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Contents
Contents 4
Preface 7
Safety Symbol and Message Conventions 7
Documentation 9
FSP 3000 C Documentation Suite 9
Accessing Documentation 9
Documentation Feedback 9
Obtaining Technical Assistance 10
Customer Portal 10
Technical Services 10
Call ADVA 11
Document Revision History 11
Introduction 13
Design Overview 13
Coherent Optical Layer Solution 15
TeraflexTM 16
SmartAmp Solution 18
Technology Use Cases Overview 19
General Features 22
Management and Control 22
User Management Interfaces 23
Using the CLI 23
Using the Web Browser Interface GUI 24
Using the NETCONF Management Protocol 24
Representational State Transfer (REST) Protocol 25
Network Management Interfaces 26
Using the Simple Network Management Protocol 26
Using the Network Configuration Protocol 26
Security 27
General Security 27
User Security 27
System Management 28
Preface
Safety Symbol and Message Conventions 7
Documentation 9
Obtaining Technical Assistance 10
Document Revision History 11
The pictures or graphics shown in this document are for reference only.
They are based on the latest hardware revision available at the time of
publication. The equipment you received might look different than
pictures or graphics shown in this document.
Documentation
FSP 3000 C Documentation Suite 9
Accessing Documentation 9
Documentation Feedback 9
Accessing Documentation
Documentation Portal https://advadocs.com/
Documentation Feedback
We want our documentation to be as helpful as possible. Feedback is always welcome.
Email admin@advadocs.com
l 24 x 7 telephone support
l Web-based support tools
l On-site support
l Technical training, both on-site and at ADVA facilities in Germany and the USA
l Expedited repair service
l Extended hardware warranty service
Customer Portal
You can use the customer portal to:
Access https://www.advaoptical.com/en/customer-portal
Questions customer-portal-admin@advaoptical.com
Technical Services
Technical services are available to customers who need technical assistance with an ADVA
product that is under warranty or covered by a maintenance contract.
Online https://www.advaoptical.com/en/about-us/contact
Email support@advaoptical.com
Call ADVA
Europe, Middle East and Africa
Martinsried/Munich, Germany
+49 (0)89 89 06 65 0
North America
Norcross, GA, USA
+1 678 728 8600
Asia
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+86 755 8621 7400
Chapter 1
Introduction
The FSP 3000 C technology provides high-capacity transport across point-to-point, linear,
and ring topologies. The FSP 3000 C platform meets stringent density, security, and energy
demands. This technology supports both Open Optical Line System (OOLS) hardware and
OpenConfig protocols as the foundation for Data Center Interconnect (DCI) solutions.
Every aspect of the FSP 3000 C platform is engineered for efficiency. Each configurable shelf
shares a small footprint and therefore consumes less rack space than any competing
technology. The FSP 3000 C keeps energy consumption low and prevents the need to
geographically extend the inventory. The shelves share the same traffic modules, which
means you have the same technology in data centers, co-location sites, and smaller offices.
The FSP 3000 C system is a single platform that supports both coherent optical-layer
technology and direct-detect optical-layer technology. Both the system filters and the system
amplifiers optimize these technologies. The platform features a high data-transport capacity
with a variety of transponder modules and an open software architecture.
This document describes the general features of theFSP 3000 C system and provides use
cases to illustrate common high-level applications.
Design Overview 13
Coherent Optical Layer Solution 15
TeraflexTM 16
SmartAmp Solution 18
Technology Use Cases Overview 19
Design Overview
The FSP 3000 C platform represents a common infrastructure for optical transport that
supports open architectures, low-power consumption, and robust encryption. Open optical-
line systems provide integration of new technological advances without the need to replace
the entire optical-line system. Open software architecture features standard interfaces
between components and result in smooth integration with multi-vendor environments and
data center interconnect environments. The FSP 3000 C offers a Yang-based open
application programming interface (API) to manage network elements and multi-level
coordination.
delivery
All applications use a common power, timing, and management backplane so that you can
efficiently develop your networks and combine functions.
You use the CLI to manage the FSP 3000 C hardware. The CLI is the foundation for user and
network software interfaces.
