fiber corresponding to a counter ⁇ clockwise direction around the ring.
  • each node includes a wavelength detector directionally coupled to the protection channel fiber for detecting an optical signal at at least one of the two wavelengths and providing a control signal for the optical switch of the node.
  • the invention is applicable to different forms of the communication links.
  • the terminals may be arranged to communicate at different transmission speeds on at least two of the communication links, and/or at least one of the pairs of terminals may be arranged to communicate synchronous signals while at least another of the pairs of terminals is arranged to communicate asynchronous signals, and/or at least two of the communication links may have different numbers of working channels.
  • this invention provides a node for an optical communications system, the node comprising: first and second terminals for coupling respectively to first and second bidirectional optical communication links each comprising at least one working channel for normal traffic and a protection channel to which the terminal is arranged to switch the normal traffic of a faulty working channel; an optical switch having optical ports Tl and T2 coupled respectively to protection channel optical ports of the first and second terminals and having optical ports FI and F2 for coupling respectively to the protection channel of the first and second communication links; and a control unit for controlling the optical switch so that in normal operation the ports FI and Tl are coupled together and the ports F2 and T2 are coupled together, in a first protection state the ports FI and T2 and/or the ports F2 and Tl are coupled together, and in a second protection state there is a coupling between the ports FI and F2.
  • the control unit can be responsive to an alarm signal from the first or second terminal, representing a failure of a protection switch at the terminal to restore traffic from a faulty working channel via the protection channel of the respective communication link, to establish the first protection state.
  • the control unit can be responsive to a loss of an optical signal received by the first or second terminal via the protection channel of the respective communication link to establish the second protection state.
  • the first terminal transmits and receives optical signals via its protection channel optical ports at first and second wavelengths respectively
  • the second terminal transmits and receives optical signals via its protection channel optical ports at the second and first wavelengths respectively
  • the node includes at least one detector directionally coupled to the protection channel of at least one of the first and second communication links for detecting optical signals at the first or second wavelength, the control unit being responsive to the detector for controlling the optical switch.
  • the node can include a bidirectional optical amplifier or regenerator via which the ports FI and F2 are coupled in the second protection state.
  • the invention also provides a method of protecting a plurality of separate bidirectional optical communication links, each comprising at least one working channel for normal traffic between a pair of terminals and a protection channel to which the terminals are arranged to switch the normal traffic of a working channel in the event of a fault on the working channel, comprising the steps of: at each of a plurality of nodes, each comprising two of said terminals associated with two separate communication links whereby the plurality of nodes and communication links form a ring, providing an optical switch arranged in normal operation to couple the protection channel of the two communication links to protection channel ports of the respective terminals; and (i) at at least one of the plurality of nodes, in the event that a protection switch, at one of the two terminals of the node, of normal traffic from a faulty working channel of the associated communication link to the protection channel of the communication link fails to restore the normal traffic, controlling the optical
  • step (i) is carried out at each of two nodes adjacent to a fault resulting in a protection switch at each of said nodes to the protection channel of the communication link between said two nodes and failure of the protection switch to restore the normal traffic between said two nodes, and step (ii) is carried out at each other node.
  • step (ii) can be achieved via overhead information on the working channel(s), but is more desirably achieved using optical signal detection in the nodes.
  • step (ii) is carried out at each other node in dependence upon an optical signal on the protection channel of a communication link associated with a terminal of the respective node.
  • Step (ii) can also comprise the step of, at at least one node, regenerating or amplifying optical signals coupled between the protection channels of the two communication links at the respective node.
  • a further aspect of this invention provides a communications system comprising a plurality of separate communication links each between two terminals at respective nodes, each node comprising two terminals associated with different communication links, each communication link comprising at least one working channel for normal traffic and a protection channel for communicating the normal traffic of a faulty working channel of the respective communication link in the event of a protection switch at the respective terminals, the protection channels of the separate connection links forming a discontinuous ring with gaps between the protection channels at the nodes, and a switch at each node via which the protection channels are coupled to the terminals at the node, the switches being operable, in response to a failure of a protection switch to restore communication of normal traffic via the protection channel of a communication link between two terminals at respective nodes, to restore communication of said normal traffic via the protection channels of the communication links around the remainder of the ring and to bridge said gaps between the protection channels at any nodes around said remainder of the ring.
  • each protection channel provides bidirectional communications of optical signals at first and second wavelengths for opposite directions of communication, all of the protection channels of the separate communication links using said first wavelength for communications in a first direction around the discontinuous ring and all of the protection channels using said second wavelength for communications in a second direction around the discontinuous ring.
  • One or more of the nodes can each include a signal regenerator or amplifier via which the switch at this node is arranged to couple the protection channels to bridge the gap between the protection channels at this node.
  • the different communication links and respective terminals can be arranged to communicate different combinations of synchronous and asynchronous signals, different transmission speeds, and/or different numbers of working channels.
  • Fig. 1 illustrates a communication system, comprising nodes linked by individual point-to-point communication links, arranged in a known manner;
  • Fig. 2 illustrates a modification of a node in accordance with an embodiment of this invention
  • Fig. 3 illustrates one form of an optical cross connect (OCC) in the node of Fig. 2;
  • Fig. 4 illustrates one form of an optical amplifier (OA) in the node of Fig. 2
  • Fig. 5 illustrates one form of optical coupling to a transmitter and receiver in the node of Fig. 2;
  • OA optical amplifier
  • Fig. 6 illustrates, in a simplified manner, the communication system of Fig. 1 modified in accordance with the invention, each node being as described with reference to Figs. 2 to 5 and the system being shown in normal operation;
  • Fig. 7 illustrates, in a similar manner, the communication system in a protection state after a span failure;
  • Fig. 8 illustrates, in a similar manner, the communication system in a protection state after a link failure
  • Fig. 9 illustrates, in a similar manner, the communication system in a protection state after a node failure
  • Fig. 10 illustrates a regenerator arrangement which may be used in the communication system, showing OCC connections in normal operation; and Fig. 11 illustrates the regenerator arrangement with the OCC connections in a protection state after a link failure.
  • a known communication system is illustrated by way of example as including four nodes 1, 2, 3, and 4.
  • the nodes 1 and 2 are linked by a point- to-point or linear communication link 10 extending between terminals T in these nodes.
  • the nodes 2 and 3, 3 and 4, and 1 and 4 are linked by respective linear communication links 11, 12, and 13 extending between respective terminals T in the nodes.
  • the communication links 10 to 13 are separate from one another and can have different forms as described below.
  • the geographical arrangement of the nodes and the communication links 10 to 13 forms a discontinuous ring, but this is not a ring system because the individual communication links are entirely separate from one another, separate terminals T being present in each node for each communication link.
  • Each of the communication links 10 to 13 comprises bidirectional optical communication paths extending between the respective terminals T, optionally (depending on distances between the nodes) via bidirectional optical amplifiers or regenerators which for clarity are not shown, providing at least one working channel W and a protection channel P.
  • a working channel refers to a channel which carries normal traffic
  • a protection channel refers to a channel to which normal traffic is switched to protect it in the event of a fault on the working channel normally carrying that traffic; the protection channel may carry other traffic in normal operation.
  • the at least one working channel is represented by a continuous line W
  • the possible existence of one or more other working channels is indicated by an adjacent broken line
  • the protection channel is represented by a continuous line P.
  • Each channel is provided on a respective optical fiber of the communication link, with two different optical wavelengths ⁇ l and ⁇ 2 being used for the two different directions of transmission. It is observed that the choice of which wavelength is used for each direction of transmission on each of the communication links 10 to 13 is relatively arbitrary, because the communication links are separate and independent from one another. For example, as illustrated both of the terminals T of the node 1 transmit using the same wavelength ⁇ l, both of the terminals T of the node 4 transmit using the same wavelength ⁇ 2, and the two terminals T of each of the nodes 2 and 3 transmit using the different wavelengths ⁇ l and ⁇ 2.
  • the communication link 10 could provide asynchronous communications with 1 :N protection (N representing the number of working channels and being greater than 1)
  • the communication link 11 could provide SONET OC-48 communications with 1:N protection
  • the communication link 12 could provide SONET OC-192 communications with 1:N protection
  • the communication link 13 could provide SONET OC-192 communications with 1 + 1 protection (i.e. 1 working channel and 1 protection channel).
  • the value of N can be different on the different communication links.
  • the different communication links can have different numbers of communication paths, different protection ratios, and different transmission rates, and can carry synchronous or asynchronous signals.
  • wavelength division multiplexing using two different wavelengths ⁇ l and ⁇ 2 is used for providing bidirectional communication on each fiber, this need not be the case. Separate fibers may be used for the opposite directions of transmission, or other forms of multiplexing may instead be used.
  • each of the nodes 1 to 4 further includes a DCC (digital cross connect) which is arranged to couple electrical signals between the terminals T of the node, and with other equipment and possibly other terminals which are not shown.
  • the DCCs are necessary to reroute traffic in the event of a failure of a communication link. For example, if the fibers in the communication link 13 between the nodes 1 and 4 are cut, then the DCCs in the nodes 1 and 4 can be controlled to reroute some or all of the interrupted traffic between these nodes 1 and 4 via the communication links 10 and 12 to the nodes 2 and 3, and the DCCs in the nodes 2 and 3 can be controlled to route the traffic via the communication link 11 between these nodes.
