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Re: [802.3_EPOC] Materials from 1/2/13 MMP Ad-hoc and plan for 1/4/13 MMP Ad-hoc



Matt, 

 

I do not think we can "lay down the framework" like that in 802.3. Either
the feature exists or it does not, especially when we're talking about
features which will have to be hardware implemented. 

 

Also, I am not sure why FDD devices have to understand it. It is not that
TDD and FDD devices would have to inter-operate on the same network. I hope
you're not assuming that .

 

Marek

 

From: Matthew Schmitt [mailto:m.schmitt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Monday, January 07, 2013 21:51
To: STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [802.3_EPOC] Materials from 1/2/13 MMP Ad-hoc and plan for
1/4/13 MMP Ad-hoc

 

Marek,

 

I agree that they are intertwined - apologies if that was not clear from my
email, because I definitely agree that technical feasibility and complexity
directly play into the economic question.

 

The problem with not including MMP into the FDD design from the beginning is
that this is the sort of feature that, even if devices don't support it,
they have to at least understand it enough to not be confused when it shows
up (IMHO, at least).  Something like this is likely going to need to be a
part of the framework of how things are framed and put on the wire; as such,
it may simply not be possible to add it in later unless the framework is
already in place.

 

While might be another way of approaching this.  Perhaps it would make sense
to put the basic framework in place to support MMP, but not require it to be
implemented.  In that way, you lay the groundwork so that it could be
implemented in the future, but you eliminate 95% of the complexity for the
first go-around.

 

Of course, there is a question of whether or not you really can eliminate
95% of the complexity in that case; and ultimately that will revolve around
what that framework looks like.

 

Thoughts?

 

Thanks!

 

Matt

 

From: Marek Hajduczenia <marek.hajduczenia@xxxxxx>
Date: Monday, January 7, 2013 2:38 PM
To: Matthew Schmitt <m.schmitt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>,
"STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: RE: [802.3_EPOC] Materials from 1/2/13 MMP Ad-hoc and plan for
1/4/13 MMP Ad-hoc

 

Matt, 

 

For me, economic feasibility and technical feasibility are interleaved.
There is no economic feasibility for complex solutions, requiring large
chipsets, tons of power and even more buffering. What we need to strive is
simple solutions, not solutions at any cost. There is a reason why Ethernet
is the leading technology for layer 2 transport and that reason is its
simplicity, robustness and cost effectiveness. 

 

That said, I do not think any new arguments were brought in favour of MMP or
can be brought against MMP. We are repeating discussions that already took
place at least twice, wasting time that could be used in a more constructive
fashion. This leaves us where we were at the end of last meeting. Perhaps an
alternative option for going forward is then incorporating the MMP design
into TDD mode first, working out the details and adding it to FDD when it is
ready later on. Otherwise, I do not see how we will move forward here. 

 

Regards

 

Marek

 

From: Matthew Schmitt [mailto:m.schmitt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Monday, January 07, 2013 21:19
To: STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [802.3_EPOC] Materials from 1/2/13 MMP Ad-hoc and plan for
1/4/13 MMP Ad-hoc

 

Eugene,

 

Thanks for the note, which is useful both for getting all thoughts on the
table and ensure we're thinking of the same thing when we refer to this
feature.

 

For example, while I would agree with you that there is no direct
correlation between MMP and SLA, and that end-users would likely not get a
higher provisioned tier of service as a result of this feature, might it be
possible that they would see some benefit at congested times because there's
more bandwidth to share around? 

 

Also, you mentioned in your email that service providers do not have direct
control of the feature, and I'm curious what specifically you're thinking of
in that case.  My assumption has been that while we would not want to
preclude the ability for a CLT/FCU to make autonomous changes to a profile,
it would be something that was both not required and configurable by the
operator.  In that sense, the operator has full control over what profiles
are available.  Further, while we'll certainly want to have some autonomous
mechanisms for switching between profiles - and we'll need to defer to the
CLT to decide how to schedule things, at least to some degree - I don't
think it would be unreasonable (and likely in fact a very good idea) to
allow the operator to define a progression order for the profiles (if you
have to leave one profile, then you go to this other one next, etc.), and
maybe even some high level bounds around when to switch (again, allowing
room for vendors to develop their own algorithms).  In those ways, I was
thinking that the operator would have a large degree of control, which they
could choose to use or not.  Did you have something else in mind?

 

As for economic feasibility, that will be driven by a combination of the
potential economic gain from the feature vs. its cost.  The former is very
much derived from analysis of use cases (IMHO), which is why I think they do
have relevance; the latter is driven by technical feasibility and
complexity.

 

What I would be very interested in seeing is more details on why people
believe it is not technically feasible to do MMP with EPoC.  I'm not saying
that it is or it isn't - I don't regard myself as enough of an expert on
EPON to render an opinion there.  However, when I hear one group say it is
feasible, and another say it isn't, that makes me want to understand better
why one side or the other thinks it is or isn't feasible.  Does that make
sense?

 

Thanks!

