Thread Links Date Links
Thread Prev Thread Next Thread Index Date Prev Date Next Date Index

Re: [STDS-802-3-EPOC] MMP issues with the MAC Layer Solution



Matt, 

 

The draft, once produced, will be evaluated and scrutinized by a group
larger than this Task Force alone, first including 802.3 WG at large, and
then theoretically - the world (or anybody willing and interested in
participating in the Sponsor Ballot). While I understand the need for such
internetwork solution, one could very easily argue that it is not within the
scope of this Task Force to deal with such architectures. In fact, I have
not seen any Task Force in 802.3 that would deal with internetworking
between devices across multiple 802.3 links. That is not our domain. The
sooner we understand, the sooner we can eliminate the jitter and focus on
what we promised to deliver. 

 

As for developing internetworking between EPON and EPoC - I seem to recall a
certain effort within CableLabs to do just that. Are we already convinced
that existing EPON cannot be used as defined in 802.3-2012 and needs to be
modified? It does seem to work in DPoE very well. 

 

Marek

 

From: Matthew Schmitt [mailto:m.schmitt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Monday, 14 January, 2013 10:47 PM
To: STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [STDS-802-3-EPOC] MMP issues with the MAC Layer Solution

 

Marek,

 

This is where things get a little tricky.  While you can argue that we're
only doing the PHY for the coax layer, at the same time the most likely
deployed architecture (and one that additional specs are being written
around outside of IEEE) is the OLT-FCU-CNU approach.  One way or another, we
need to make sure that works, because if it doesn't.  Well, we'll just need
to make sure it can work.

 

It'll be fun. :-)

 

Thanks!

 

Matt

 

From: Marek Hajduczenia <marek.hajduczenia@xxxxxx>
Date: Monday, January 14, 2013 3:33 PM
To: Matthew Schmitt <m.schmitt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>,
"STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: RE: [STDS-802-3-EPOC] MMP issues with the MAC Layer Solution

 

Matt, 

 

Just to finish this (already lengthy) thread. 

 

The latter option you mention, i.e., was already discussed and if memory
serves me right, OLT working with CNUs via FCU seems like a definition for
802.1 (internetworking) and not 802.3, since the physical 802.3 link is
terminated in a middle at FCU. We can debate whether that is good or not,
but it begs the question why we do not see e.g. 10GE P2P as a viable
solution for FCU backhaul and try to modify 10GE spec to fit our needs as
well. 

 

At this time we have (I believe) already enough on the plate to spend the
next 2 years discussing. Let's focus first on getting EPoC working, and then
perhaps if there is further interest, get internetworking between both
systems. Doing everything at the same time does not always work out right. 

 

Marek

 

From: Matthew Schmitt [mailto:m.schmitt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Monday, 14 January, 2013 10:24 PM
To: Marek Hajduczenia; STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [STDS-802-3-EPOC] MMP issues with the MAC Layer Solution

 

Marek,

 

For what it's worth, I agree that we should not touch things that we don't
need to.  And thank you for the clarification of your intent - it is
appreciated.

 

Also, I think that part of where we get hung up is in the architectures
we're referring to.  In a pure CLT-CNU architecture (where the CLT is a coax
equivalent of an OLT) it's something of a moot point; however, in an
OLT-FCU-CNU architecture, EPON over the fiber link comes into play, and it
may prove necessary to convey something new or different over the fiber link
to support the coax link.  It would be great if we can get the functionality
we need without doing so, but if it turns out that it is necessary, I
believe that it is at least in scope.

 

Put another way, I don't think we have to discard an approach just because
it would make a change there; at the same time, if we have 2 different and
otherwise equal options on the table, one of which does not touch MPCP, then
I think we should give weight to that approach.

 

Thanks!