  • This has considerable disadvantages, for example in that it requires the presence in each node of a large and costly DCC with sufficient spare traffic capacity to handle the rerouted traffic, and the control and rerouting (protection switching) of the traffic is complicated and slow.
  • Fig. 2 illustrates a modification of a node in accordance with an embodiment of this invention.
  • the modified node includes a small optical cross connect (OCC) 20, an example of which is described in detail below with reference to Fig. 3, having optical ports Tl, FI, Al, T2, F2, and A2.
  • OCC small optical cross connect
  • OA bidirectional optical amplifier
  • the node includes two terminals T, the same as in each of the nodes 1 to 4 in Fig. 1, referenced 22 and 23 to which the optical fiber(s) of the bidirectional working channel(s) W of the respective communication links, e.g. 10 and 13 for the node 1 as illustrated, are coupled as in Fig. 1.
  • the bidirectional protection channel P of one communication link, 10 as illustrated is coupled via an optical fiber 24 to the OCC port F2, and the bidirectional protection channel P of the other communication link, 13 as illustrated, is coupled via an optical fiber 25 to the OCC port FI.
  • the protection channel optical ports of the terminals 22 and 23 are coupled via optical fibers to the OCC ports T2 and Tl respectively. As illustrated, one of the terminals 22 transmits on one of the optical wavelengths ⁇ l (and receives on the other wavelength ⁇ 2), and the other terminal 23 transmits on the other wavelength ⁇ 2 (and receives on the one wavelength ⁇ l). This is an additional constraint compared with the nodes in the prior art of Fig.
  • the modified node of Fig. 2 further includes an OCC control unit 26 and two wavelength detectors 27 and 28 each of which can comprise an optical signal detector coupled to a wavelength filter for a wavelength to be detected in an incoming optical signal.
  • the wavelength detector 27 is directionally coupled at 29 to the optical fiber 24 and serves for detecting the wavelength ⁇ l in the optical signal incoming to this fiber and hence to the node 1 on the protection channel P of the communication link 10.
  • the wavelength detector 28 is directionally coupled at 30 to the optical fiber 25 and serves for detecting the wavelength ⁇ 2 in the optical signal incoming to this fiber and hence to the node 1 on the protection channel P of the communication link 13.
  • the OCC control unit 26 is responsive to electrical output signals from the wavelength detectors 27 and 28, and/or to electrical alarm signals from the terminals 22 and 23, to control the OCC 20 in a desired manner as described below.
  • Fig. 2 also illustrates by dashed lines that the node may further include a DCC 31 for coupling electrical signals to, from, and between the terminals 22 and 23 and other equipment or terminals (not shown).
  • a DCC 31 is not required for protection switching purposes (rerouting of traffic in the event of a fault) in accordance with this invention as described below, but may optionally be provided for desired switching of signals for other purposes. Accordingly, any such DCC does not require the same spare capacity for protection switching as in the prior art of Fig. 1, and can be very much smaller, less costly, and easier to control.
  • the presence or absence in each node of the DCC has no affect on the protection switching operations of this invention as described below.
  • the modified node is shown in Fig. 2 and described above as including the wavelength detectors 27 and 28, in different embodiments of the invention either or both of these detectors may be omitted.
  • the modified node includes the optical amplifier 21, in different embodiments of the invention, and in different nodes of a single communication system, the optical amplifier may be replaced by an optical regenerator between the OCC ports Al and A2 or by a simple optical fiber connection between these ports, depending on optical fiber signal attenuation and degradation factors which are well known in the art. These variations are described in more detail later below.
  • Fig. 3 illustrates a convenient form of the OCC 20, comprising three optical switches 34, 35, and 36.
  • the optical switches can comprise any desired form, for example being optomechanical devices in which prisms are moved, or being thermo-optic devices in which the refractive index of a polymer is changed by controlling its temperature, in each case to switch optical signals passing through the devices in accordance with electrical control signals which are not represented in Fig. 3.
  • Fig. 3 shows optical paths through the switches 34 to 36, solid lines indicating optical paths in normal (fault-free) situations and broken lines indicating optical paths in protection switched conditions as described further below.
  • the switch 34 is a 2-port, 2-way or changeover switch, and each of the switches 35 and 36 is a 1-port, 2-way switch.
  • the two inputs of the switch 34 are coupled via optical fibers to the OCC ports FI and F2, the two outputs of the switch 34 are coupled via optical fibers each to the input of a respective one of the switches 35 and 36, the "normal path” switch outputs of the switches 35 and 36 are coupled via optical fibers to the OCC ports Tl and T2 respectively, and the "switched path” outputs of the switches 35 and 36 are coupled via optical fibers to the OCC ports Al and A2 respectively.
  • the following table lists three alternative states of the OCC 20, identified as normal, adjacent node protection, and far node protection states, indicating the states of the optical switches 34 to 36 and the resulting couplings of the OCC ports:
  • Fig. 4 illustrates one form of the bidirectional optical amplifier (OA) 21, which comprises an optical amplifier (OA) 40 and four wavelength division multiplex (WDM) signal couplers 41 to 44 each having a port for the wavelength ⁇ l, a port for the wavelength ⁇ 2, and a port which is common to the two wavelengths. These units are coupled via optical fibers between the ports Al and A2 of the OCC 20 as shown in Fig. 4.
  • an optical signal at the wavelength ⁇ l incoming at the port A2 is supplied via the common and ⁇ l ports of the couplers 41 and 43 to the input of the OA 40, and an amplified signal at this wavelength is supplied from the output of the OA 40 to the port Al via the common and ⁇ l ports of the couplers 42 and 44.
  • an optical signal at the wavelength ⁇ 2 incoming at the port Al is supplied via the common and ⁇ 2 ports of the couplers 44 and 43 to the input of the OA 40, and an amplified signal at this wavelength is supplied from the output of the OA 40 to the port A2 via the common and ⁇ 2 ports of the couplers 42 and 41.
  • the OA 40 thus amplifies bidirectional optical signals at the two wavelengths.
  • Fig. 5 illustrates optical coupling to a transmitter (Tx.) and a receiver (Rx.) in a terminal T of a node.
  • a transmitter 50 transmits an optical signal at the wavelength ⁇ l to the ⁇ l port of a WDM coupler 51
  • a receiver 52 receives an optical signal at the wavelength ⁇ 2 from the ⁇ 2 port of the coupler 51.
  • Bidirectional optical signals at the respective wavelengths are communicated via the common port of the coupler 51.
  • a converse arrangement can be provided for transmitting an optical signal at the wavelength ⁇ 2 and receiving an optical signal at the wavelength ⁇ l.
  • Fig. 6 illustrates the communication system of Fig. 1 modified with nodes as described with reference to Figs. 2 to 5, the system being shown in normal operation.
  • Fig. 6 does not illustrate the OCC control unit 26, wavelength detectors 27 and 28, and any DCC 31 in each node.
  • each reference is supplemented by a hyphen followed by the node number.
  • 22-1 identifies the terminal 22, which transmits at the wavelength ⁇ l and receives at the wavelength ⁇ 2, in the node 1.
  • each node transmits using the wavelength ⁇ l, and receives using the wavelength ⁇ 2, in the terminal 22 and transmits using the wavelength ⁇ 2, and receives using the wavelength ⁇ l, in the other terminal 23. Consequently, the arrangement of the terminals 22 and 23, and the directions of optical signals having the wavelengths ⁇ l and ⁇ 2, are changed to be as illustrated in Fig. 6.
  • the communication links 10 to 13 are still separate and independent links, the protection channel fibers of these links can now be coupled optically in a ring for protection purposes as described below.
  • the directions of the wavelengths ⁇ l and ⁇ 2 as illustrated in Fig. 6 and discussed here refer to the wavelengths of optical signals on the protection channel fiber.
  • the directions of the wavelengths ⁇ l and ⁇ 2 on each working channel fiber can be the same as on the protection channel, but this need not necessarily be the case and the invention is not limited in this respect.
  • arbitrary choices can be made as to which wavelength is used for each direction of transmission on each working channel of each communication link.
  • the working channel fibers are not coupled to the OCCs 20, and the working channels W can be operated exactly as in the prior art. The normal operating state shown in Fig. 6 will persist while there is no fault.
  • the wavelength ⁇ l is received on the protection channel P of the communication link 13 from the node 4 and is supplied via the fiber 25 and the OCC coupling Fl-Tl to the terminal 23, which transmits the wavelength ⁇ 2 in the opposite direction.
  • the wavelength detector 28 which accordingly does not produce any output signal.
  • the wavelength ⁇ 2 is received on the protection channel P of the communication link 10 from the node 2 and is supplied via the fiber 24 and the OCC coupling F2-T2 to the terminal 22, which transmits the wavelength ⁇ l in the opposite direction.
  • the OCC control unit 26 maintains the normal state of the OCC 20 as shown in Fig. 6.
  • Figs. 7, 8, and 9 illustrate the same communication system as Fig. 6 in various different protection states following respectively a span failure, a link failure, and a node failure. In each case the failure is represented by a bold X.
  • Fig. 7 represents a span failure, i.e. a failure of a working channel, in the communication link 13 between the nodes 1 and 4. For example, this may arise from a failure of an optical transmitter or receiver associated with the working channel. Such a failure is detected within the terminals 23-1 and 22-4 and traffic on the failed working channel is protected by switching it within these terminals onto the protection channel P, preempting any (lower priority) traffic which may have been carried on the protection channel. On correction of the fault, the normal state shown in Fig. 6 is retumed to. As this protection switching and return to the normal state are well known in the art, no further description of them is required here.
  • Fig. 8 represents a protection state of the system after a link failure, for example a cable cut interrupting all of the optical fibers, of the communication link 13 between the nodes 1 and 4. This state is reached from the normal state of Fig. 6 in the following manner: Initially, the terminals 23-1 and 22-4 in the nodes 1 and 4 adjacent (i.e.
  • the fault detect a loss of the signal received from the working channel W (or the highest priority working channel if there is more than one) of the communication link 13, and perform a protection switch of the traffic from this working channel to the protection channel P on this communication link 13 as described above with respect to Fig. 7.
  • This protection switch fails to restore the traffic, producing an alarm signal from the receivers in these terminals.
  • Such an alarm signal can be produced by the receivers in these terminals detecting a loss of signal on all of the channels of the communication link 13, the protection switch still being performed.
  • the alarm signal produced at the terminal 23-1 is supplied to the OCC control unit 26-1 in the node 1, and the alarm signal produced at the terminal 22-4 is supplied to the OCC control unit 26-4 in the node 4, and the control units 26 control the OCCs 20-1 and 20-4 each to switch to the adjacent node protection state in which the couplings Fl-Tl and F2-T2 are changed over to F1-T2 and F2-T1.
  • FIG. 8 shows only the F2-T1 coupling for the OCC 20-1, and shows only the F1-T2 coupling for the OCC 20-4, because only these couplings are necessary for the protection switching process.
  • the other couplings are simultaneously provided using the form of OCC 20 described above with reference to Fig. 3, or alternatively need not be provided if a different form of OCC 20 is used.
  • the protection channel P of the communication link 10 now carries an optical signal at the wavelength ⁇ 2 transmitted by the terminal 23-1, instead of at the wavelength ⁇ l transmitted by the terminal 22-1.
  • this optical signal is coupled via the directional coupling 30 to the ⁇ 2 wavelength detector 28, which consequently detects this wavelength and supplies an electrical signal to the OCC control unit 26 in the node 2.