CAUTION
The use of equipment other than that approved and released by ADVA
will result in loss of laser safety approval for the respective module and
the entire FSP 3000 C system.
The maximum optical input power for feeder ports is +6 dBm to
guarantee compliance to Laser Class 1M requirements.
The operating organization has the ultimate responsibility for the safety
of the end-to-end system.
The FSP 3000 C platform represents a common infrastructure for optical transport. The
infrastructure consists of shelves and associated components that include a fan tray module,
power supply module, common equipment module, and element controller module. These
shelves are availble:
The FSP 3000 C infrastructure supports shelves with and without a high-speed backplane:
Transport shelves are optimized for high power density.
TeraflexTM
TeraFlex™ is a 1RU-high chassis for channels of up to 1.2 Tbps and a total capacity of
3.6 Tbps that use up to 600-Gbps capacity per wavelength. The ultra-compact footprint and
open API design offer ultra-high density, interoperability, and flexibility. The FSP 3000 C
TeraFlex™ optimizes all optical paths over every distance, no matter which filter technology
you use. The platform achieves this optimization through fractional QAM modulation, which
changes between lower and higher schemes for maximum spectral efficiency. This feature
significantly boosts capacity or extends the reach of installed legacy infrastructure without an
OLS overhaul.
l Offers a scalable and flexible solution that supports 100-Gbps and 400-Gbps
services.
l Supports 10GbE services using our pluggable MicroMux™ QSFP.
l Enables smooth service upgrades from 10GbE to 400GbE.
l Is power efficient.
l Addresses a wide range of DCI applications with minimum inventory.
l Ensures data security by using the ADVA ConnectGuard™ technology. This
technology provides robust, low-latency encryption and eliminates the need for
standalone security equipment.
l Delivers real-time streaming telemetry, a prerequisite for big data based network
management.
This figure shows a TeraFlex™ T-SH1R-2 shelf with three T-MP-2D12CT traffic modules.
You can use TeraFlex™ in addition to a filtering device, a preamplifier, and a booster amplifier
in point-to-point and ring applications. See the figures that follow.
SmartAmp Solution
The FSP 3000 C SmartAmp system provides a DCI solution where external wavelengths from
transceivers operate over point-to-point, or standard single-mode fiber. The SmartAmp
solution features direct-detect transmission. This solution is cost-effective for moderate
capacity and distances and is ideal for metro DCI deployments.
The FSP 3000 C SmartAmp platform consists of a SH4R shelf with 7 traffic module slots and
associated components that include a fan tray module, power supply module, common
equipment module, and element controller module:
The SmartAmp system features two active traffic modules and a passive module.
The FSP 3000 C supports single and multi-shelf nodes. You use the CLI to manage the FSP
3000 C hardware. The CLI supports the user and network software interfaces. The FSP 3000
C SmartAmp platform targets point-to-point data center connectivity applications.
The FSP 3000 C SmartAmp solution provides automated tunable chromatic dispersion
compensation and transmits 100-Gbps signals through integrated pre- and post-amplifiers.
These components form a 4RU form factor that supports point–to-point DCI configurations.
Chapter 2
General Features
Use the CLI to access the features and capabilities of the FSP 3000 C system. These features
include:
The CLI runs on POSIX-compliant, Linux-based operating systems. The operating system
provides an execution environment for the various OAM applications associated with an FSP
3000 C system. By leveraging industry-standard tools and utilities, the CLI provides a
powerful set of capabilities.
A user interface is available through the CLI and the web-based GUI. Ensemble Director
software, which runs on a server, provides network-level management and monitoring. You
can access nodes using the ECM. The nodes must connect to the management network using
the ECM in order for the NMS to manage the nodes. For more information about using the
CLI, see Using the CLI and the CLI User Guide.
