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Challenges in open access gateway design Kees de Waard, Director of Business Development, Genexis Open Access Workshop, FTTH Conference 2013, London (UK)

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FTTH Conference 2013 Workshop Open Models

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Page 1: Kees de waard

Challenges in open access gateway design Kees de Waard, Director of Business Development, Genexis

Open Access Workshop, FTTH Conference 2013, London (UK)

Page 2: Kees de waard

© Genexis BV | all rights reserved 2

Operator  (Country)   Type   Speed  (Mb/s)   Technology   Availability  

NTT  (Japan)   ILEC   100/100   FTTH  EPON   March  2008  

GVT  (Brasil)   CLEC   100/10   FTTH   July  2009  

HKBN  (Hong  Kong)   CLEC   1000/1000   FTTH   April  2010  

AlHbox  (Norway)   CLEC   400/400   FTTH  PTP   June  2010  

Comcast  (USA)   MSO   105/10   HFC/FTTH  RFoG  DOCSIS3.0   April  2011  

ONO  (Spain)   MSO   100/10   HFC  DOCSIS3.0   September  2011  

KPN  (Netherlands)   ILEC   500/500   FTTH  PTP   January  2012  

Verizon  (USA)   ILEC   300/65   FTTH  GPON   May  2012  

Comcast  (USA)   MSO   305/65   HFC/FTTH  RFoG  DOCSIS3.0   July  2012  

Google  (USA)   CLEC   1000/1000   FTTH  PTP   November  2012  

Gigaclear  (UK)   CLEC   1000/1000   FTTH  PTP   November  2012  

B4RN  (UK)   CLEC   1000/1000   FTTH  PTP   January  2013  Source: Public press releases, Internet

Access Bandwidth Per User – ISP Offers

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© Genexis BV | all rights reserved 3

10  Gbps    

1  Gbps  

2015            2019            2023  

Twisted pair Cable Fiber Growth trends ~50% annual

increase

Based on: http://www.useit.com/alertbox/980405.html

Access Bandwidth Per User – 30Y Trend

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© Genexis BV | all rights reserved 4

Layer  3:  Service  layer  •  Determines  end-­‐user  experience  •  Should-­‐be:  self-­‐installable,  powerful  

Layer  1:  Passive  layer  •  Highest  iniHal  investment  •  Should  be:  Layer  2-­‐agnosHc,  future  proof  

Layer  2:  Transport  layer  •  Increasing  amount  of  choices  to  deal  with  •  Should  be:  cost-­‐effecHve  under  growth  

L1:  Passive  layer  

L2:  Transport  layer  

L3:  Service  layer  

Fiber To The Home – Three Layers Exist

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© Genexis BV | all rights reserved 5

Open Access Network Business Models

•  Open Access FTTH has different operators at each layer, namely:

•  Passive Infrastructure Provider, e.g. Reggefiber, Stokab

•  Network or Connection Provider, e.g. KPN-ITNS, Accione, GITpa, DST

•  Service Provider, e.g. KPN, Tele2, Adamo, Orange

[M.  ForzaH,  ACREO,  ICTON  2010  conference,  Jun.  2010,  Munich  (DE)]  

L2  

L3  

L1  

=      =      =  

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© Genexis BV | all rights reserved 6

Matching The Gateway to Open Access

•  An FTTH gateway solution consists of 3 modules: FTU, ONT, and RG

•  What are some of the challenges in open access?

Layer  3:  Service  layer  •  FTTH  CPE:  ResidenHal  Gateway  •  Service  Provider  •  Lifecycle:  2-­‐5  years  

Layer  1:  Passive  layer  •  FTTH  CPE:  Fiber  TerminaHon  Unit  •  Passive  Infrastructure  Provider  •  Lifecycle  :  >20  years  

Layer  2:  Transport  layer  •  FTTH  CPE:  OpHcal  Network  TerminaHon  •  Network/ConnecHon  Provider  •  Lifecycle:  8-­‐10  years  

L1:  Passive  layer  

L2:  Transport  layer  

L3:  Service  layer  

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© Genexis BV | all rights reserved 7

L1: Fiber termination unit

•  The fiber termination unit (FTU) is the passive demarcation point

•  Desktop placement of ONT using an optical patch cord

•  Wall-mount “click-on” installation using fiber-splice solution

•  Challenge: diversity of solutions in shape, size, and interface

•  Also, fiber regulation is different per country

External  patch  cord                            Internal  fiber  splice  

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© Genexis BV | all rights reserved 8

L2: Optical network termination

•  Optical network termination (ONT) is the network demarcation point

•  External residential gateway is remotely located or “click-on”

•  Any transport layer is terminated: GPON, Ethernet PTP, WDM PON, …

•  Challenge: How to separate responsibilities between NP and SP when ONT is integrated with RG?

External  wiring  to  RG              “click-­‐on”  RG  installaHon  

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© Genexis BV | all rights reserved 9

L3: Residential Gateway

•  The residential gateway (RG) is the service demarcation point

•  A “one-box” solution: Integrated with the ONT, trending in USA

•  A “click-on” module: Flexible service platform independent of the ONT

•  Desktop gateway using patch cords

•  Challenge: How to manage open access and diversity of bandwidth provisioning inside the home?

“One-­‐box”  with  ONT                                              “Click-­‐on”                                                                  Desktop  

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© Genexis BV | all rights reserved 10

Example: Integrated FTTH Gateway

•  The individual modules allow heterogeneity and facilitate change

•  Each module can have a different owner with separated responsibility

•  Modules can be changed independently of one and other

•  Is this this open access gateway?

FTU                                                                                                                    ONT                                                                                                                  RG  

L2:  Transport  layer   L3:  Service  layer  

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© Genexis BV | all rights reserved 11

Management and Provisioning

•  The ONT and RG are managed separately

•  The ONT transports the data that is terminated at the RG

•  Such separation of functionalities follows BBF TR-142 v2 (GPON)

Element  manager  SNMP  OMCi  

TR-­‐069  SNMP  CLI  DHCP/TFTP  

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© Genexis BV | all rights reserved 12

Conclusions

•  A three-module integrated CPE is a matched solution to FTTH

•  A demarcation point in hardware for the open access operators

•  Each module is optimized in functionality and managed independently

•  A “click-on” RG allows user self-installation with reduced service calls

•  Interoperability is a key requirement at all three FTTH layers

•  In-home networks is a next domain to be conquered

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Thank you! Any questions? [email protected]