  • This causes the OCC 20-2 to switch to the far node protection state as shown in Fig. 8, whereby the protection channel P of the communication link 10 is coupled through the OCC coupling Fl-Al, the OA 21-2, and the OCC coupling F2-A2 to the protection channel P of the communication link 11.
  • the protection channel P of the communication link 11 now carries an optical signal at the wavelength ⁇ 2 transmitted by the terminal 23-1, instead of at the wavelength ⁇ l transmitted by the terminal 22-2.
  • this optical signal is coupled to and detected by the detector 28 in a similar manner to that described above for the node 2, causing the OCC 20-3 also to switch (if it has not already done so as described in the next paragraph) to the far node protection state as shown in Fig. 8.
  • the protection channel P of the communication link 12 carries an optical signal at the wavelength ⁇ l transmitted by the terminal 22-4, instead of at the wavelength ⁇ 2 transmitted by the terminal 23-4.
  • this optical signal is coupled via the directional coupling 29 to the ⁇ l wavelength detector 27, which detects this wavelength and supplies an electrical signal to the OCC control unit 26 in the node 3 to cause the OCC 20-3 to switch more immediately to the far node protection state as shown in Fig. 8.
  • an optical signal from the transmitter in the te ⁇ ninal 23-1 at the wavelength ⁇ 2 is propagated clockwise around the protection channel P looped through the OCCs 20 in the far nodes (i.e. the nodes not adjacent the fault) 2 and 3, and an optical signal from the transmitter in the terminal 22-4 at the wavelength ⁇ l is propagated counter-clockwise around the protection channel P looped through the OCCs 20 in the far nodes 2 and 3, whereby the protection switched traffic from the (highest priority) working channel W interrupted by the fault on the communication link 13 is communicated between the nodes 1 and 4 via the remainder of an optical ring now formed by the interconnected protection channels P on the other communication links 10 to 12.
  • the speed of the protection switching as described above is maximized by providing both of the ⁇ l and ⁇ 2 wavelength detectors 27 and 28 in each of the nodes.
  • a slightly slower speed of protection switching is achieved if only one wavelength detector, e.g. the detector 28, is provided in each node.
  • the protection switching still takes place without any wavelength detectors.
  • there is a loss of the received optical signal from the protection channel in the respective terminal resulting in an alarm signal which is also communicated to the OCC control unit 26 of the node as shown in Fig. 2 and which causes the OCC 20 to switch to the far node protection state if it has not already done so.
  • the change of state of the OCC 20-4 causes the protection channel P of the communication link 12 to carry an optical signal at the wavelength ⁇ l transmitted by the terminal 22-4, instead of at the wavelength ⁇ 2 transmitted by the terminal 23-4.
  • the receiver 52 (Fig. 5) of the terminal 22-3 in the node 3 therefore no longer receives any optical signal, the signal at the wavelength ⁇ l being blocked from the receiver by the coupler 51, and produces an alarm signal which is supplied to the OCC control unit 26 in the node 3 to cause the OCC 20-3 to switch to the far node protection state as shown in Fig. 8.
  • the presence of the wavelength detectors 27 and 28 is optional, but is preferred for rapid protection switching.
  • the protection switching as described above and illustrated in Fig. 8 is effective for only one working channel at a time, and preempts any low priority traffic which can otherwise be carried by the protection channels on the communication links 10 to 13. This is consistent with the provision, purpose, and implementation of existing protection channels. It can also be seen from Fig. 8 that in the protection state the optical amplifiers 21 serve to amplify the optical signals on the protection channel as they are coupled through the nodes from one communication link to another. The need for the optical amplifiers, or their possible replacement by regenerators or direct optical fiber couplings, is determined primarily by the optical signal path lengths which are created on the looped protection channel path, and the resulting optical signal attenuation or degradation, and clearly can be different for different ones of the nodes 1 to 4. On rectification of the link failure fault as shown in Fig. 8, the communication system returns to the normal state in the following manner:
  • optical signals on the working channel(s) W of the previously failed communication link 13 are detected by the receivers in the terminals 23-1 and 22-4 of the adjacent nodes 1 and 4.
  • the terminals 23-1 and 22-4 terminate the protection switch in conventional manner, and terminate the corresponding alarm signals supplied to the OCC control units 26 thereby causing the OCCs 20-1 and 20-4 to return to their normal states as shown in Fig. 6.
  • the receivers in the terminals 23-1 and 22-4 then also detect the optical signals on the protection channel P of the communication link 13.
  • the protection channel P of the communication link 10 no longer carries an optical signal at the wavelength ⁇ 2 to the node 2.
  • the ⁇ 2 wavelength detector 28 in the node 2 consequently no longer produces an output signal, thereby causing the OCC 20-2 to switch to the normal state as shown in Fig. 6.
  • the protection channel P of the communication link 11 also no longer carries an optical signal at the wavelength ⁇ 2, and in the node 3, this signal is no longer detected by the detector 28 so that similarly the OCC 20-3 also switches (if it has not already done so as described below) to the normal state as shown in Fig. 6.
  • any intermediate nodes (not shown) which may be present in the communication system, a return to the normal state of the OCCs 20 in the far nodes is propagated in the clockwise direction around the protection ring.
  • the detectors 27 in these far nodes detect the loss of the optical signal at the wavelength ⁇ l from the protection channel optical fibers coupled to them, and propagate a return to the normal state of the OCCs 20 in the counter-clockwise direction around the protection ring.
  • each node includes both of the wavelength detectors 27 and 28, but either of these may be omitted.
  • both wavelength detectors are not provided in a far node, then the loss of the optical signal in the respective direction on the protection channel P at the wavelength ⁇ l and/or ⁇ 2 is detected in the optical amplifier 21 and a resulting signal is supplied to the OCC control unit 26 to cause the OCC 20 to return to the normal state.
  • the optical amplifier 21 is replaced by a regenerator as discussed above, then a corresponding optical signal loss detection signal is available from the regenerator.
  • a "return- to-normal" control signal can be communicated from the adjacent node 1 and/or 4 to the far nodes 2 and 3 via overhead (e.g. user-defined alarm) signals on the working channel(s), in response to which the OCC control unit 26 in each far node causes the OCC 20 to return to the normal state.
  • overhead e.g. user-defined alarm
  • this is not preferred because it involves interfaces to the terminals T.
  • Fig. 9 represents a protection state of the system after a node failure, for example of the node 4. Protection switching to this state from the normal state of Fig. 6, and the return to the normal state in Fig. 6 on rectification of the node failure, is effected in substantially the same manner as described above for the link failure case of Fig. 8, the only significant difference being that the nodes 1 and 3 in Fig. 9 are the nodes adjacent the fault and only the node 2 is a far node.
  • any of the communication links 10 to 13 may also include one or more bidirectional regenerators. Figs.
  • regenerator 60 each illustrate, for example for the communication link 1 1 between the nodes 2 and 3, schematically a regenerator 60 for one working channel W optical fiber, and in more detail within a dashed line box a regenerator 62 provided for the protection channel P optical fiber.
  • Each regenerator comprises, as shown for the regenerator 62, two units each comprising a transmitter 50, a WDM coupler 51, and a receiver 52 arranged as described above with reference to Fig. 5, one unit serving for transmission at the wavelength ⁇ l and reception at the wavelength ⁇ 2, and the other unit serving for transmission at the wavelength ⁇ 2 and reception at the wavelength ⁇ l.
  • the regenerator 60 is coupled to the working channel fiber in conventional manner.
  • the regenerator 62 is coupled to the protection channel fiber via a 2-port 2-way optical switch (OS) 64 having a control unit 66 which is controlled by alarm signals from the receivers 52 and/or by ⁇ l and ⁇ 2 wavelength detectors 27 and 28 which are directionally coupled to the protection channel fiber, in a similar manner to that described above for the OCC control unit 26 in each node.
  • OS 2-port 2-way optical switch
  • Fig. 10 illustrates the OS 64 in the normal state
  • Fig. 11 illustrates the OS 64 in the protection switched state
  • the oppositely directed signal wavelengths ⁇ l and ⁇ 2 on the protection channel are coupled to the appropriate units of the regenerator 62, via either the normal connections of the OS 64 as shown in Fig. 10 or the crossed connections of the OS 64 as shown in Fig. 11.
  • Switching between the two states is controlled by the control unit 66 in dependence upon optical signal loss detection signals from the receivers and/or wavelength detection signals from the detectors 27 and 28 in a similar manner to that described above. Again, either or both of the wavelength detectors 27 and 28 may be dispensed with as described above.
  • the OCC control unit 26 in each node and the OS control unit 66 in each regenerator can comprise logic circuits which are responsive to the alarm signals and/or wavelength detector signals supplied thereto to control the OCC 20 and OS 64, respectively, in the manner described above.
  • Such logic circuits can easily be provided by persons of ordinary skill in the art, and accordingly need not be further described here.
  • the invention provides several important commercial and technical advantages.
  • it provides a protection arrangement which can be inco ⁇ orated in new communication systems and can be easily added to existing communication systems using groups of linear or point-to-point communication links, regardless of their use of synchronous or asynchronous communication, or both, regardless of their ratios of protection channels to working channels, and regardless of their transmission rates. It thus also permits easy upgrading of the communication links, in that the use of higher bit rates on the communication links requires no change of the protection system components.
  • the protection arrangement provides the advantages of switching optical signals, the transmission rate of which does not affect the protection switching.
  • the protection arrangement uses a small number of small optical switches, such as 1- or 2-port 2-way switches as described above, thereby avoiding the disadvantages (especially cost and unreliability) of large optical switches which have hitherto been considered necessary for protection purposes.
  • the OCC and OS are provided only in the protection channel, so that the reliability of communication of the working channel traffic is not adversely affected by the protection arrangement.
  • WDM may be used to permit each optical fiber to carry optical signals at two or more wavelengths in each direction of transmission.
  • one wavelength in each direction on the protection channel optical fibers may be used to provide protection for any one of two or more WDM wavelengths in each direction on one or more working channel optical fibers.
  • the above description relates to a communication system having four nodes, the invention is applicable to communication systems having two or more nodes with communication links forming a ring.
  • more complex networks may comprise many nodes and communication links forming two or more communication systems in accordance with this invention, with the rings of such systems possibly intersecting and/or overlapping one another.
  • the invention can also be applied to communication systems in which different optical fibers are used for opposite directions of transmission, rather than different wavelengths on the same fiber.
  • each OCC 20, OS 64, and OA 21 as described above can be duplicated for the two different fibers or directions of transmission, the WDM couplers being dispensed with and the wavelength detectors being replaced by optical signal detectors.