Either an RJ45 Ethernet port or an RJ48 serial port performs local management. The Ethernet
port provides access to :
You can use the serial port to access the CLI. Your ID and password protect your access. A
serial port disconnection can cause the associated user session to immediately log out. You
can disable both the local management LAN ports and the serial port for security purposes.
l Model (YANG) driven hierarchical structure allows for automated CLI generation
l Customize for usability.
l An intuitive command set similar to well-known router platforms.
l Command completion assistance, or hints.
l Context-sensitive Help.
l Command aliasing.
l A command transaction-candidate buffer concept. Requires entry to configure mode
and commit to change the system database.
This interface supports Fault, Configuration, Accounting, Performance, and Security (FCAPS).
l Composability: You can change custom views to customize the GUI into a particular
operational model.
l Mobility:
o Responsive design adapts automatically to tablet and mobile devices.
A consistent look and feel that uses a standardized visual model provided by the use of
advanced features in HTML5 and with Google Material Design concepts for laptop, tablet,
and mobile devices.
network devices, and retrieve non-configuration data. This protocol is client-server based
and uses remote procedure calls (RPCs) to communicate between the client and the server.
The client can be a script or a network manager, while the server is typically a network
device.
NETCONF uses XML to convey configuration data and protocol messages. NETCONF
supports RFCs 6241, 6242, 5277, and 6470. After a NETCONF client establishes an SSH
connection to the NETCONF server, the client sends a series of RPC requests messages. Then
the NETCONF server responds with a corresponding series of RPC reply messages.
To the extent that systems conform to the constraints of REST they can be called RESTful.
RESTful systems typically, but not always, communicate over Hypertext Transfer Protocol
(HTTP) with the same HTTP verbs or operations (GET, POST, PUT, DELETE, etc.) that web
browsers use to retrieve web pages and to send data to remote servers.
The name "Representational State" expresses the behavior of a system, such as a Web
application. A network of web pages is like a virtual state-machine where the user progresses
through the application by selecting links (state transitions) that result in the display of the
next page (representing the next state of the application).
Full FSP 3000 C system control is available using the standard REST interface model, which is
a JSON-based (Java Script Object Notation) interface that supports CRUD (Create, Read,
Update and Delete) operations on the management information contained in the system
database. This interface is used for all communications with ADVA’s own Network Controller
(NC) NMS system, or with third party RESTful interfaces. These features are supported:
The FSP 3000 C system supports standard MIBs for inventory, security, system management,
and performance management.
Security
General Security
The FSP 3000 C supports these general security features:
User Security
The FSP 3000 C supports the user security features described in the table that follows.
System Management
The FSP 3000 C system management includes:
l Capture the configuration for a subset of the tree – an entity and its children.
l Copy or apply to another branch or system.
l Edit offline.
The system manages configuration files as normal files, so you can create, delete, transfer, or
edit them offline.
l The factory default database shows defaults as shipped from the factory.
l System defaults database
o You can set your preferred default settings.
You can define alarm profiles on the system to customize the severity, Notification code, of a
particular class of alarm related to an entity. See the FSP 3000 C Troubleshooting Guide for
more details about alarms.
For initial turn-up of a system, the automatic optical-control process provisions the gain, tilt,
and variable optical amplifier (VOA) settings on the SmartAmp post-amplifier or booster.This
process also provisions the gain-tilt settings on the SmartFilter pre-amplifier. The system
automatically provisions these settings system to optimize system power levels. This process
maximizes the operating power or OSNR margin of the system. This process is known as
Automatic Gain and Tilt Evaluation & Setting (A-GATES).
See the FSP 3000 C Command Line Interface (CLI) User Guide for a procedure to provision
span equalization.
Chapter 3
See the detailed configuration procedures and hardware information in these references:
l Two network DWDM interfaces over a single fiber, each capable of 100 Gbps, 150
Gbps, or 200 Gbps.
l Four 100 Gbps Ethernet or OTU4 client interfaces.
For this application, the system inputs a data rate of 100 Gbps to each of the four QSFP28
applicable transceivers. The MP-2B4CT traffic module combines and bidirectionally
transports up to 200 Gbps of data on each network port, N1 and N2.