 

Matt

 

From: Marek Hajduczenia <marek.hajduczenia@xxxxxx>
Date: Monday, January 14, 2013 3:15 PM
To: Matthew Schmitt <m.schmitt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>,
"STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: RE: [STDS-802-3-EPOC] MMP issues with the MAC Layer Solution

 

Matt, 

 

Even though the final product of the group seems relatively simple (just a
few changes in SDs from Clause 64), the path there was long and required the
effort of many individuals, including computer simulations, case studies and
many revisions - something that is not easy to do when several key people
are not involved in this TF. 

 

I think we (as a group) should not even touch anything that we do not need
to, and EPON is not what we set out to develop - we should focus on EPoC,
which is what the group is about. For EPoC, we start with a carbon copy of
EPON MPCP and then make "minimal augmentation" on it, to allow implementers
reuse what they have done already at least once. 

 

I do not try to imply anything, and if that was the impression, I apologize
for it. All I am after is preservation of EPON the way it is today, with no
changes or new options, and making EPoC "a new type of EPON" running on
different type of media. 

 

Marek

 

From: Matthew Schmitt [mailto:m.schmitt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Monday, 14 January, 2013 09:58 PM
To: STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [STDS-802-3-EPOC] MMP issues with the MAC Layer Solution

 

Marek,

 

Actually, I disagree with the following statement of yours regarding my
message:

 

"since it implies that existing equipment may become incompatible with the
newly made changes."

 

In my email below, I clearly stated that changes to MPCP in EPON were only
acceptable if they did NOT make things incompatible (this based on my
reading of the Objectives).  Unless I'm misunderstanding you, the way you
appear to be characterizing my message is directly opposite of what I said
on that point, as it seems you are implying that I'm okay making changes
that break compatibility (which I am not).

 

Now, you could - possibly fairly - argue that making any change is
potentially dangerous, particularly if we don't have a lot of expertise on
the potential impacts of those changes; that said, I have a hard time
believing that we don't have the expertise in the room to make that
determination.

 

Thanks.

 

Matt

 

From: Marek Hajduczenia <marek.hajduczenia@xxxxxx>
Date: Monday, January 14, 2013 2:50 PM
To: Matthew Schmitt <m.schmitt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>,
"STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: RE: [STDS-802-3-EPOC] MMP issues with the MAC Layer Solution

 

Hi Matt, 

 

Thank you for answering the question. 

 

I believe your reading to be quite dangerous, since it implies that existing
equipment may become incompatible with the newly made changes. That is
something that I believe nobody really wants and I am not sure everybody
really understood the statements you quote below when the words were put on
paper. Certainly, I'd vote against PAR if that is what was intended. Recall
even that during the SG phase I presented a sketch of a potential draft
outline (http://www.ieee802.org/3/epoc/public/jul12/hajduczenia_01_0712.pdf)
and discussion at the time was geared towards a separate clause for MPCP,
something that nobody disagreed at the time to (yes, I know it is not an
approved beaseline and it is SG material only) and based on that
understanding, my reading on what's in the PAR is different. 

 

My understanding is that we take EPON as baseline and adapt it to operate
over coax PHY. In the process, we extend MPCP as defined in EPON, to operate
over coax PHY, but that adaptation essentially means that MPCP gets a new
clause, its own place to live and be independent from EPON. This is my
assumption. If during the process we discover that EPoC MPCP is a carbon
copy of EPON MPCP, or changes could be localized into a clearly designated
places, leaving no doubt as to what applies to EPON and what is EPoC
specific, making changes to Clause 77 would be OK. However, my understanding
is that we develop EPoC-specific MPCP clause in our future draft, and
examine merger only and if possible. 

 

I think interpreting the scope of this group to have an open mandate to go
and make changes to spec that has been stable for a few years now is
dangerous, at best, especially that there is just a small group of people
involved in the development of original Clause 77 material. 

 

Marek

 

From: Matthew Schmitt [mailto:m.schmitt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Monday, 14 January, 2013 09:07 PM
To: STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [STDS-802-3-EPOC] MMP issues with the MAC Layer Solution

 

Marek,

 

A good (and fair) question.