Abstract

A discontinuous ring is formed by separate bidirectional optical communication links (10-13), with possibly different transmission speeds, synchronous or asynchronous transmission, and ratios of working (W) to protection (P) channels, each linking a pair of terminals (22, 23) in different nodes (1-4) of a communication system. To protect protection-switched traffic on a communication link from a link failure, it is routed around the ring via the protection channel of the oter communcication links. To this end, an optical switch (20) is provided between the protection channel of each link and the associated terminals in each node, and is controlled differently in nodes (1, 4) adjacent the link failure and in nodes (2, 3) not adjacent the link failure to route the protection-switched traffic accordingly. Rapid protection switching is facilitated by controlling the optical switches using wavelength (μ1, μ2) detectors directionally coupled to the protection channel at each node.

Description

OPTICAL COMMUNICATION SYSTEM Technical Field and Industrial Applicability
This invention relates to communication systems, and is particularly concerned with an optical communication system in which protection is provided against failures, for example due to an optical fiber cable cut. Background Art
It is known from Flanagan et al. United States Patent No. 5,159,595 issued October 27, 1992 and entitled "Ring Transmission System" to provide an optical communication system in the form of a plurality of nodes coupled in a ring via two multiplexed communication paths providing for transmission in opposite directions around the ring. In normal operation, communications are effected between the nodes in both directions via the two paths. In the presence of a fault such as a fiber cut, this is detected in the two nodes immediately adjacent to the fault, and communications are maintained via both paths forming a folded loop, signals being coupled between the paths at these two nodes adjacent to the fault. Such systems have become known as bidirectional line switched ring (BLSR) systems, and typically serve for communicating SONET signals in which case they are commonly referred to as SONET ring systems.
BLSR systems provide effective fault protection, or survivability, for new communication system installations, but can not be easily applied to already-existing (synchronous or asynchronous) communication systems without requiring costly equipment upgrades. In addition, BLSR systems have disadvantages in that they have a high utilization of optical fibers, do not provide for 1:N (N > 1) protection (i.e. protection of N working (W) channels using one protection (P) channel), and they are not bit-rate or wavelength transparent (i.e. a change in wavelength or bit rate, such as a change from SONET OC-48 to OC-192 signals for increased capacity, involves a change in equipment). Furthermore, BLSR systems have the limitations that all nodes around the ring must be of the same type and must have the same capacity.
In order to provide survivability of existing communication systems without replacing them with ring systems, it is possible to use digital cross connects (DCCs) at the nodes of the system for rerouting signals in the event of a link failure. DCCs are electronic switches, for example operating on DS3 signals. However, the use of DCCs involves considerable disadvantages of cost, equipment capacity, complexity, size, and power consumption, and slow protection in the event of a fault.
It has also been proposed to use optical cross connects (OCCs) to provide for survivability of optical communication systems or networks, the OCCs serving to switch optical signals. However, it has been necessary for such OCCs to be large (for example, a 72 x 72 cross connect for an OC-48 optical signal carrying 16 DS3 signals) and for large numbers of such OCCs to be required in a network. Large OCCs have disadvantages of involving relatively new technology with low or unproved reliability and concerns of crosstalk and loss, as well as having a large size and cost.
It is also known from Wu United States Patent No. 5,442,623 issued August 15, 1995, entitled "Passive Protected Self Healing Ring Network", and from "A Novel Passive Protected SONET Bidirectional Self-Healing Ring Architecture" by Tsong-Ho Wu et al., IEEE Journal of Lightwave Technology, Vol. 10, No. 9, September 1992, to provide a ring network with a passive optical fiber protection ring. In such a network optical switches located at each node serve for protection switching of traffic to the protection ring in the event of a fault. While this can avoid some of the disadvantages of ring systems discussed above, it has disadvantages in that the optical fiber protection ring is unused in normal operation (i.e. in the absence of a fault), the traffic of the ring system in normal operation is conducted via the optical switches with a consequent decrease in the reliability of the system, and the complexity of the optical switching is increased in order to provide, as is desirable, for protection switching for span failures. In addition, this is a ring system which does not address survivability of existing communication systems using point-to-point communication links.
An object of this invention, therefore, is to provide a communication system which avoids or reduces the above disadvantages of the prior art. Disclosure of the Invention One aspect of this invention provides an optical communication system comprising: a plurality of nodes each comprising two terminals, and a plurality of optical communication links each providing bidirectional communications between a respective pair of terminals in two different nodes, each communication link comprising at least one working channel for normal traffic and a protection channel to which the terminals are arranged to switch the normal ttaffic of a faulty working channel; wherein each node includes an optical switch via which the protection channels are coupled to the respective terminals in normal operation, the optical switches being arranged and controlled so that, in the event that normal traffic of a faulty working channel of a communication link between two terminals is not restored by a switch to the protection channel of that communication link, the normal traffic is communicated between the two terminals via the optical switches and the protection channels of the other communication links.
The protection channel of each communication link preferably comprises an optical fiber using two different wavelengths for the two directions of transmission on the channel, a first one of the wavelengths being used in normal operation for transmission in a direction on each protection channel fiber corresponding to a clockwise direction around the ring, and a second one of the wavelengths being used in normal operation for transmission in a direction on each protection channel fiber corresponding to a counter¬ clockwise direction around the ring. In this case, preferably each node includes a wavelength detector directionally coupled to the protection channel fiber for detecting an optical signal at at least one of the two wavelengths and providing a control signal for the optical switch of the node.
The invention is applicable to different forms of the communication links. Thus for example the terminals may be arranged to communicate at different transmission speeds on at least two of the communication links, and/or at least one of the pairs of terminals may be arranged to communicate synchronous signals while at least another of the pairs of terminals is arranged to communicate asynchronous signals, and/or at least two of the communication links may have different numbers of working channels. According to another aspect, this invention provides a node for an optical communications system, the node comprising: first and second terminals for coupling respectively to first and second bidirectional optical communication links each comprising at least one working channel for normal traffic and a protection channel to which the terminal is arranged to switch the normal traffic of a faulty working channel; an optical switch having optical ports Tl and T2 coupled respectively to protection channel optical ports of the first and second terminals and having optical ports FI and F2 for coupling respectively to the protection channel of the first and second communication links; and a control unit for controlling the optical switch so that in normal operation the ports FI and Tl are coupled together and the ports F2 and T2 are coupled together, in a first protection state the ports FI and T2 and/or the ports F2 and Tl are coupled together, and in a second protection state there is a coupling between the ports FI and F2.
The control unit can be responsive to an alarm signal from the first or second terminal, representing a failure of a protection switch at the terminal to restore traffic from a faulty working channel via the protection channel of the respective communication link, to establish the first protection state. In addition, the control unit can be responsive to a loss of an optical signal received by the first or second terminal via the protection channel of the respective communication link to establish the second protection state.
In an embodiment of the invention described in detail below, the first terminal transmits and receives optical signals via its protection channel optical ports at first and second wavelengths respectively, the second terminal transmits and receives optical signals via its protection channel optical ports at the second and first wavelengths respectively, and the node includes at least one detector directionally coupled to the protection channel of at least one of the first and second communication links for detecting optical signals at the first or second wavelength, the control unit being responsive to the detector for controlling the optical switch.
The node can include a bidirectional optical amplifier or regenerator via which the ports FI and F2 are coupled in the second protection state. The invention also provides a method of protecting a plurality of separate bidirectional optical communication links, each comprising at least one working channel for normal traffic between a pair of terminals and a protection channel to which the terminals are arranged to switch the normal traffic of a working channel in the event of a fault on the working channel, comprising the steps of: at each of a plurality of nodes, each comprising two of said terminals associated with two separate communication links whereby the plurality of nodes and communication links form a ring, providing an optical switch arranged in normal operation to couple the protection channel of the two communication links to protection channel ports of the respective terminals; and (i) at at least one of the plurality of nodes, in the event that a protection switch, at one of the two terminals of the node, of normal traffic from a faulty working channel of the associated communication link to the protection channel of the communication link fails to restore the normal traffic, controlling the optical switch to couple the protection channel port of this one of the two terminals to the protection channel of the communication link associated with the other of the two terminals of the node; and
(ii) at at least one other node in consequence of the coupling in (i), controlling the optical switch of this other node to provide a coupling between the protection channels of the two communication links at this other node.
Preferably step (i) is carried out at each of two nodes adjacent to a fault resulting in a protection switch at each of said nodes to the protection channel of the communication link between said two nodes and failure of the protection switch to restore the normal traffic between said two nodes, and step (ii) is carried out at each other node.
The control in step (ii) can be achieved via overhead information on the working channel(s), but is more desirably achieved using optical signal detection in the nodes. Thus preferably step (ii) is carried out at each other node in dependence upon an optical signal on the protection channel of a communication link associated with a terminal of the respective node. Step (ii) can also comprise the step of, at at least one node, regenerating or amplifying optical signals coupled between the protection channels of the two communication links at the respective node. A further aspect of this invention provides a communications system comprising a plurality of separate communication links each between two terminals at respective nodes, each node comprising two terminals associated with different communication links, each communication link comprising at least one working channel for normal traffic and a protection channel for communicating the normal traffic of a faulty working channel of the respective communication link in the event of a protection switch at the respective terminals, the protection channels of the separate connection links forming a discontinuous ring with gaps between the protection channels at the nodes, and a switch at each node via which the protection channels are coupled to the terminals at the node, the switches being operable, in response to a failure of a protection switch to restore communication of normal traffic via the protection channel of a communication link between two terminals at respective nodes, to restore communication of said normal traffic via the protection channels of the communication links around the remainder of the ring and to bridge said gaps between the protection channels at any nodes around said remainder of the ring.
Preferably the communication links comprise optical communication links and the switches at the nodes comprise optical switches. In one form of the system, each protection channel provides bidirectional communications of optical signals at first and second wavelengths for opposite directions of communication, all of the protection channels of the separate communication links using said first wavelength for communications in a first direction around the discontinuous ring and all of the protection channels using said second wavelength for communications in a second direction around the discontinuous ring. One or more of the nodes can each include a signal regenerator or amplifier via which the switch at this node is arranged to couple the protection channels to bridge the gap between the protection channels at this node. The different communication links and respective terminals can be arranged to communicate different combinations of synchronous and asynchronous signals, different transmission speeds, and/or different numbers of working channels.
Brief Description of the Drawings
The invention will be further understood from the following description with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Fig. 1 illustrates a communication system, comprising nodes linked by individual point-to-point communication links, arranged in a known manner;
Fig. 2 illustrates a modification of a node in accordance with an embodiment of this invention;
Fig. 3 illustrates one form of an optical cross connect (OCC) in the node of Fig. 2;
Fig. 4 illustrates one form of an optical amplifier (OA) in the node of Fig. 2; Fig. 5 illustrates one form of optical coupling to a transmitter and receiver in the node of Fig. 2;
Fig. 6 illustrates, in a simplified manner, the communication system of Fig. 1 modified in accordance with the invention, each node being as described with reference to Figs. 2 to 5 and the system being shown in normal operation; Fig. 7 illustrates, in a similar manner, the communication system in a protection state after a span failure;
Fig. 8 illustrates, in a similar manner, the communication system in a protection state after a link failure; Fig. 9 illustrates, in a similar manner, the communication system in a protection state after a node failure;
Fig. 10 illustrates a regenerator arrangement which may be used in the communication system, showing OCC connections in normal operation; and Fig. 11 illustrates the regenerator arrangement with the OCC connections in a protection state after a link failure. Mode(s) of Carrying Out the Invention
Referring to Fig. 1, a known communication system is illustrated by way of example as including four nodes 1, 2, 3, and 4. The nodes 1 and 2 are linked by a point- to-point or linear communication link 10 extending between terminals T in these nodes. Similarly, the nodes 2 and 3, 3 and 4, and 1 and 4 are linked by respective linear communication links 11, 12, and 13 extending between respective terminals T in the nodes. The communication links 10 to 13 are separate from one another and can have different forms as described below. The geographical arrangement of the nodes and the communication links 10 to 13 forms a discontinuous ring, but this is not a ring system because the individual communication links are entirely separate from one another, separate terminals T being present in each node for each communication link.