You can use three types of DWDM filter modules, FD-48E (48 channels), 96CSM (96
channels), and FD-128D (128 channels) with multiple MP-2B4CT traffic modules. If these
traffic modules specify 200 Gbps using a 16QAM modulation format, the modules can
transport 9.6 to 25.6 Tbps.
Fiber links can span approximately 100 kilometers without amplification. With amplification,
you can increase the range. You can use a AM-S20H-2 amplifier that uses an erbium-doped
fiber amplifier (EDFA) for fiber-link distances over 100 kilometers. The transmission distance
of any given type of traffic signal through the fiber depends on multiple factors that include:
fiber type, span length, presence and type of DWDM filter modules, type of ROADMs,
channel spacing, and modulation format. For this solution, you can use these modulation
formats:
l 16QAM modulation
l 8QAM modulation
l QPSK modulation
Network Diagram 35
Prerequisites 35
Network Diagram
Figure 7: DCI Point-to-Point Configuration
Prerequisites
This topic provides an overview of the equipment and configuration requirements.
Requirement Description
FSP 3000 C Equipment l You installed these components:
Requirements o The MP-2B4CT.
l Module type.
l Network port frequency.
l 200-Gpbs service on the network port.
l (Optional): Set FEC to high gain.
l Configure the QSFP28 client plugs.
l (Optional): QSFP28 client plugs.
The FSP 3000R7 passes the optical signal without impact on its optical layer, and no OEO
conversion occurs. The single external wavelength passes through the FSP 3000R7 layer at
any data rate you apply to it. For this type of solution, the data rate is irrelevant because it is
an optical signal. Currently, the maximum data rate available on each network port of the
MP-2B4CT modules is 200 Gbps.
l With the available releases, you can connect only one high speed shelf and only as a
sub-shelf.
l You must specify all configuration settings on the FSP 3000 C in advance using the
CLI.
l We recommend that you do not combine management interfaces. For example,
avoid using the native FSP 3000 C CLI in combination with the FSP 3000R7 craft
interface or with Network Element Director (NED).
Network Diagram 37
Prerequisites 37
Network Diagram
Figure 8: The FSP 3000 C Connecting to the FSP 3000R7 Optical Layer
Prerequisites
This topic provides an overview of the FSP 3000 C and FSP 3000R7 equipment and
configuration requirements.
Requirement Description
FSP 3000 C Equipment l You installed:
Requirements o The MP-2B4CT.
To configure the FSP 3000R7 network-edge nodes so that they will accept external
wavelengths, you need to use interfaces such as Craft or NED.
l Up to 40 channels are available, each at 100 Gbps. Each channel has two 50-GHz-
spaced wavelengths, which are off-center from the 100-GHz grid by 25 GHz.
l You provided an integrated 40-channel multiplexer or demultiplexer.
l A tunable dispersion compensation module is available at the booster amplifier
The Smart Amp system is unique in its support for third-party channels that originate and
terminate entirely outside the system. When you initially configure the system, you can use a
single command to autonomously tune the optical-amplifier gain settings and the tunable-
dispersion compensation settings. The system greatly reduces turn-up time, provides the
ease-of-use that you want in a data center environment, and thereby decreases possible user
errors. The precise operational points result in the use of lower-cost transceivers that you can
use over longer-reach optical fiber links between nodes.
Network Diagram 39
Prerequisites for the Configuring the SmartAmp 1.0 Solution 39
Network Diagram
Figure 9: SmartAmp 1.0 Solution
Requirement Description
Equipment l You populated the node with the required equipment. During
provisioning, you set the admin states for amplifier and filter to In
Service. You installed these components:
o An AM-S23L-TD.
Network Diagram
Figure 10: SmartAmp 2.0 System Diagram
l AM-S24L-TD amplifiers
l AM-S23L booster amplifiers
l FD-48E-2 modules
l Connect fibers as specified in your fiber plan
The figure that follows shows the path of the IN-APR loop. In the diagram, the IN-APR loop
forms by using filters in the mux and demux path. The internal SFP uses a 1510-nm optical
channel to monitor the amplifier connectivity. If the internal SFP receives messages back
from the filter, it indicates fiber connectivity. The amplifier can then output >20.8dBm to
overcome filter loss and still maintain the laser hazard safety level.