 

I believe that the answer is that EPON MPCP is in scope (with restrictions),
but that if we can restrict anything we do to the coax link (EPoC) that
would be a good thing.

 

To come to that conclusion, I went back to the Objectives and the PAR to see
if they would provide me with any guidance on the answer.

 

In the Objectives, it states that:

 

"Maintain compatibility with 1G-EPON and 10G-EPON, as currently defined in
IEEE Std. 802.3 with minimal augmentation to MPCP and/or OAM if needed to
support the new PHY."

 

Then in the PAR (section 5.2.b. Scope of the project), we have the
following:

 

"It also extends the operation of Ethernet Passive Optical Networks (EPON)
protocols, such as MultiPoint Control Protocol (MPCP) and Operation
Administration and Management (OAM)."

 

In combination, I would take that to imply that if we need to make changes
to MPCP in EPON (across the fiber link) to support what we're doing on the
coax link (EPoC) that is okay (the PAR clearly puts this in scope), but only
if whatever we do does not break compatibility with 1G and 10G devices
sharing that optical port (the restriction from the Objectives).  In other
words, if we need to send a new message at the MAC Control Sublayer that is
unique to EPoC over the fiber link we can, as long as it's not going to
cause compatibility problems for any existing ONUs that might also be
sharing that fiber link.  Or if we need to modify an existing message we
can, again only if it doesn't break the operation of existing devices.

 

Thanks.

 

Matt

 

 

From: Marek Hajduczenia <marek.hajduczenia@xxxxxxxxx>
Date: Monday, January 14, 2013 11:55 AM
To: Matthew Schmitt <m.schmitt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>,
"STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: RE: [STDS-802-3-EPOC] MMP issues with the MAC Layer Solution

 

Matt, 

 

Just to clarity - are we talking about changing "EPON" MPCP, as defined in
Clause 64 and Clause 77 or defining "EPoC" MPCP ? I already asked before,
and got conflicting opinions from people 

 

Marek

 

From: Matthew Schmitt [mailto:m.schmitt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Monday, 14 January, 2013 06:53 PM
To: STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [STDS-802-3-EPOC] MMP issues with the MAC Layer Solution

 

Geoff,

 

I will agree that there is ambiguity in the term "minimal", as different
people can very much interpret that in different ways.  In fact, as one of
the folks that worked on that language, it's worth pointing out that what I
at least had in mind was actually "minimal necessary" -- in fact I probably
said this verbally - although I didn't push to get it onto the page (so to
speak).  Regrettably it's become clear that not everyone saw it that way.
Live and learn.

 

In the end, I believe that it will come down to whether or not we can
convince 75% of the full 802.3 Working Group whether whatever changes the
Task Force decides to make to MPCP - if any - constitute "minimal" or not.
Only time will tell.

 

Thanks.

 

Matt

 

From: Geoff Thompson <thompson@xxxxxxxx>
Reply-To: "thompson@xxxxxxxx" <thompson@xxxxxxxx>
Date: Monday, January 14, 2013 11:06 AM
To: "STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: [STDS-802-3-EPOC] MMP issues with the MAC Layer Solution

 

Andrea-

What you claim is clear to you is not clear to me.
The CFI, PAR and 5 Criteria for EPoC were written and presented to 802.3 for
approval on the basis that Ed lays out below.
Minimal augmentation means just that.  Minimal.
Your opinion on that is not nearly as important as the collective opinion of
802.3 who will ultimately judge the draft against the currently approved
PAR, 5 Criteria and Objectives.

If you want to do a project that is beyond the scope of the currently
authorized project then I have no problem with that.  The ways to do that
are:
     - to expand the scope of the PAR, readdress the 5 Criteria and get ia
all approved by .3, 802 and the SASB
-OR-
    - get a new PAR, 5 Criteria etc for the expansionist portion of EPoC and
run it through the system.