 

Matt

 

From: <Dai>, "Eugene (CCI-Atlanta)" <Eugene.Dai@xxxxxxx>
Reply-To: "Dai, Eugene (CCI-Atlanta)" <Eugene.Dai@xxxxxxx>
Date: Monday, January 7, 2013 1:34 PM
To: "STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: [802.3_EPOC] Materials from 1/2/13 MMP Ad-hoc and plan for
1/4/13 MMP Ad-hoc

 

Jorge:

 

Sorry for missing the last meetings, I was at Pacific Time zone. Now I am
back to East time zone, I'll try to join tomorrow's meeting.

 

The fundamental question of MMP is its technical and economic feasibility
under the EPON MAC framework; I didn't think use cases will help at this
point. We have presented detailed analysis of both technical and economic
challenges of MMP at the San Antonio meeting; I believe everything we have
presented still hold. Although I do not believe re-present the old material
will help moving forward, I am willing re-present the main points (of San
Antonio presentation) tomorrow if necessary; it seems this was what other
people did anyway.

 

A few summary points:

   

From service providing point of view:

.         End-users do not get notable benefit from MMP

.         Service providers do not have direct control of MMP  

.         There is no direct relationship between MMP and SLA

 

From technical feasibility point of view:

 

MMP introduce significant complexity at PHY, MAC and system levels,
especially for EPON to coax rate adaption.

 

From outside plant point of view:

 

A network reference model is needed that including outside plant and
in-home-networks that provide base outside plant conditions reference for
the future EPoC. 

 

Thanks,

 

Eugene 

 

 

From: Duane Remein [mailto:Duane.Remein@xxxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Monday, January 07, 2013 2:51 PM
To: STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [802.3_EPOC] Materials from 1/2/13 MMP Ad-hoc and plan for
1/4/13 MMP Ad-hoc

 

Ed,

Perhaps, given that you're having difficulty getting to the ad hoc calls,
you could enumerate your issues here on the exploder. That would at least
open the dialog and we could debate the issues you see. Personally I don't
see anything that cannot be addressed.

Best Regards,

Duane

 

FutureWei Technologies Inc.

duane.remein@xxxxxxxxxx

Director, Access R&D

919 418 4741

Raleigh, NC

 

From: Ed (Edward) Boyd [mailto:ed.boyd@xxxxxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Monday, January 07, 2013 2:29 PM
To: STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [802.3_EPOC] Materials from 1/2/13 MMP Ad-hoc and plan for
1/4/13 MMP Ad-hoc

 

Hi Jorge,

 

I hope that you had a great holiday.  Sorry but I'm a little behind on
things due to the time off.

 

I agree with Marek.  I presented issues with the MMP at the last meeting.  I
looked over the Qualcomm presentation from the Ad Hoc and I didn't see any
difference from the last IEEE meeting.  The issues that I raised at the
meeting still exist.  If you like, I can repeat those issues to the Ad Hoc. 

 

As we discussed before, I'm not able to attend the Ad Hoc based on the time
selected.  I can try to call in from 6am to 7am on tomorrow's call.

 

Take care,

Ed.

 

From: Marek Hajduczenia [mailto:marek.hajduczenia@xxxxxx] 
Sent: Friday, January 04, 2013 4:47 AM
To: STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [802.3_EPOC] Materials from 1/2/13 MMP Ad-hoc and plan for
1/4/13 MMP Ad-hoc

 

Jorge, 

 

I was under the impression that presentations on the topic of technical
challenges associated with MMP implementation have been already presented
and discussed in detail at the meetings. I am not sure how presenting the
same material in a new form helps move us forward in any way. 

 

Perhaps a list of questions on specific aspects of already presented
technical challenges would be a better way to move forward? That would give
time to prepare concise and comprehensive answers to the benefit of this
ad-hoc. I fear that we if we start discussion on the phone, we'll get lost
in details again. 

 

Regards 

 

Marek

 

From: Salinger, Jorge [mailto:Jorge_Salinger@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Friday, January 04, 2013 05:46
To: STDS-802-3-EPOC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [802.3_EPOC] Materials from 1/2/13 MMP Ad-hoc and plan for 1/4/13
MMP Ad-hoc

 

Folks,

 

Thanks to those that were able to attend the meeting yesterday. We did not
have any presentations on why MMP could not be implemented, so we took the
opportunity to review the diagram outlining the use case we reviewed before
the holidays (see below for reference). We had lots of discussion about this
use case, but did not arrive to any specific conclusions. I attached a
transcript of the discussion that Joe Solomon kindly recorded.

 

Given the discussion, and to help the continuation of this discussion, I
expanded the use case into 4 slides, each progressively more complex. We
will review these slides during our meeting tomorrow.

 

HOWEVER, our focus is on determining why and/or how is MMP not possible to
implement. To that end, we are seeking presentations that would outline that
specific topic. So, if there are any presentations that address why and/or
how MMP can not be implemented we will give those presentations the
priority.

 

Thanks!

Jorge 

 



 

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