IN-APR is enabled by default. If you set IN-APR to enabled and the messages are lost, an IN-
APR alarm is raised. You can disable IN-APR by setting the optical limit (OPTLMT) to enabled.
l Complete the steps shown in the FSP 3000 CCLI User Guide or FSP 3000 C
NETCONF User Guide on both sides of the network.
l Allow the process to complete at one end before you begin the steps at the opposite
end.
While most of the configuration for span equalization is automatic, you must enter and
validate a few key parameters during the initialization process for the Automatic Gain and
Tilt Evaluation & Setting.
Configuring Amplifiers
This use case explains how to configure the AM-S20H-2, AM-S23L, and AM-S23H amplifiers.
When you insert an amplifier module into a slot, it is already automatically configured.
Prerequisites
l You installed the amplifier.
l You populated the node with the required modules, and set their admin states to In
Service.
l All cables properly connect as specified in the FSP 3000 C Hardware Guide.
l A cabling plan that shows all node-internal fiber jumpers is available.
For this application you use FSP 3000 C nodes to multiplex a combination of these services
into two 100-Gbps (OTU4) outputs for transport through the network:
l 10-Gbps Ethernet
l OTU2
l OTU2e
l 25-Gbps Ethernet
l 32-Gbps Fiberchannel
l 40-Gbps Ethernet services
l FSP 3000 C nodes that you populate with the MA-2C5LT and MP-2B4CT traffic
modules.
l QSFP28 and QSFP10 pluggable transceivers that you install into MA-2C5LT
modules.
l QSFP28 pluggable transceivers that you install into MP-2B4CT modules.
See the network diagrams that follow for a visual representation of this multiplexer solution.
Network Diagrams 46
Prerequisites 46
Network Diagrams
Figure 12: The MA-2C5LT Cascades with the MP-2B4CT
Prerequisites
This topic provides an overview of the equipment and configuration requirements.
Requirement Description
FSP 3000 C l You installed these components. See the hardware guide for plug
Equipment options.
o The MA-2C5LT.
o The MP-2B4CT.
o QSFP plugs in C1 and C2 of MA-2C5LT.
o QSFP plugs in N1 and N2 of MA-2C5LT.
o QSFP plugs in C1 and C2 of MP-2B4CT.
l You populated the node with the required modules, and you set their
admin states to In Service.
l A cabling plan that shows all node-internal fiber jumpers is available.
l All cables properly connect as specified in the FSP 3000 C Hardware
Guide.
Configuration l Configure nodes with MA-2C5LT modules first, then nodes with MP-
2B4CT modules.
l Configure these MA-2C5LT module settings:
o Client port interfaces
Prerequisites
l You populated the node with the required modules, and you set their admin states
to In Service.
l All cables properly connect as specified in the FSP 3000 C Hardware Guide.
l You logged in to the node from your laptop or PC.
Prerequisites
l You populated the node with the required modules, and you set their admin states
to In Service.
l All cables properly connect as specified in the FSP 3000 C Hardware Guide.
l You logged in to the node from your laptop or PC.
Configuring the
MA-2C2C3LT-A Module
The CryptoMuxTM MA-2C2C3LT-A module multiplexes, demultiplexes, encrypts, decrypts,
and cross-connects services. This use case describes how to deploy the MA-2C2C3LT-A
encryption module to transport encrypted data over a generic third-party OTN and an ADVA
OTN. Only the network interfaces between the MA-2C2C3LT-A modules carry the encrypted
traffic. See the Network Diagrams.
To transport encrypted data over a generic third-party OTN, you can use one MA-2C2C3LT-A
module at each of the edge nodes to transport 20 bidirectional, clear-text ODU2 channels
over two bidirectional, encrypted ODU4 fibers. In this use case, you would provision either
the GCC1 or the GCC2 to carry the key-exchange protocol through the third-party
intermediate OTN.