Geoff

On 141//13 7:22 AM, Garavaglia, Andrea wrote: 

Hi Ed,

Here the approved objective again, I believe it is obvious and clear to
everybody that it is possible to apply changes to MPCP and OAM for CLT/CNU
(coax part):

Maintain compatibility with 1G-EPON and 10G-EPON, as currently defined in
IEEE Std. 802.3 with minimal augmentation to MPCP and/or OAM if needed to
support the new PHY.

 

Thanks,

Andrea 

 

From: Ed (Edward) Boyd [mailto:ed.boyd@xxxxxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Friday, January 11, 2013 18:24
To: Garavaglia, Andrea; STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: MMP issues with the MAC Layer Solution

 

Hi Andrea,

 

This is where we continue to not agree.  EPoC FDD is a PHY in my mind for
the existing EPON MAC that exists in OLTs.  It should not make changes above
the PHY.  There was the text about compatibility with 1G and 10G EPON.  I'm
saying that we can't make something compatible.  I haven't come up with a
way to make it compatible and I haven't seen anything that shows that it can
be compatible.

 

Thanks,

Ed..

 

From: Garavaglia, Andrea [ <mailto:andreag@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
mailto:andreag@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Friday, January 11, 2013 5:32 AM
To: Ed (Edward) Boyd;  <mailto:STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: MMP issues with the MAC Layer Solution

 

Hi Ed,

Thanks for your reply, we try to address your questions/comments directly in
the slides, so it is easier to discuss them - Nicola will present today
during the call, let's try to have a constructive discussion.

 

Please allow me a couple of comments ahead: it is not intended from me to
deny issues (sorry if I gave that impression), I am trying to address them
instead showing how that can be overcome - I think it would be a pity to not
even try to address them and I hope experts like you also contribute to the
discussion in this spirit. In this regard, I believe it is beneficial to
stick on the scope of the ad-hoc, which is about MMP in the coax portion of
the network. 

 

So we should not talk about MMP in OLT, rather MMP in CLT. Also we should
not talk about channel bonding, TDD, etc., rather about MMP only. 

Also we should not exclude MPCP augmentation for CLT/CNU, we should minimize
them to make the system work - CLT is not a legacy OLT.

 

I hope we can both (all) agree on these points to profitably continue this
discussion - thanks for your help.

 

Thanks,

Andrea

 

From: Ed (Edward) Boyd  <mailto:[mailto:ed.boyd@xxxxxxxxxxxx]>
[mailto:ed.boyd@xxxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Tuesday, January 08, 2013 19:27
To: Garavaglia, Andrea;  <mailto:STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: MMP issues with the MAC Layer Solution

 

Andrea,

 

Thanks for the reply.  We keep going back to the same issue and you continue
to deny that they exist.  The OLT needs new functionality defined for rate
shaping and packet shuffling to use MMP.  This functionality is not defined
in the current devices and needs to be above the PHY.  I don't see how you
can argue against this point.  It is a new EPON for EPoC.  It is not just a
PHY as promised.  TDD, MMP, and packet bonding are not compatible with the
current EPON above the XGMII.

 

The delay and jitter performance of the downstream is poor by adding the MMP
and extremely poor if you add in the channel bonding that you propose.   It
requires two layers of buffering and packet sorting.  I'm not sure how you
meet the 3ms RTT jitter specification.  Please show your proposed solution
with the channel bonding so I can make sure that I understand it for the
delay analysis.

 
&nbs p;


EPON is a single copy broadcast downstream.  It is simple/fast and EPoC
should be a coax PHY only below it. If an operator wants to get the last
drop of efficiency on bad networks and they are willing to add complexity
and delay for it, the DOCSIS 3.0/3.1 solution is a better fit.

 

Please see in-line below. Thanks.

