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Discover the key aspects of framing and FEC for 10G EPON technology, focusing on efficient design strategies and FEC synchronization methods for downstream and upstream transmission.
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10 Gb/s PON FEC-Framing Contributors names Sept 2006
Introduction • Presentations in July seemed to demonstrate general consensus on: • FEC is definitely needed for 10G • FEC should be at the lowest layer • There are two parts to the FEC puzzle • ‘Framing,’ or how to arrange the bits • ‘Algorithm,’ or the actual math of FEC • This set of slides concentrates on framing
FEC framing • FEC will be applied at the lowest layer • Below the 64b66b sub-layer • Right before the PMA • FEC sub-layer will be responsible for obtaining codeword lock, because without it, FEC is impossible • Frame lock must work with extensive errors • In the upstream, lock must work very fast • 64b66b sub-layer will be handed aligned data, so there is no need for its own framing system
FEC framing structure issues • There are several differently sized data objects in the 10G EPON technology that we should consider: • 64b66b blocks, 6.4 ns long • MPCP time quanta, 16 ns long • FEC codeword, (yet to be determined) • The simplest and most efficient system will • Arrange objects so sizes are related by ratios of small integers • Result in a final line-rate that is a small integer ratio of the input MAC rate
64b66b and time quanta • The least common denominator of time quanta and 64b66b blocks is 32 ns • 5 blocks • 2 time quanta • Regardless of FEC code choice, if we want to keep things neat, then time-quanta should always be specified in even numbers
RS code as an example • For this presentation, we will consider the tried and true RS(239,255) code (and shortened variants) as a example code • This gives us a concrete set of code constraints to work out the method of solution • This is not meant to favor RS over other codes • As the PMD analysis moves forward, the choice of FEC algorithm will get clearer • However, the basic ideas presented here will remain the same
Form of FEC codeword • A FEC codeword will contain three important items • Framing pattern • User data • FEC parity • In continuous mode systems, framing pattern is typically short, and state machine with long memory is used to lock onto codewords • In burst-mode systems, framing pattern is longer, to provide instant lock-on • This can occur once at the beginning of the frame, with no further framing structure required
Good codeword arrangements for 66b blocks • Maximum number of 66b blocks that fit is 28 • 1848 bits payload • 40 bits synchronization • 128 bits parity • 252 total bytes: 9/8 line rate • With an even number of quanta, 25 blocks fit • 1650 bits payload • 22 bits synchronization • 128 bits parity • 225 total bytes: 9/8 line rate
Choice of 64b66b encoding • The 2 bit header in 64b66b is redundant, since FEC sub-layer will be aligning the data • Can reduce to 1 bit (the T-bit) to increase effciency • Sounds good, but redundant bits in the payload could be used for auxilliary alignment purpose, so sending 66b blocks is not useless
Good codeword arrangements for 65b blocks • Maximum number of 65b blocks that fit is 29 • 1885 bits payload • 17 bits synchronization • 128 bits parity • 2030 total bits: 35/32 line rate • With an even number of quanta, 25 blocks fit • 1625 bits payload • 22 bits synchronization • 128 bits parity • 1775 total bits: 71/64 line rate
Downstream FEC synchronization • In the downstream, any of the above mentioned framing lengths would work • We would adjust the state machine parameters to obtain whatever lock probabilities we wanted • For reference, 2^64 was considered a ‘good lock’ in the 66b system • 2~4 sync patterns will produce similar results
Upstream FEC synchronization • Two phases of synchronization • Initial lock requires a larger and error-resistant sequence that can reliably produce a unique autocorrelation signal • For reference, merely 20 bits is recommended for G-PON operating at 1e-4 raw BER • Maintenance is nearly redundant (protects against clock slips – how frequent are they?) but probably will be included to retain clock frequency harmonization