To transport encrypted data over an ADVA OTN, this application uses two MA-2C2C3LT-A
modules and one MP-2B4CT module. With this configuration, you can aggregate 40
bidirectional, clear-text ODU2 channels over two bidirectional, encrypted ODU4 fibers. By
using these modules at each edge node, you can transport services that total 100 GB per
network fiber across the network. The MP-2B4CT accepts a variety of plugs like the
QSFP28/112G/AOCx, or the QSFP28/112G/DAC/yy/xxxx to aggregate the services.
You can multiplex a combination of these services into a 100-Gbps (OTU4) output for
transport through the network:
l 10-Gbps Ethernet
l 40-Gbps Ethernet
l 16-Gbps Fiberchannel
l 32-Gbps Fiberchannel
l OTU2
l ODU2
Network Diagrams
Figure 14: Encrypted Services over ADVA OTN
Prerequisites for
Configuring the MA-2C2C3LT-A Module
This section provides an overview of the equipment and configuration requirements for this
use case.
Requirement Description
FSP 3000 C Equipment l You installed these components for each node. See the
Requirements for Third-Party hardware guide for plug options.
OTN o Two MA-2C2C3LT-A modules.
Requirement Description
FSP 3000 C Equipment l You installed these installed components for each node.
Requirements for ADVA OTN See the hardware guide for plug options.
o Two MA-2C2C3LT-A modules.
o Encryption
o Client port interfaces
o Network port interfaces
o Client-to-network cross-connections
l Configure these settings on the MP-2B4CT module:
o Module type.
l Configure the License Manager to provide permanent or timed license files for a
client port and for non-approved plug RTUs.
l Configure a backup license server.
l Configure the License Manager to provide license files for a client port and for
non-approved plug RTU.
l Relinquish unused licenses from a node.
l Return unused licenses to a server so another node can use them.
l Verify the status of a license.
Prerequisites
l The FSP 3000 C device is running version 2.1 or later.
l You correctly set up the Embedded License Server.
l You populated the node with the required modules, and you set their admin states
to In Service
l All cables properly connect as specified in the FSP 3000 C Hardware Guide.
l You logged in to the node from your laptop or PC.
Prerequisites
l You installed a MP-2B4CT card at the near-end and far-end nodes.
l An established error-free ot100, ot200, or ot300 data-rate connection exists over
the network interface.
l You populated the node with the required modules, and you set their admin states
to In Service.
l All cables properly connect as specified in the FSP 3000 C Hardware Guide.
l A cabling plan that shows all node-internal fiber jumpers is available.
Prerequisites
l You installed the MP-2B4CT-S module.
l You populated the node with the required modules, and you set their admin states
to In Service.
l All cables properly connect as specified in the FSP 3000 C Hardware Guide.
l A cabling plan that shows all node-internal fiber jumpers is available.
Prerequisites
l You installed these components:
o A MP-2B4CT card at the near-end and far-end nodes.
Prerequisites
l You installed these components:
o The main shelf and subshelves.
Prerequisites
l You populated the node with the required modules, and you set their admin states
to In Service.
l All cables properly connect as specified in the FSP 3000 C Hardware Guide.
l You logged in to the node from your laptop or PC.
Prerequisites
l You populated the node with the required modules, and you set their admin states
to In Service.
l All cables properly connect as specified in the FSP 3000 C Hardware Guide.
l You logged in to the node from your laptop or PC.
Configuring the
T-MP-2D12CT Module
The TeraFlexTM T-MP-2D12CT traffic module can transport 600 Gbps of data over a single
wavelength and deliver a total duplex capacity of 3.6 Tbps. The client ports support twelve
100 Gbps Ethernet, 10 Gbps Ethernet using MicroMux, and OTU4 client interfaces.
These DWDM filters modules are compatible with multiple T-MP-2D12CT traffic modules:
l T-MP-2D12CT modules.
l QSFP-28 plugs in T-MP-2D12CT modules.
l FD-64W or FD-48E-W filters.
l Connected fibers as specified in the fiber plan.
l MP-2B4CT
l MP-2B4CT-S
l T-MP-2D12CT
l MA-2C5LT
l MA-2C2C3LT-A
l MA-B5LT
l MA-B2C3LT-A