Each of the communication links 10 to 13 comprises bidirectional optical communication paths extending between the respective terminals T, optionally (depending on distances between the nodes) via bidirectional optical amplifiers or regenerators which for clarity are not shown, providing at least one working channel W and a protection channel P. A working channel refers to a channel which carries normal traffic, and a protection channel refers to a channel to which normal traffic is switched to protect it in the event of a fault on the working channel normally carrying that traffic; the protection channel may carry other traffic in normal operation. As illustrated, for each of the communication links 10 to 13 the at least one working channel is represented by a continuous line W, the possible existence of one or more other working channels is indicated by an adjacent broken line, and the protection channel is represented by a continuous line P. Each channel is provided on a respective optical fiber of the communication link, with two different optical wavelengths λl and λ2 being used for the two different directions of transmission. It is observed that the choice of which wavelength is used for each direction of transmission on each of the communication links 10 to 13 is relatively arbitrary, because the communication links are separate and independent from one another. For example, as illustrated both of the terminals T of the node 1 transmit using the same wavelength λl, both of the terminals T of the node 4 transmit using the same wavelength λ2, and the two terminals T of each of the nodes 2 and 3 transmit using the different wavelengths λl and λ2. To illustrate the separate and independent nature of the communication links 10 to 13, it is observed purely by way of example that the communication link 10 could provide asynchronous communications with 1 :N protection (N representing the number of working channels and being greater than 1), the communication link 11 could provide SONET OC-48 communications with 1:N protection, the communication link 12 could provide SONET OC-192 communications with 1:N protection, and the communication link 13 could provide SONET OC-192 communications with 1 + 1 protection (i.e. 1 working channel and 1 protection channel). The value of N can be different on the different communication links. Thus the different communication links can have different numbers of communication paths, different protection ratios, and different transmission rates, and can carry synchronous or asynchronous signals.
Although as described here wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) using two different wavelengths λl and λ2 is used for providing bidirectional communication on each fiber, this need not be the case. Separate fibers may be used for the opposite directions of transmission, or other forms of multiplexing may instead be used.
Fig. 1 also shows that each of the nodes 1 to 4 further includes a DCC (digital cross connect) which is arranged to couple electrical signals between the terminals T of the node, and with other equipment and possibly other terminals which are not shown. As explained in the introduction, the DCCs are necessary to reroute traffic in the event of a failure of a communication link. For example, if the fibers in the communication link 13 between the nodes 1 and 4 are cut, then the DCCs in the nodes 1 and 4 can be controlled to reroute some or all of the interrupted traffic between these nodes 1 and 4 via the communication links 10 and 12 to the nodes 2 and 3, and the DCCs in the nodes 2 and 3 can be controlled to route the traffic via the communication link 11 between these nodes. This has considerable disadvantages, for example in that it requires the presence in each node of a large and costly DCC with sufficient spare traffic capacity to handle the rerouted traffic, and the control and rerouting (protection switching) of the traffic is complicated and slow.
Fig. 2 illustrates a modification of a node in accordance with an embodiment of this invention. The modified node includes a small optical cross connect (OCC) 20, an example of which is described in detail below with reference to Fig. 3, having optical ports Tl, FI, Al, T2, F2, and A2. A bidirectional optical amplifier (OA) 21, an example of which is described in detail below with reference to Fig. 4, is coupled via optical fibers between the ports Al and A2. The node includes two terminals T, the same as in each of the nodes 1 to 4 in Fig. 1, referenced 22 and 23 to which the optical fiber(s) of the bidirectional working channel(s) W of the respective communication links, e.g. 10 and 13 for the node 1 as illustrated, are coupled as in Fig. 1. The bidirectional protection channel P of one communication link, 10 as illustrated, is coupled via an optical fiber 24 to the OCC port F2, and the bidirectional protection channel P of the other communication link, 13 as illustrated, is coupled via an optical fiber 25 to the OCC port FI. The protection channel optical ports of the terminals 22 and 23 are coupled via optical fibers to the OCC ports T2 and Tl respectively. As illustrated, one of the terminals 22 transmits on one of the optical wavelengths λl (and receives on the other wavelength λ2), and the other terminal 23 transmits on the other wavelength λ2 (and receives on the one wavelength λl). This is an additional constraint compared with the nodes in the prior art of Fig. 1, but is easily met simply by interchanging where necessary optical transmitter and receiver cards in the terminals of the nodes. The modified node of Fig. 2 further includes an OCC control unit 26 and two wavelength detectors 27 and 28 each of which can comprise an optical signal detector coupled to a wavelength filter for a wavelength to be detected in an incoming optical signal. The wavelength detector 27 is directionally coupled at 29 to the optical fiber 24 and serves for detecting the wavelength λl in the optical signal incoming to this fiber and hence to the node 1 on the protection channel P of the communication link 10.
Conversely, the wavelength detector 28 is directionally coupled at 30 to the optical fiber 25 and serves for detecting the wavelength λ2 in the optical signal incoming to this fiber and hence to the node 1 on the protection channel P of the communication link 13. The OCC control unit 26 is responsive to electrical output signals from the wavelength detectors 27 and 28, and/or to electrical alarm signals from the terminals 22 and 23, to control the OCC 20 in a desired manner as described below.
Fig. 2 also illustrates by dashed lines that the node may further include a DCC 31 for coupling electrical signals to, from, and between the terminals 22 and 23 and other equipment or terminals (not shown). Such a DCC 31 is not required for protection switching purposes (rerouting of traffic in the event of a fault) in accordance with this invention as described below, but may optionally be provided for desired switching of signals for other purposes. Accordingly, any such DCC does not require the same spare capacity for protection switching as in the prior art of Fig. 1, and can be very much smaller, less costly, and easier to control. The presence or absence in each node of the DCC has no affect on the protection switching operations of this invention as described below.
It is observed that, although the modified node is shown in Fig. 2 and described above as including the wavelength detectors 27 and 28, in different embodiments of the invention either or both of these detectors may be omitted. Furthermore, although as shown in Fig. 2 and described above the modified node includes the optical amplifier 21, in different embodiments of the invention, and in different nodes of a single communication system, the optical amplifier may be replaced by an optical regenerator between the OCC ports Al and A2 or by a simple optical fiber connection between these ports, depending on optical fiber signal attenuation and degradation factors which are well known in the art. These variations are described in more detail later below.
Fig. 3 illustrates a convenient form of the OCC 20, comprising three optical switches 34, 35, and 36. The optical switches can comprise any desired form, for example being optomechanical devices in which prisms are moved, or being thermo-optic devices in which the refractive index of a polymer is changed by controlling its temperature, in each case to switch optical signals passing through the devices in accordance with electrical control signals which are not represented in Fig. 3.
Fig. 3 shows optical paths through the switches 34 to 36, solid lines indicating optical paths in normal (fault-free) situations and broken lines indicating optical paths in protection switched conditions as described further below. The switch 34 is a 2-port, 2-way or changeover switch, and each of the switches 35 and 36 is a 1-port, 2-way switch. The two inputs of the switch 34 are coupled via optical fibers to the OCC ports FI and F2, the two outputs of the switch 34 are coupled via optical fibers each to the input of a respective one of the switches 35 and 36, the "normal path" switch outputs of the switches 35 and 36 are coupled via optical fibers to the OCC ports Tl and T2 respectively, and the "switched path" outputs of the switches 35 and 36 are coupled via optical fibers to the OCC ports Al and A2 respectively. The following table lists three alternative states of the OCC 20, identified as normal, adjacent node protection, and far node protection states, indicating the states of the optical switches 34 to 36 and the resulting couplings of the OCC ports:
OCC state Switch 34 Switch 35 Switch 36 Couplings
Normal Normal Normal Normal Fl-Tl F2-T2
Adjacent node protection Switched Normal Normal F1-T2 F2-T1
Far node protection Normal Switched Switched Fl-Al F2-A2
Fig. 4 illustrates one form of the bidirectional optical amplifier (OA) 21, which comprises an optical amplifier (OA) 40 and four wavelength division multiplex (WDM) signal couplers 41 to 44 each having a port for the wavelength λl, a port for the wavelength λ2, and a port which is common to the two wavelengths. These units are coupled via optical fibers between the ports Al and A2 of the OCC 20 as shown in Fig. 4. In consequence, an optical signal at the wavelength λl incoming at the port A2 is supplied via the common and λl ports of the couplers 41 and 43 to the input of the OA 40, and an amplified signal at this wavelength is supplied from the output of the OA 40 to the port Al via the common and λl ports of the couplers 42 and 44. In addition, an optical signal at the wavelength λ2 incoming at the port Al is supplied via the common and λ2 ports of the couplers 44 and 43 to the input of the OA 40, and an amplified signal at this wavelength is supplied from the output of the OA 40 to the port A2 via the common and λ2 ports of the couplers 42 and 41. The OA 40 thus amplifies bidirectional optical signals at the two wavelengths.
Fig. 5 illustrates optical coupling to a transmitter (Tx.) and a receiver (Rx.) in a terminal T of a node. As illustrated, a transmitter 50 transmits an optical signal at the wavelength λl to the λl port of a WDM coupler 51, and a receiver 52 receives an optical signal at the wavelength λ2 from the λ2 port of the coupler 51. Bidirectional optical signals at the respective wavelengths are communicated via the common port of the coupler 51. A converse arrangement can be provided for transmitting an optical signal at the wavelength λ2 and receiving an optical signal at the wavelength λl.
Fig. 6 illustrates the communication system of Fig. 1 modified with nodes as described with reference to Figs. 2 to 5, the system being shown in normal operation. For simplicity and clarity, Fig. 6 does not illustrate the OCC control unit 26, wavelength detectors 27 and 28, and any DCC 31 in each node. For identifying components in the different nodes, each reference is supplemented by a hyphen followed by the node number. Thus for example 22-1 identifies the terminal 22, which transmits at the wavelength λl and receives at the wavelength λ2, in the node 1.
As shown in Fig. 6, all of the OCCs 20 are in the normal state in which the ports FI and Tl are coupled together and the ports F2 and T2 are coupled together. Thus the protection channel ports of the terminals T are coupled via the OCCs 20 to the optical fiber protection channels P, in a similar manner to that of Fig. 1, except in respect of the directions in which the two wavelengths λl and λ2 of optical signal are transmitted. Thus whereas in the prior art system of Fig. 1 these wavelengths can be used arbitrarily for the opposite directions of transmission on each communication link, as described above, in each node of the system of Fig. 6 each node transmits using the wavelength λl, and receives using the wavelength λ2, in the terminal 22 and transmits using the wavelength λ2, and receives using the wavelength λl, in the other terminal 23. Consequently, the arrangement of the terminals 22 and 23, and the directions of optical signals having the wavelengths λl and λ2, are changed to be as illustrated in Fig. 6. Although the communication links 10 to 13 are still separate and independent links, the protection channel fibers of these links can now be coupled optically in a ring for protection purposes as described below.
It is noted here that the directions of the wavelengths λl and λ2 as illustrated in Fig. 6 and discussed here refer to the wavelengths of optical signals on the protection channel fiber. For consistency and convenience, the directions of the wavelengths λl and λ2 on each working channel fiber can be the same as on the protection channel, but this need not necessarily be the case and the invention is not limited in this respect. As far as this embodiment of the invention is concerned, arbitrary choices can be made as to which wavelength is used for each direction of transmission on each working channel of each communication link. As can be seen from the drawings and the above description, the working channel fibers are not coupled to the OCCs 20, and the working channels W can be operated exactly as in the prior art. The normal operating state shown in Fig. 6 will persist while there is no fault. As can be seen from a consideration of Figs. 2 and 6, for example in the node 1 the wavelength λl is received on the protection channel P of the communication link 13 from the node 4 and is supplied via the fiber 25 and the OCC coupling Fl-Tl to the terminal 23, which transmits the wavelength λ2 in the opposite direction. As a result of the directional coupling at 30, only the received optical signal at the wavelength λl is supplied to the wavelength detector 28, which accordingly does not produce any output signal. Conversely, in the node 1 the wavelength λ2 is received on the protection channel P of the communication link 10 from the node 2 and is supplied via the fiber 24 and the OCC coupling F2-T2 to the terminal 22, which transmits the wavelength λl in the opposite direction. As a result of the directional coupling at 29, only the received optical signal at the wavelength λ2 is supplied to the wavelength detector 27, which accordingly does not produce any output signal. In the absence of any output signal from the wavelength detectors 27 and 28, and in the absence of any alarm signal from the terminals 22 and 23, in each node the OCC control unit 26 maintains the normal state of the OCC 20 as shown in Fig. 6.
Figs. 7, 8, and 9 illustrate the same communication system as Fig. 6 in various different protection states following respectively a span failure, a link failure, and a node failure. In each case the failure is represented by a bold X.