 

Ed.

 

From: Garavaglia, Andrea  <mailto:[mailto:andreag@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]>
[mailto:andreag@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Tuesday, January 08, 2013 5:41 AM
To: Ed (Edward) Boyd;  <mailto:STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: MMP issues with the MAC Layer Solution

 

Hi Ed,

Thanks for the summary. 

 

Let's see if we can make a step forward in understanding better the concerns
and how can they be addressed. 

I inserted my feedback below, for further discussion.

 

Thanks,

Andrea

 

From: Ed (Edward) Boyd [ <mailto:ed.boyd@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
mailto:ed.boyd@xxxxxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 08, 2013 02:09
To:  <mailto:STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [802.3_EPOC] MMP issues with the MAC Layer Solution

 

Jorge, Duane, and All,

 

I have some concerns about reshuffling the packets in the MAC based on
destination.  Here are a few of the issues that I brought up at the last
meeting.

 

Not a PHY layer solution.  

It won't work with existing standard compliant EPON OLT MACs. I believe that
this is out of scope for our project and it severely impacts the economic
feasibility for EPoC.  

[AG] I tend to agree that OLT is out of scope of this project; in fact we
have CLT and CNU, and we cannot assume the CLT is an OLT. 

That said, I fail to see why it should not work - in the example we have
shown there is no change to 802.3 MAC and I cannot see any particular change
in the MPCP parts either: simply the rate adaptation (which will be needed
for coax and still have to be defined in details) will use different
computation parameter based on the active profile(s). The function will be
the same and will need to be parameterized anyway as the coax rate can be
quite variable from case to case even with single profile.

 

[Ed] I don't understand your response.  The solution proposed requires new
OLT functionality and it is not compatible with existing OLTs.  It doesn't
matter where you define it outside of the PHY.  It doesn't exist so it is
not compatible and it requires additional define outside the scope of the
project.  EPON over Coax should leave EPON alone.  

 

Higher layer solutions today assume point-to-point Ethernet with packet
ordering happening at the bridging or routing layers.  Having a packet
reordering based on the destination of packets below the MAC with a variable
delay goes against this direction.  

[AG] In the solution we presented there is no reordering of packets, neither
above nor below MAC. Simply the Multi-Point Transmission Controller apply a
different algorithm (which I like to remind is as per today already
proprietary and implementation dependent) when selecting which client to
serve. This can be done by proper design of the scheduler which is listed in
clause 77.2.1 ("The scheduling algorithm is implementation dependent, and is
not specified for the case where multiple transmit requests happen at the
same time."), and does not preclude any option and certainly allow an
implementation to offer only single profile as well.

 

[Ed] In the current solution, the downstream MAC/PHY is a pass through
device. There isn't shuffling of packets to group them.  The shuffling is
not reversed on the output so a packet is jitter.  The scheduler has no
definition and in fact, it does nothing.  The proposed solution requires
adding scheduler functionality that doesn't exist. It is not compatible for
that reason.

 

The downstream right now looks exactly like point to point Ethernet.  We
shouldn't decrease the performance and break this model.  It isn't perform
like EPON or Ethernet.  This is not fiber performance.

[AG] In term of throughput, I would see MMP closer to fiber performance than
SMP, as in average a larger data rate will be available on the coax since
there is no need to run at the speed of the slowest user. In term of
latency/jitter there may be some small increase at application level based
on the particular implementation of the algorithm and of the system
parameters, but this is well below the target of the current PHY layer
assumptions.  

 

[Ed] The fiber has a fixed delay and data rate.  This solution is not like
Ethernet or EPON with QoS/packet ordering is handled at the higher layer.
Shuffling and jittering packets in the MAC layer is a mess.  The data rate
is based on the amount of spectrum available and not the position of the
modem in the network.  

 

Jitters the downstream packets

For the MMP, I proposed a PHY layer solution with packet time stamping.  I
had the packet time stamping so packets would be in the same order at the
CNU with a fixed delay.  

