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John,
Thanks for all your work on this; I have to study it more
and would like to see the actual presentation but I would offer the following
comment:
If the following statement is true, why do we have an
objective of 100m rather than 150m?
"Do nothing to the standard and when 150 m of OM3 or 250 m
of OM4 is desired – just plug in the fiber. The odds are
overwhelming that it will work."
Thanks,
Steve From: PETRILLA,JOHN [mailto:john.petrilla@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Wednesday, August 20, 2008 11:23 PM To: STDS-802-3-HSSG@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [802.3BA] 802.3ba XR ad hoc next step concern Colleagues I’m concerned that the
proposal of creating a new objective is leading us into a train wreck.
This is due to my belief that it’s very unlikely that 75% of the project members
will find this acceptable. This will be very frustrating for various
reasons, one of which, almost all the modules expected to be developed will
easily support the desired extended link reaches, will be discussed
below. I don’t want to wait until
our next phone conference to share this in the hope that we can make use of that
time to prepare a proposal for the September interim. I’ll try to capture
my thoughts in text in order to save some time and avoid distributing a
presentation file to such a large distribution. I may have a presentation
by the phone conference. Optical modules are expected
to either have a XLAUI/CLAUI interface or a PMD service interface, PPI.
Both are considered. A previous presentation,
petrilla_xr_02_0708, http://ieee802.org/3/ba/public/AdHoc/MMF-Reach/petrilla_xr_02_0708.pdf
has shown that modules with XLAUI/CLAUI interfaces will support 150 m of OM3 and
250 m of OM4. These modules will be selected by equipment implementers
primarily because of the commonality of their form factor with other variants,
especially LR, and/or because of the flexibility the XLAUI/CLAUI interface
offers the PCB designer. Here the extended fiber reach comes for no
additional cost or effort. This is also true in PPI modules where FEC is
available in the host. Everyone is welcome to
express their forecast of the timing and adoption of XLAUI/CLAUI MMF modules vs
baseline MMF modules. To evaluate the base line
proposal for its extended reach capability, a set of The Tx distribution
characteristics follow. All distributions are
Gaussian. Min OMA, mean = -2.50
dBm, std dev = 0.50 dBm (Baseline value = -3.0 dBm) Tx tr tf, mean = 33.0
ps, std dev = 2.0 ps (Example value = 35 ps) RIN(oma), mean =
-132.0 dB/Hz, std dev = 2.0 dB (Baseline value = -128 to -132 dB/Hz, Example
value = -130 dB/Hz) Tx Contributed DJ,
mean = 11.0 ps, std dev = 2.0 ps (Example value = 13.0
ps) Spectral Width, mean
= 0.45 nm, std dev = 0.05 nm (Baseline value = 0.65
nm). Baseline values are
from Pepeljugoski_01_0508 and where no baseline value is available Example
values from petrilla_02_0508 are used. All of the above, except
spectral width, can be included in an aggregate Tx test permitting less
restrictive individual parameter distributions than if each parameter is tested
individually. In this example distributions are chosen such that only the
mean and one std dev of the distribution satisfy the target value in the link
budget spreadsheet. If the individual parameter is tested directly to this
value the yield loss would be approximately 16%. The Rx distribution
characteristics follow. Again, all distributions are
Gaussian. Unstressed
sensitivity, mean = -12.0 dBm, std dev = 0.75 dB (Baseline value = -11.3
dBm) Rx Contributed DJ,
mean = 11.0 ps, std dev = 2.0 ps (Baseline value = 13.0
ps) Rx bandwidth, mean =
10000 MHz, std dev = 850 MHz (Baseline value = 7500
MHz). For the Tx MC, only 2% of
the combinations would fail the aggregate Tx test. For the 150 m OM3 MC, only
2% of the combinations would have negative link margin and fail to support the
150 m reach. This is less than the percentage of modules that would have
been rejected by the Tx aggregate test and a stressed Rx sensitivity test and
very few would actually be seen in the field. For the 250 m OM4 MC, only
8% of the combinations would have negative link margin. Here approximately
half of these would be due to transmitters and receivers that should have been
caught at their respective tests. The above analysis is for a
single lane. In the case of multiple lane modules, the module yield loss
will increase depending on how tightly the lanes are correlated. Where
module yield loss is high, module vendors will adjust the individual parameter
distributions such that more than one std dev separates the mean from the spread
sheet target value. This will reduce the proportion of modules failing the
extended link criteria. Also, any correlation between lanes results in a module
distribution of units that are shipped having fewer marginal lanes than where
the lanes are independent. So while there’s a finite
probability that a PPI interface module doesn’t support the desired extended
reaches, the odds are overwhelming that it does. Then with all of one form
factor and more than 92% of the other form factor supporting the desired
extended reach, the question becomes, ‘what’s a rational and acceptable means to
take advantage of what is already available?’ A new objective would enable
this but, as stated above getting a new objective for this is at best
questionable. Further, it’s expected that one would test to see that
modules meet the criteria for the new objective, set up part numbers, create
inventory, etc. and that adds cost. Finally, users, installers, etc. are
intelligent and will soon find this out and will no longer accept any cost
premium for modules that were developed to support extended reach - they will
just use a standard module. There’s little incentive to invest in an
extended reach module development. I’ll make a modest proposal:
Do nothing – just hook up the link. Do nothing to the standard and when
150 m of OM3 or 250 m of OM4 is desired – just plug in the fiber. The odds
are overwhelming that it will work. If something is really needed in the
standard, then generate a white paper and/or an informative annex describing the
statistical solution. Background/Additional
thoughts: Even with all the survey
results provided to this project, it’s not easy to grasp what to expect for a
distribution of optical fiber lengths within a data center and what is gained by
extending the reach of the MMF baseline beyond 100 m. Here’s another
attempt. In flatman_01_0108, page 11,
there’s a projection for 2012. There for 40G, the expected adoption
percentage of links in Client-to-Access (C-A) applications of 40G is 30%, for
Access-to-Distribution (A-D) links, it is 30%, and for Distribution-to-Core
(D-C)links it is 20%. While Flatman does not explicitly provide a relative
breakout of link quantities between the segments, C-A, A-D & D-C, perhaps
one can use his sample sizes as an estimate. This yields for C-A 250000,
for A-D 16000 and for D-C 3000. Combining with the above adoption
percentages yields an expected link ratio of C-A:A-D:D-C =
750:48:6. Perhaps Alan Flatman can
comment on how outrageous this appears. This has D-C, responsible
for 1% of all 40G links, looking like a niche. Arguments over covering the
last 10% or 20% or 50% of D-C reaches does not seem like time well spent.
Even A-D combined with D-C, AD+DC, provides only 7% of the
total. Similarly for 100G:
the 2012 projected percentage adoption for C-A:A-D:D-C is 10:40:60 and link
ratio is 250:64:18. Here D-C is responsible for 5% of the links and
combined with A-D generates 25% of the links. Now the last 20% of AD+DC
represents 5% of the market. Since the computer
architecture trend leads to the expectation of shorter link lengths and there
are multiple other solutions that can support longer lengths, activating FEC,
active cross-connects, telecom centric users prefer SM anyway, point-to-point
connections, etc., there is no apparent valid business case supporting resource
allocation for development of an extended reach
solution. |