Fig. 7 represents a span failure, i.e. a failure of a working channel, in the communication link 13 between the nodes 1 and 4. For example, this may arise from a failure of an optical transmitter or receiver associated with the working channel. Such a failure is detected within the terminals 23-1 and 22-4 and traffic on the failed working channel is protected by switching it within these terminals onto the protection channel P, preempting any (lower priority) traffic which may have been carried on the protection channel. On correction of the fault, the normal state shown in Fig. 6 is retumed to. As this protection switching and return to the normal state are well known in the art, no further description of them is required here. It is observed that the OCCs 20 are not involved in this process, and that similar protection switching can take place independently and simultaneously on any of the communication links 10 to 13. Fig. 8 represents a protection state of the system after a link failure, for example a cable cut interrupting all of the optical fibers, of the communication link 13 between the nodes 1 and 4. This state is reached from the normal state of Fig. 6 in the following manner: Initially, the terminals 23-1 and 22-4 in the nodes 1 and 4 adjacent (i.e. closest on each side of) the fault detect a loss of the signal received from the working channel W (or the highest priority working channel if there is more than one) of the communication link 13, and perform a protection switch of the traffic from this working channel to the protection channel P on this communication link 13 as described above with respect to Fig. 7. This protection switch fails to restore the traffic, producing an alarm signal from the receivers in these terminals. (Alternatively, such an alarm signal can be produced by the receivers in these terminals detecting a loss of signal on all of the channels of the communication link 13, the protection switch still being performed.) The alarm signal produced at the terminal 23-1 is supplied to the OCC control unit 26-1 in the node 1, and the alarm signal produced at the terminal 22-4 is supplied to the OCC control unit 26-4 in the node 4, and the control units 26 control the OCCs 20-1 and 20-4 each to switch to the adjacent node protection state in which the couplings Fl-Tl and F2-T2 are changed over to F1-T2 and F2-T1. For clarity, Fig. 8 shows only the F2-T1 coupling for the OCC 20-1, and shows only the F1-T2 coupling for the OCC 20-4, because only these couplings are necessary for the protection switching process. The other couplings are simultaneously provided using the form of OCC 20 described above with reference to Fig. 3, or alternatively need not be provided if a different form of OCC 20 is used.
As a result of the change of state of the OCC 20-1, the protection channel P of the communication link 10 now carries an optical signal at the wavelength λ2 transmitted by the terminal 23-1, instead of at the wavelength λl transmitted by the terminal 22-1. In the node 2, this optical signal is coupled via the directional coupling 30 to the λ2 wavelength detector 28, which consequently detects this wavelength and supplies an electrical signal to the OCC control unit 26 in the node 2. This causes the OCC 20-2 to switch to the far node protection state as shown in Fig. 8, whereby the protection channel P of the communication link 10 is coupled through the OCC coupling Fl-Al, the OA 21-2, and the OCC coupling F2-A2 to the protection channel P of the communication link 11.
Consequently, the protection channel P of the communication link 11 now carries an optical signal at the wavelength λ2 transmitted by the terminal 23-1, instead of at the wavelength λl transmitted by the terminal 22-2. In the node 3, this optical signal is coupled to and detected by the detector 28 in a similar manner to that described above for the node 2, causing the OCC 20-3 also to switch (if it has not already done so as described in the next paragraph) to the far node protection state as shown in Fig. 8. The same applies to any intermediate nodes (not shown) which may be present in the communication system.
It can be seen that, as a result of the change of state of the OCC 20-4, the protection channel P of the communication link 12 carries an optical signal at the wavelength λl transmitted by the terminal 22-4, instead of at the wavelength λ2 transmitted by the terminal 23-4. In the node 3, this optical signal is coupled via the directional coupling 29 to the λl wavelength detector 27, which detects this wavelength and supplies an electrical signal to the OCC control unit 26 in the node 3 to cause the OCC 20-3 to switch more immediately to the far node protection state as shown in Fig. 8. In any event, it can be seen that an optical signal from the transmitter in the teπninal 23-1 at the wavelength λ2 is propagated clockwise around the protection channel P looped through the OCCs 20 in the far nodes (i.e. the nodes not adjacent the fault) 2 and 3, and an optical signal from the transmitter in the terminal 22-4 at the wavelength λl is propagated counter-clockwise around the protection channel P looped through the OCCs 20 in the far nodes 2 and 3, whereby the protection switched traffic from the (highest priority) working channel W interrupted by the fault on the communication link 13 is communicated between the nodes 1 and 4 via the remainder of an optical ring now formed by the interconnected protection channels P on the other communication links 10 to 12. The speed of the protection switching as described above is maximized by providing both of the λl and λ2 wavelength detectors 27 and 28 in each of the nodes. A slightly slower speed of protection switching is achieved if only one wavelength detector, e.g. the detector 28, is provided in each node. However, the protection switching still takes place without any wavelength detectors. In this case, in each far node, e.g. the nodes 2 and 3 as described above, there is a loss of the received optical signal from the protection channel in the respective terminal, resulting in an alarm signal which is also communicated to the OCC control unit 26 of the node as shown in Fig. 2 and which causes the OCC 20 to switch to the far node protection state if it has not already done so. For example, as described above the change of state of the OCC 20-4 causes the protection channel P of the communication link 12 to carry an optical signal at the wavelength λl transmitted by the terminal 22-4, instead of at the wavelength λ2 transmitted by the terminal 23-4. The receiver 52 (Fig. 5) of the terminal 22-3 in the node 3 therefore no longer receives any optical signal, the signal at the wavelength λl being blocked from the receiver by the coupler 51, and produces an alarm signal which is supplied to the OCC control unit 26 in the node 3 to cause the OCC 20-3 to switch to the far node protection state as shown in Fig. 8. Thus the presence of the wavelength detectors 27 and 28 is optional, but is preferred for rapid protection switching.
It can be seen that the protection switching as described above and illustrated in Fig. 8 is effective for only one working channel at a time, and preempts any low priority traffic which can otherwise be carried by the protection channels on the communication links 10 to 13. This is consistent with the provision, purpose, and implementation of existing protection channels. It can also be seen from Fig. 8 that in the protection state the optical amplifiers 21 serve to amplify the optical signals on the protection channel as they are coupled through the nodes from one communication link to another. The need for the optical amplifiers, or their possible replacement by regenerators or direct optical fiber couplings, is determined primarily by the optical signal path lengths which are created on the looped protection channel path, and the resulting optical signal attenuation or degradation, and clearly can be different for different ones of the nodes 1 to 4. On rectification of the link failure fault as shown in Fig. 8, the communication system returns to the normal state in the following manner:
Initially, optical signals on the working channel(s) W of the previously failed communication link 13 are detected by the receivers in the terminals 23-1 and 22-4 of the adjacent nodes 1 and 4. The terminals 23-1 and 22-4 terminate the protection switch in conventional manner, and terminate the corresponding alarm signals supplied to the OCC control units 26 thereby causing the OCCs 20-1 and 20-4 to return to their normal states as shown in Fig. 6. The receivers in the terminals 23-1 and 22-4 then also detect the optical signals on the protection channel P of the communication link 13.
As a result of the change of state of the OCC 20-1, the protection channel P of the communication link 10 no longer carries an optical signal at the wavelength λ2 to the node 2. The λ2 wavelength detector 28 in the node 2 consequently no longer produces an output signal, thereby causing the OCC 20-2 to switch to the normal state as shown in Fig. 6. As a result, the protection channel P of the communication link 11 also no longer carries an optical signal at the wavelength λ2, and in the node 3, this signal is no longer detected by the detector 28 so that similarly the OCC 20-3 also switches (if it has not already done so as described below) to the normal state as shown in Fig. 6. The same applies to any intermediate nodes (not shown) which may be present in the communication system, a return to the normal state of the OCCs 20 in the far nodes is propagated in the clockwise direction around the protection ring. Likewise, the detectors 27 in these far nodes detect the loss of the optical signal at the wavelength λl from the protection channel optical fibers coupled to them, and propagate a return to the normal state of the OCCs 20 in the counter-clockwise direction around the protection ring.
As in the case of protection switching, the return to the normal state of Fig. 6 is most rapid when each node includes both of the wavelength detectors 27 and 28, but either of these may be omitted. In the event that both wavelength detectors are not provided in a far node, then the loss of the optical signal in the respective direction on the protection channel P at the wavelength λl and/or λ2 is detected in the optical amplifier 21 and a resulting signal is supplied to the OCC control unit 26 to cause the OCC 20 to return to the normal state. In the event that the optical amplifier 21 is replaced by a regenerator as discussed above, then a corresponding optical signal loss detection signal is available from the regenerator.
Alternatively, a "return- to-normal" control signal can be communicated from the adjacent node 1 and/or 4 to the far nodes 2 and 3 via overhead (e.g. user-defined alarm) signals on the working channel(s), in response to which the OCC control unit 26 in each far node causes the OCC 20 to return to the normal state. However, this is not preferred because it involves interfaces to the terminals T. Likewise it is possible, but not preferred, to communicate a "protection" control signal in the working channel overhead signals from the adjacent nodes to the far nodes in order to effect a protection switch from the normal state in Fig. 6 to the protection state of Fig. 8. The use of one or both of the wavelength detectors 27 and 28 in each node as described above is preferred because it provides faster switching between the normal and protection states, and because it is independent of the design of individual manufacturers' equipment. Fig. 9 represents a protection state of the system after a node failure, for example of the node 4. Protection switching to this state from the normal state of Fig. 6, and the return to the normal state in Fig. 6 on rectification of the node failure, is effected in substantially the same manner as described above for the link failure case of Fig. 8, the only significant difference being that the nodes 1 and 3 in Fig. 9 are the nodes adjacent the fault and only the node 2 is a far node.
In addition, in the protection state after a node failure as shown in Fig. 9, it is desirable or necessary to prohibit traffic for the failed node from being communicated to other nodes for which the traffic is not intended. For example, in the case of failure of the node 4 as shown in Fig. 9, in the protection state traffic from the node 1 and intended for the node 4 could be routed to the node 3, where it would be superfluous and ignored. In order to avoid such unnecessary routing of traffic, channel and system identities carried by the optical signals can be monitored in the nodes and used to prohibit traffic destined for a failed node, or a similar function can be performed by a network management system. As is well known, any of the communication links 10 to 13 may also include one or more bidirectional regenerators. Figs. 10 and 11 each illustrate, for example for the communication link 1 1 between the nodes 2 and 3, schematically a regenerator 60 for one working channel W optical fiber, and in more detail within a dashed line box a regenerator 62 provided for the protection channel P optical fiber. Each regenerator comprises, as shown for the regenerator 62, two units each comprising a transmitter 50, a WDM coupler 51, and a receiver 52 arranged as described above with reference to Fig. 5, one unit serving for transmission at the wavelength λl and reception at the wavelength λ2, and the other unit serving for transmission at the wavelength λ2 and reception at the wavelength λl. The regenerator 60 is coupled to the working channel fiber in conventional manner. The regenerator 62 is coupled to the protection channel fiber via a 2-port 2-way optical switch (OS) 64 having a control unit 66 which is controlled by alarm signals from the receivers 52 and/or by λl and λ2 wavelength detectors 27 and 28 which are directionally coupled to the protection channel fiber, in a similar manner to that described above for the OCC control unit 26 in each node.
Fig. 10 illustrates the OS 64 in the normal state, and Fig. 11 illustrates the OS 64 in the protection switched state. In each case the oppositely directed signal wavelengths λl and λ2 on the protection channel are coupled to the appropriate units of the regenerator 62, via either the normal connections of the OS 64 as shown in Fig. 10 or the crossed connections of the OS 64 as shown in Fig. 11. Switching between the two states is controlled by the control unit 66 in dependence upon optical signal loss detection signals from the receivers and/or wavelength detection signals from the detectors 27 and 28 in a similar manner to that described above. Again, either or both of the wavelength detectors 27 and 28 may be dispensed with as described above.
The OCC control unit 26 in each node and the OS control unit 66 in each regenerator can comprise logic circuits which are responsive to the alarm signals and/or wavelength detector signals supplied thereto to control the OCC 20 and OS 64, respectively, in the manner described above. Such logic circuits can easily be provided by persons of ordinary skill in the art, and accordingly need not be further described here.
It can be appreciated from the above description that the invention provides several important commercial and technical advantages. In particular, it provides a protection arrangement which can be incoφorated in new communication systems and can be easily added to existing communication systems using groups of linear or point-to-point communication links, regardless of their use of synchronous or asynchronous communication, or both, regardless of their ratios of protection channels to working channels, and regardless of their transmission rates. It thus also permits easy upgrading of the communication links, in that the use of higher bit rates on the communication links requires no change of the protection system components. In other words, the protection arrangement provides the advantages of switching optical signals, the transmission rate of which does not affect the protection switching. At the same time, the protection arrangement uses a small number of small optical switches, such as 1- or 2-port 2-way switches as described above, thereby avoiding the disadvantages (especially cost and unreliability) of large optical switches which have hitherto been considered necessary for protection purposes. Furthermore, the OCC and OS are provided only in the protection channel, so that the reliability of communication of the working channel traffic is not adversely affected by the protection arrangement.
Although particular embodiments of the invention have been described in detail above, it should be appreciated that numerous modifications, variations, and adaptations may be made without departing from the scope of the invention. For example, it can be appreciated that although the above description refers only to the use of one wavelength in each direction on each fiber, WDM may be used to permit each optical fiber to carry optical signals at two or more wavelengths in each direction of transmission. In addition, one wavelength in each direction on the protection channel optical fibers may be used to provide protection for any one of two or more WDM wavelengths in each direction on one or more working channel optical fibers. Although the above description relates to a communication system having four nodes, the invention is applicable to communication systems having two or more nodes with communication links forming a ring. Furthermore, more complex networks may comprise many nodes and communication links forming two or more communication systems in accordance with this invention, with the rings of such systems possibly intersecting and/or overlapping one another.
In addition, as already indicated the invention can also be applied to communication systems in which different optical fibers are used for opposite directions of transmission, rather than different wavelengths on the same fiber. In this case each OCC 20, OS 64, and OA 21 as described above can be duplicated for the two different fibers or directions of transmission, the WDM couplers being dispensed with and the wavelength detectors being replaced by optical signal detectors.