The MAC layer solution doesn't provide this function so there are a few
issues.  

[AG] In the MAC solution the order of packet is not changed: at each CNU the
same order will be received as transmitted. Also there is no jitter as all
operations of selection of the MAC Client for transmission are made before
MAC, in the Multi-Point Transmit controller - when a client is selected, its
transmission will be enabled as today and no jitter is introduced - when the
packet leaves the MAC, it reached the CNU counterpart after a fixed delay.
Therefore there is no need to timestamp to support MMP in this solution.

 

[Ed] When you shuffle packets, the packets are jittered on the downstream.
They do not enter and exit with the same delay.  If you timestamp the
packets and add a play out buffer at the output, you can remove the jitter.
This adds delay but doesn't add the jitter. 

 

Right now, the assumption is that there is almost 0 jitter in the downstream
for the MEF 23H jitter specification (3ms RTT).  I used the entire 3ms in my
analysis for the upstream polling jitter and discovery windows.  Any jitter
in the downstream will require a higher upstream polling rate or violate the
specification.

My analysis showed that a small pipe of 24MHz will have multiple
milliseconds of delay and in the MAC solution, it is jitter.  It is
impossible to meet MEF23H for small pipes and the larger pipes will require
higher upstream polling to make up for it.

[AG] As commented last meeting, if the pipe is very small, a single profile
can be configured and used (in addition the parameters of the MMP
implementation can also be tuned) - I believe 24 MHz is rather the exception
than then rule for a system which is supposed to be running at speeds of 1
Gb/s and above. Question for MSO: are we expecting a lot of deployments
using only such a small bandwidth or are these corner cases? Appropriate
configuration applies in any case, so I cannot see this to be a real issue.

 

[Ed] As the pipe cuts in half, the efficiency is half or the delay is
double.  24MHz is the smallest channel that we support and it shows that the
solution isn't usable but it is going down on the way.  Based on your
channel bonding proposal, each of these channels would face this delay with
its own shuffling logic so it is very messy.

 

Obviously performance monitoring protocols that work above the MAC will not
work.

[AG] Could you explain why not? I expect a performance monitoring tool shall
not assume how the system is implemented in the lower layers and shall
actually work for various configurations and implementations.

[Ed] It is expected that the MAC/PHY has a fixed delay and performance.
This solution varies the delay (by shuffling packets between stations) and
data rate based on the other traffic.  The priority of my traffic is not
used to determine the order to the output.

 

GATE frame will break up the shuffled blocks of packets.

The scheduler in the OLT will send the GATE at the exact time that it should
go out to decrease the RTT time to get the REPORT.

The scheduler is not aligned with the blocks of blocks out from the MAC so
GATE frames will come out when another MMP block of packets is present.

[AG] According to the specification (see figure 77-4), the selection between
GATE messages and data packets happens at the Control Multiplexer, which is
in charge of prioritizing control frames (e.g. GATE) over data frames. In my
understanding there is one instance of such control multiplexer for each MAC
Client and whether a GATE or another frame is selected in there has nothing
to do with the selection of the transmitting MAC Client itself by the
multi-point transmit controller. Also the timing for the GATE messages is
determined by the DBA agent, which is also proprietary and implementation
dependent, I cannot see any issue in generating GATEs when they are needed,
at most is a matter of optimizing proprietary algorithms to achieve better
performance, something that should be done anyway. 

 

Another short FEC termination will be needed for the GATE so the GATE frame
can go out immediately.  This will result in a lower efficiency based on the
RATE of the upstream bursts.  Based on the numbers in my presentation, it
will significantly increase the data rate for GATE frames.  Small bursts in
the upstream are common with high data rate polling.

[AG] See above - all this is not needed, the control multiplexer still
prioritize GATE messages over data and those are treated as any other frame
of that profile.

