Configuring cpos interfaces, Overview, Sonet – H3C Technologies H3C SR8800 User Manual

Page 35: Cpos, Sdh frame structure

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Configuring CPOS interfaces

NOTE:

Only the PIC-CLF2G8L and PIC-CLF4G8L sub-cards have channelized E3/T3 interfaces.

Overview

SONET

Synchronous Optical Network (SONET), a synchronous transmission system defined by the ANSI, is an
international standard transmission protocol. It adopts optical transmission.

SDH

Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH), defined by the CCITT (today’s ITU-T), uses a SONET rate subset.

As SDH uses synchronous multiplexing and a flexible mapping structure, low-speed tributary signals can

be added to or dropped from an SDH signal without a large amount of multiplexing/demultiplexing

devices. This reduces signal attenuation and investment in network devices.

CPOS

The Low-speed tributary signals multiplexed to form an SDH signal are called channels. The channelized

POS (CPOS) interface makes full use of SDH to provide precise bandwidth division, reduce the number
of low-speed physical interfaces on network devices, enhance their aggregation capacity, and improve

the access capacity of leased lines.
The CPOS interface operates at the rate of STM-1.

SDH frame structure

To understand the benefits of CPOS, you need to first understand the frame structure of SDH signal

STM-N.
Low-speed tributary signals should distribute in one frame regularly and evenly for the convenience of
adding them to or dropping them from high-speed signals. The ITU-T specifies that STM-N frames adopt

the structure of rectangle blocks in bytes, as illustrated in

Figure 4

:

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