Claims

CLAIMS:
1. An optical communication system comprising: a plurality of nodes each comprising two terminals, and a plurality of optical communication links each providing bidirectional communications between a respective pair of terminals in two different nodes, each communication link comprising at least one working channel for normal traffic and a protection channel to which the terminals are arranged to switch the normal traffic of a faulty working channel; wherein each node includes an optical switch via which the protection channels are coupled to the respective terminals in normal operation, the optical switches being arranged and controlled so that, in the event that normal traffic of a faulty working channel of a communication link between two terminals is not restored by a switch to the protection channel of that communication link, the normal traffic is communicated between the two terminals via the optical switches and the protection channels of the other communication links.
2. A system as claimed in claim 1 wherein the protection channel of each communication link comprises an optical fiber using two different wavelengths for the two directions of transmission on the channel, a first one of the wavelengths being used in normal operation for transmission in a direction on each protection channel fiber corresponding to a clockwise direction around the ring, and a second one of the wavelengths being used in normal operation for transmission in a direction on each protection channel fiber corresponding to a counter-clockwise direction around the ring.
3. A system as claimed in claim 2 wherein at least one node includes a wavelength detector directionally coupled to the protection channel fiber for detecting an optical signal at at least one of the two wavelengths and providing a control signal for the optical switch of the node.
4. A system as claimed in any of claims 1 to 3 wherein the terminals are arranged to communicate at different transmission speeds on at least two of the communication links.
5. A system as claimed in any of claims 1 to 4 wherein at least one of the pairs of terminals is arranged to communicate synchronous signals and at least another of the pairs of terminals is arranged to communicate asynchronous signals.
6. A system as claimed in any of claims 1 to 5 wherein at least two of the communication links have different numbers of working channels.
7. A node for an optical communications system, the node comprising: first and second teιτninals for coupling respectively to first and second bidirectional optical communication links each comprising at least one working channel for normal traffic and a protection channel to which the terminal is arranged to switch the normal traffic of a faulty working channel; an optical switch having optical ports Tl and T2 coupled respectively to protection channel optical ports of the first and second terminals and having optical ports FI and F2 for coupling respectively to the protection channel of the first and second communication links; and a control unit for controlling the optical switch so that in normal operation the ports FI and Tl are coupled together and the ports F2 and T2 are coupled together, in a first protection state the ports FI and T2 and/or the ports F2 and Tl are coupled together, and in a second protection state there is a coupling between the ports FI and F2.
8. A node as claimed in claim 7 wherein the control unit is responsive to an alarm signal from the first or second terminal, representing a failure of a protection switch at the terminal to restore traffic from a faulty working channel via the protection channel of the respective communication link, to establish the first protection state.
9. A node as claimed in claim 7 or 8 wherein the control unit is responsive to a loss of an optical signal received by the first or second terminal via the protection channel of the respective communication link to establish the second protection state.
10. A node as claimed in claim 7 or 8 wherein the first terminal transmits and receives optical signals via its protection channel optical ports at first and second wavelengths respectively, the second terminal u*ansmits and receives optical signals via its protection channel optical ports at the second and first wavelengths respectively, and the node includes at least one detector directionally coupled to the protection channel of at least one of the first and second communication links for detecting optical signals at the first or second wavelength, the control unit being responsive to the detector for controlling the optical switch.
1 1. A node as claimed in any of claims 7 to 10 and including a bidirectional optical amplifier or regenerator via which the ports FI and F2 are coupled in the second protection state.
12. A method of protecting a plurality of separate bidirectional optical communication links, each communication link comprising at least one working channel for normal traffic between a pair of terminals and a protection channel to which the terminals are arranged to switch the normal traffic of a working channel in the event of a fault on the working channel, comprising the steps of: at each of a plurality of nodes, each comprising two of said terminals associated with two separate communication links whereby the plurality of nodes and communication links form a ring, providing an optical switch arranged in normal operation to couple the protection channel of the two communication links to protection channel ports of the respective terminals; and
(i) at at least one of the plurality of nodes, in the event that a protection switch, at one of the two terminals of the node, of normal traffic from a faulty working channel of the associated communication link to the protection channel of the communication link fails to restore the normal traffic, controlling the optical switch to couple the protection channel port of this one of the two terminals to the protection channel of the communication link associated with the other of the two terminals of the node; and (ii) at at least one other node in consequence of the coupling in (i), controlling the optical switch of this other node to provide a coupling between the protection channels of the two communication links at this other node.
13. A method as claimed in claim 12 wherein step (i) is carried out at each of two nodes adjacent to a fault resulting in a protection switch at each of said nodes to the protection channel of the communication link between said two nodes and failure of the protection switch to restore the normal traffic between said two nodes, and step (ii) is carried out at each other node.
14. A method as claimed in claim 12 or 13 wherein step (ii) comprises the step of, at at least one node, regenerating or amplifying optical signals coupled between the protection channels of the two communication links at the respective node.
15. A method as claimed in claim 12 or 13 wherein step (ii) is carried out at each other node in dependence upon an optical signal on the protection channel of a communication link associated with a terminal of the respective node.
16. A communications system comprising a plurality of separate communication links each between two terminals at respective nodes, each node comprising two terminals associated with different communication links, each communication link comprising at least one working channel for normal traffic and a protection channel for communicating the normal traffic of a faulty working channel of the respective communication link in the event of a protection switch at the respective terminals, the protection channels of the separate connection links forming a discontinuous ring with gaps between the protection channels at the nodes, and a switch at each node via which the protection channels are coupled to the terminals at the node, the switches being operable, in response to a failure of a protection switch to restore communication of normal traffic via the protection channel of a communication link between two terminals at respective nodes, to restore communication of said normal traffic via the protection channels of the communication links around the remainder of the ring and to bridge said gaps between the protection channels at any nodes around said remainder of the ring.
17. A system as claimed in claim 16 wherein the communication links comprise optical communication links and the switches at the nodes comprise optical switches.
18. A system as claimed in claim 16 or 17 wherein each protection channel provides bidirectional communications of optical signals at first and second wavelengths for opposite directions of communication, all of the protection channels of the separate communication hnks using said first wavelength for communications in a first direction around the discontinuous ring and all of the protection channels using said second wavelength for communications in a second direction around the discontinuous ring.
19. A system as claimed in any of claims 16 to 18 wherein at least one node includes a signal regenerator or amplifier via which the switch at this node is arranged to couple the protection channels to bridge the gap between the protection channels at this node.
20. A system as claimed in any of claims 16 to 19 wherein the different communication links and respective terminals are arranged to communicate different combinations of synchronous and asynchronous signals, different transmission speeds, and/or different numbers of working channels.
PCT/CA1996/000580 1995-09-06 1996-08-29 Optical communication system WO1997009803A1 (en)

Priority Applications (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP51071597A JP3362228B2 (en) 1995-09-06 1996-08-29 Failure switching node for optical communication system, optical communication system, and failure switching method in optical communication system
DE69627165T DE69627165T2 (en) 1995-09-06 1996-08-29 OPTICAL TRANSMISSION SYSTEM
EP96927489A EP0848873B1 (en) 1995-09-06 1996-08-29 Optical communication system

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US328695P 1995-09-06 1995-09-06
US60/003,286 1995-09-06

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1997009803A1 true WO1997009803A1 (en) 1997-03-13

Family

ID=21705075

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/CA1996/000580 WO1997009803A1 (en) 1995-09-06 1996-08-29 Optical communication system

Country Status (6)

Country Link
US (1) US5933258A (en)
EP (1) EP0848873B1 (en)
JP (1) JP3362228B2 (en)
CA (1) CA2164071C (en)
DE (1) DE69627165T2 (en)
WO (1) WO1997009803A1 (en)

Cited By (16)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1998044660A1 (en) * 1997-03-27 1998-10-08 Robert Bosch Gmbh Optical transmission device and method for checking transmission in an optical transmission device
WO1999000942A2 (en) * 1997-06-27 1999-01-07 Tellabs Denmark A/S A method of transmitting data in a ring-shaped teletransmission network, such a network and a network element therefor
EP0907266A2 (en) * 1997-09-16 1999-04-07 Nec Corporation Optical wave network system and method of monitoring a network trouble
WO1999043106A1 (en) * 1998-02-20 1999-08-26 Robert Bosch Gmbh Method for transferring utility optical signals and optical-line network
EP0949777A2 (en) * 1998-04-08 1999-10-13 Nortel Networks Corporation Path switched shared protection
DE19832039A1 (en) * 1998-07-16 2000-01-20 Alcatel Sa Node of a point-to-multipoint network
EP1048139A1 (en) * 1998-01-14 2000-11-02 MCI Worldcom, Inc. Self-healing optical network
NL1012568C2 (en) * 1999-07-12 2001-01-15 Koninkl Kpn Nv Optical transmission network with protection configuration.
EP1148667A1 (en) * 2000-04-20 2001-10-24 TELEFONAKTIEBOLAGET L M ERICSSON (publ) A multi-wavelength/multi-channel optical system
EP1162858A2 (en) * 2000-06-06 2001-12-12 Lucent Technologies Inc. Methods and apparatus for protection against network failures
EP1263153A2 (en) * 2001-06-01 2002-12-04 Redfern Broadband Networks Inc. Failure protection switching in optical network
EP1351416A2 (en) * 2002-03-27 2003-10-08 Fujitsu Limited System and method for amplifying signals in an optical network
US6643464B1 (en) 1999-07-07 2003-11-04 Nortel Networks Limited Constrained optical mesh protection for transmission systems
US6891942B1 (en) 1999-09-16 2005-05-10 Mci, Inc. Method and system for using caller preferences to direct special call handling
EP2224624A1 (en) * 2007-12-07 2010-09-01 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. A method for primary and backup links protection in passive optical network and a ring-based system
FR2996090A1 (en) * 2012-09-21 2014-03-28 Thales Sa Information transmission network for aircraft, has clock forming unit for providing clock for generation of authorization signals for insertion of messages independent of reception of messages inserted previously in loop by insertion node

Families Citing this family (48)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6483803B1 (en) * 1996-09-04 2002-11-19 Nortel Networks Limited Apparatus and method for restoring fiber optic communications network connections
SE506320C2 (en) * 1996-09-23 1997-12-01 Ericsson Telefon Ab L M Method and apparatus for detecting errors in a network
JP3555824B2 (en) * 1996-11-21 2004-08-18 日本電気株式会社 Branching device
ID22055A (en) * 1996-12-06 1999-08-26 Bell Communications Res CROSS-NETWORKS OF RINGS FOR OPTICAL COMMUNICATION NETWORKS WITH A LOT OF RELIABLE WAVES
DE19703992A1 (en) * 1997-02-03 1998-08-06 Siemens Ag Method for the equivalent switching of transmission devices in ring architectures for the bidirectional transmission of ATM cells
JP3777008B2 (en) * 1997-02-18 2006-05-24 株式会社日立コミュニケーションテクノロジー Disaster recovery control method
US6424445B1 (en) * 1997-02-25 2002-07-23 Hitachi, Ltd. Optical transmission apparatus and optical systems
JP3175630B2 (en) * 1997-04-02 2001-06-11 日本電気株式会社 Optical communication node and wavelength-division multiplexing optical transmission device having ring configuration formed therefrom
US6233072B1 (en) * 1997-12-31 2001-05-15 Mci Communications Corporation Method and system for restoring coincident line and facility failures
US6195367B1 (en) * 1997-12-31 2001-02-27 Nortel Networks Limited Architectural arrangement for bandwidth management in large central offices
US6307652B1 (en) * 1998-04-28 2001-10-23 Weed Instrument Company, Incorporated Fault tolerant optical communication apparatus and method
US6567194B1 (en) * 1998-08-17 2003-05-20 Corvis Corporation Optical communication network and protection methods
US7272321B1 (en) 1999-05-10 2007-09-18 Alloptic, Inc. Passive optical network
US6968130B1 (en) * 1999-09-07 2005-11-22 Nokia Corporation System and method for fully utilizing available optical transmission spectrum in optical networks
US7386236B1 (en) 1999-09-27 2008-06-10 Alloptic, Inc. Multiple wavelength TDMA optical network
DE19946487A1 (en) * 1999-09-28 2001-05-10 Siemens Ag Optical protection module for optical network topologies
US6735392B1 (en) * 1999-10-18 2004-05-11 Nortel Networks Limited System and method for transmitting and restoring an optical signal
IL132726A (en) * 1999-11-03 2003-07-31 Eci Telecom Ltd Method and system for transmitting optical communication
US7139477B2 (en) * 1999-11-03 2006-11-21 Eci Telecom Ltd. Method and system for diverting traffic in a communication network
JP4215369B2 (en) * 2000-02-09 2009-01-28 株式会社日立コミュニケーションテクノロジー Network transmission apparatus and network transmission system
EP1126741A1 (en) * 2000-02-15 2001-08-22 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Method for protection switching of transmission equipment in MPLS networks
US6894978B1 (en) 2000-03-10 2005-05-17 Noriaki Hashimoto Method and system for operation of a resilient closed communication network without a dedicated protection network segment
US20010038473A1 (en) * 2000-03-10 2001-11-08 Ming-Jun Li Devices and methods for controlling protection switching in an optical channel shared protection ring
US20020097461A1 (en) * 2000-07-07 2002-07-25 Naimish Patel Bi-directional wavelength switched ring optical protection switching protocol
US7170852B1 (en) * 2000-09-29 2007-01-30 Cisco Technology, Inc. Mesh with projection channel access (MPCA)
US6856767B2 (en) * 2000-10-06 2005-02-15 Alphion Corporation Optical signal quality selection system
US6782198B1 (en) * 2000-11-10 2004-08-24 Lucent Technologies Inc. Switching arrangement for fault recovery in optical WDM ring networks
US7016300B2 (en) * 2000-12-30 2006-03-21 Redback Networks Inc. Protection mechanism for an optical ring
GB2386274B (en) * 2000-12-30 2004-07-14 Redback Networks Inc Non-BLSR protected layer 2/3 channel provisioning
US6975589B2 (en) * 2000-12-30 2005-12-13 Redback Networks Inc. Method and apparatus for a hybrid variable rate pipe
US7209436B1 (en) * 2000-12-30 2007-04-24 Redback Networks Inc. Method and apparatus for variable rate pipes
US20050086232A1 (en) * 2001-02-05 2005-04-21 Jixiong Dong Virtual protection method and device for fiber path
CN1184752C (en) * 2001-02-05 2005-01-12 华为技术有限公司 Virtual protection method and device for optical fibre path
DE10126334A1 (en) * 2001-05-30 2002-12-12 Siemens Ag Optical protection system for an optical communication system
US7372803B2 (en) * 2001-07-24 2008-05-13 Nortel Networks Limited Apparatus and method for establishment and protection of connections within mesh networks
US7054264B2 (en) * 2001-07-24 2006-05-30 Corrigent Systems Ltd. Interconnect and gateway protection in bidirectional ring networks
US7061859B2 (en) 2001-08-30 2006-06-13 Corrigent Systems Ltd. Fast protection in ring topologies
US7305623B2 (en) * 2001-12-03 2007-12-04 Lucent Technologies Inc. Method and apparatus for managing and representing elements in a network
DE10237584B4 (en) * 2002-08-16 2005-10-06 Siemens Ag Method for managing resources when setting up a replacement path in a transparently switchable network
CN100370700C (en) * 2004-04-14 2008-02-20 华为技术有限公司 Realizing method and device for optical path shared protection in wave division complex system
FR2978315B1 (en) * 2011-07-20 2013-09-13 Thales Sa INFORMATION TRANSMISSION NETWORK AND CORRESPONDING NETWORK NODE
FR2983017B1 (en) * 2011-11-22 2014-01-10 Thales Sa INFORMATION TRANSMISSION NETWORK AND NETWORK CORRESPONDING NOZZLE
FR2983018B1 (en) * 2011-11-22 2014-01-10 Thales Sa INFORMATION TRANSMISSION NETWORK AND PROGRAMMABLE NETWORK NUTS
FR2987202B1 (en) 2012-02-16 2014-03-28 Thales Sa NODE AND INFORMATION TRANSMISSION NETWORK
FR2987201B1 (en) 2012-02-16 2017-12-01 Thales Sa INFORMATION TRANSMISSION NETWORK AND TRANSMISSION RING NODE
FR2987204B1 (en) * 2012-02-16 2014-03-21 Thales Sa INFORMATION TRANSMISSION NETWORK AND NODE
FR2987203B1 (en) * 2012-02-16 2014-03-28 Thales Sa NETWORK AND NETWORK OF INFORMATION TRANSMISSION NETWORK
US10826601B2 (en) * 2019-01-16 2020-11-03 Ciena Corporation Optical switch with path continuity monitoring for optical protection switching