 

If the GATE waits for its MMP block to come up, it will increase the RTT
time for REPORT to GATE.  

[AG] Maybe I am missing something here, but I do not see how this can be the
case: to be able to send a REPORT, a GATE should first provide the CNU with
corresponding grant - so the REPORT will be sent after getting the GATE and
apart a possible delay of the very first message exchange when the CNU
starts up, the RTT for REPORT to GATE (from XGMII at TX to XGMII at RX)
remains the same and it is determined by the PHY processing and propagation
time.

 

[Ed] I don't know how to explain this.  The GATE frame comes out based on
the scheduler.  If it is not going in the MMP block that is currently going
out, the MMP block needs to break up the FEC block or delay the GATE until
the proper FEC block comes around.  It is either very inefficient or it adds
a millisecond or more to the schedulers delay to generate a GATE.  This goes
into the REPORT/GATE loop.

 

Small Pipes have long delays or poor efficiency.

As mentioned in my PHY solution, small pipes are inefficient or have long
delays to support packet re-ordering.

If the pipe is 50% of the BW and the efficient is the same as a 1Gbps pipe,
the delay for a block of packets would be doubled.

If the pipe is 50% of the BW and delay is constant, the overhead for the FEC
would be doubled.

[AG] Again, the number of profiles and the choice to use one or more can be
tuned accordingly, as well as the parameters of the MMP implementation can
be properly selected. In our presentation we have shown examples of possible
tuning and shown that the possible additional delay can be controlled.

[Ed] In short, we can't support MMP on smaller pipes. 

 

 

Hope that helps as a starting point.  I will try to be on the call at 6am.
I can't imagine mixing this with the channel bonding proposal.  The delay
and jitter would be crazy and it would be very complex to implement.  I
think that the performance in the downstream shouldn't be compromised.
Simple, cheap, fast, wide pipe is Ethernet.

 

Thanks,

Ed.

 

 

Description: Description: Description: Description: Description:
Description: Description: Description: Description: Description:
Description: Description: Description: cid:image009.jpg@01CD505E.7B800DB0

 

Edward Boyd | Sr Technical Director
Broadcom Corporation | (O) 707-792-9008 | (M) 707-478-1146

 

 <http://www.linkedin.com/company/broadcom> Description: Description:
Description: Description: Description: Description: Description:
Description: Description: Description: Description: Description:
Description: Description: Description: image005
<http://twitter.com/#%21/broadcom> Description: Description: Description:
Description: Description: Description: Description: Description:
Description: Description: Description: Description: Description:
Description: Description: image002 <https://www.facebook.com/Broadcom>
Description: Description: Description: Description: Description:
Description: Description: Description: Description: Description:
Description: Description: Description: Description: Description: image003
<https://plus.google.com/109188783526874806673/posts#109188783526874806673/p
osts> Description: Description: Description: Description: Description:
Description: Description: Description: Description: Description:
Description: Description: Description: Description: Description: image004
<https://www.youtube.com/user/BroadcomCorporation> Description: Description:
Description: Description: Description: Description: Description:
Description: Description: Description: Description: Description:
Description: Description: Description: image006 <http://blog.broadcom.com/>
Description: Description: Description: Description: Description:
Description: Description: Description: Description: Description:
Description: Description: Description: Description: Description: image008
<http://broadcom.com/> Description: Description: Description: Description:
Description: Description: Description: Description: Description:
Description: Description: Description: Description: Description:
Description: image007          

 

 

 

  _____  

<="" p=""> 

 

  _____  

 

  _____  

<="" p=""> 

 

  _____  

 

  _____  

 

  _____  

 

  _____  


________________________________________________________________________

To unsubscribe from the STDS-802-3-EPOC list, click the following link:
https://listserv.ieee.org/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=STDS-802-3-EPOC&A=1

JPEG image

PNG image

PNG image

PNG image

PNG image

PNG image

PNG image

PNG image