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5159595A (en) * 1988-04-08 1992-10-27 Northern Telecom Limited Ring transmission system
EP0651528A1 (en) * 1993-10-29 1995-05-03 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Optical transparent ring network with redundant paths
US5442623A (en) * 1992-08-17 1995-08-15 Bell Communications Research, Inc. Passive protected self healing ring network

Family Cites Families (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JP2570016B2 (en) * 1991-08-29 1997-01-08 富士通株式会社 Path switch switching method for optical transmission equipment
WO1993014574A1 (en) * 1992-01-10 1993-07-22 Fujitsu Limited Optical transmission system
JPH0795225A (en) * 1993-09-20 1995-04-07 Fujitsu Ltd Bidirectional ring network control system
IT1267645B1 (en) * 1994-12-09 1997-02-07 Cselt Centro Studi Lab Telecom RING COMMUNICATION STRUCTURE ON OPTICAL VECTOR AND RELATIVE RECONFIGURABLE NODE.

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5159595A (en) * 1988-04-08 1992-10-27 Northern Telecom Limited Ring transmission system
US5442623A (en) * 1992-08-17 1995-08-15 Bell Communications Research, Inc. Passive protected self healing ring network
EP0651528A1 (en) * 1993-10-29 1995-05-03 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Optical transparent ring network with redundant paths

Non-Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
ELREFAIE A F: "MULTIWAVELENGTH SURVIVABLE RING NETWORK ARCHITECTURES", 23 May 1993, PROCEEDINGS OF THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON COMMUNICATIONS (ICC), GENEVA, MAY 23 - 26, 1993, VOL. 1 - 2 - 03, PAGE(S) 1245 - 1251, INSTITUTE OF ELECTRICAL AND ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS, XP002019138 *
WU T -H ET AL: "A NOVEL PASSIVE PROTECTED SONET BIDIRECTIONAL SELF-HEALING RING ARCHITECTURE", JOURNAL OF LIGHTWAVE TECHNOLOGY, vol. 10, no. 9, 1 September 1992 (1992-09-01), pages 1314 - 1322, XP000399611 *

Cited By (31)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1998044660A1 (en) * 1997-03-27 1998-10-08 Robert Bosch Gmbh Optical transmission device and method for checking transmission in an optical transmission device
WO1999000942A2 (en) * 1997-06-27 1999-01-07 Tellabs Denmark A/S A method of transmitting data in a ring-shaped teletransmission network, such a network and a network element therefor
WO1999000942A3 (en) * 1997-06-27 1999-03-18 Dsc Communications As A method of transmitting data in a ring-shaped teletransmission network, such a network and a network element therefor
EP0907266A2 (en) * 1997-09-16 1999-04-07 Nec Corporation Optical wave network system and method of monitoring a network trouble
EP0907266A3 (en) * 1997-09-16 2005-01-26 Nec Corporation Optical wave network system and method of monitoring a network trouble
EP1048139A1 (en) * 1998-01-14 2000-11-02 MCI Worldcom, Inc. Self-healing optical network
EP1048139A4 (en) * 1998-01-14 2003-08-27 Mci Worldcom Inc Self-healing optical network
USRE42095E1 (en) 1998-02-20 2011-02-01 Nola Semiconductor Llc Method for transferring utility optical signals and optical-line network
US6947668B1 (en) 1998-02-20 2005-09-20 Robert Bosch Gmbh Method for transferring utility optical signals and optical-line network
WO1999043106A1 (en) * 1998-02-20 1999-08-26 Robert Bosch Gmbh Method for transferring utility optical signals and optical-line network
EP0949777A3 (en) * 1998-04-08 2003-05-14 Nortel Networks Limited Path switched shared protection
EP0949777A2 (en) * 1998-04-08 1999-10-13 Nortel Networks Corporation Path switched shared protection
US6643255B1 (en) 1998-07-16 2003-11-04 Alcatel Node of a point-to-multipoint network
DE19832039A1 (en) * 1998-07-16 2000-01-20 Alcatel Sa Node of a point-to-multipoint network
US6643464B1 (en) 1999-07-07 2003-11-04 Nortel Networks Limited Constrained optical mesh protection for transmission systems
NL1012568C2 (en) * 1999-07-12 2001-01-15 Koninkl Kpn Nv Optical transmission network with protection configuration.
WO2001005083A1 (en) * 1999-07-12 2001-01-18 Koninklijke Kpn N.V. Optical transmission network having a protection configuration
US6891942B1 (en) 1999-09-16 2005-05-10 Mci, Inc. Method and system for using caller preferences to direct special call handling
EP1148667A1 (en) * 2000-04-20 2001-10-24 TELEFONAKTIEBOLAGET L M ERICSSON (publ) A multi-wavelength/multi-channel optical system
WO2001082509A1 (en) * 2000-04-20 2001-11-01 Telefonaktiebolget Lm Ericsson (Publ) A multi-wavelength/multi-channel system
EP1162858A3 (en) * 2000-06-06 2004-02-04 Lucent Technologies Inc. Methods and apparatus for protection against network failures
US7096275B1 (en) 2000-06-06 2006-08-22 Lucent Technologies Inc. Methods and apparatus for protection against network failures
EP1162858A2 (en) * 2000-06-06 2001-12-12 Lucent Technologies Inc. Methods and apparatus for protection against network failures
EP1263153A3 (en) * 2001-06-01 2004-02-11 Redfern Broadband Networks Inc. Failure protection switching in optical network
EP1263153A2 (en) * 2001-06-01 2002-12-04 Redfern Broadband Networks Inc. Failure protection switching in optical network
EP1351416A3 (en) * 2002-03-27 2005-03-16 Fujitsu Limited System and method for amplifying signals in an optical network
EP1351416A2 (en) * 2002-03-27 2003-10-08 Fujitsu Limited System and method for amplifying signals in an optical network
EP2224624A1 (en) * 2007-12-07 2010-09-01 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. A method for primary and backup links protection in passive optical network and a ring-based system
EP2224624A4 (en) * 2007-12-07 2011-04-27 Huawei Tech Co Ltd A method for primary and backup links protection in passive optical network and a ring-based system
US8768162B2 (en) 2007-12-07 2014-07-01 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. PON ring system, and method for realizing primary and backup link protection in PON
FR2996090A1 (en) * 2012-09-21 2014-03-28 Thales Sa Information transmission network for aircraft, has clock forming unit for providing clock for generation of authorization signals for insertion of messages independent of reception of messages inserted previously in loop by insertion node

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
CA2164071C (en) 2001-08-21
EP0848873B1 (en) 2003-04-02
EP0848873A1 (en) 1998-06-24
DE69627165T2 (en) 2003-11-13
JP3362228B2 (en) 2003-01-07
CA2164071A1 (en) 1997-03-07
DE69627165D1 (en) 2003-05-08
JPH10511250A (en) 1998-10-27
US5933258A (en) 1999-08-03

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
EP0848873B1 (en) Optical communication system
US6701085B1 (en) Method and apparatus for data transmission in the wavelength-division multiplex method in an optical ring network
US6088141A (en) Self-healing network
CA2254606C (en) Ring network for sharing protection resource by working communication paths
JP4070246B2 (en) Method and apparatus for optical bidirectional line switch type ring data communication system
US6295146B1 (en) System and method for sharing a spare channel among two or more optical ring networks
US6775477B2 (en) Optical communication network and protection methods
EP0548648B1 (en) 1:N Ring-type signal protection apparatus
EP1161014A1 (en) Autoprotected optical communication ring network
CA2318046A1 (en) Self-healing optical network
US6697546B2 (en) Optical node system and switched connection method
US6579018B1 (en) Four-fiber ring optical cross connect system using 4×4 switch matrices
EP1004184B1 (en) Self-healing ring network and a method for fault detection and rectifying
US7123830B2 (en) WDM self-healing optical ring network
WO2001030005A1 (en) System and method for transmitting and restoring an optical signal
CA2387750C (en) Method and system for communication protection
Uehara et al. Highly reliable and economical WDM ring with optical self-healing and 1: N wavelength protection
EP1075105B1 (en) Autoprotected optical communication ring network
EP1065822A1 (en) Autoprotected optical communication ring network
JP3312707B2 (en) Optical fiber communication network
EP1354439A2 (en) Optical communications network and node for forming such a network

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): JP

AL Designated countries for regional patents

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): AT BE CH DE DK ES FI FR GB GR IE IT LU MC NL PT SE

DFPE Request for preliminary examination filed prior to expiration of 19th month from priority date (pct application filed before 20040101)
121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application
WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 1996927489

Country of ref document: EP

WWP Wipo information: published in national office

Ref document number: 1996927489

Country of ref document: EP

WWG Wipo information: grant in national office

Ref document number: 1996927489

Country of ref document: EP