nanog mailing list archives

Re: Passive Optical Network (PON)


From: Stas Bilder <stas.bilder () gmail com>
Date: Sat, 21 Jan 2017 15:22:20 -0600

I evaluated several campus PON project on both vendor/provider and customer
sides over the last 5 years.

PON was designed as a last-mile technology for _operators_ to cover huge
areas and save on OPEX - that's the usual vendor's mantra.
GigE usually takes two fibers to deliver; GigE aggregation requires an
Ethernet switch you need to power and maintain - "many points of failure"
argument.
PON only takes one fiber, splitting a PON signal is done by a cheap passive
optical splitter which, once installed, lasts forever.

Correct cost comparison between PON and Ethernet is pretty difficult.
First, the cost of the actual network _equipment_ (switches, routers etc.)
for an Access network (tens of thousands of subscribers) is nothing
compared to the civil works - trenching, cabling, permits etc. Second, CPE
cost is the most sensitive on that scale. $5 cheaper CPE saves more money
than a $50k cheaper OLT.

Without scale benefits and (assumed) OpEx reduction, PON projects are
usually significantly more expensive.

Now, to the projects.
I have never heard of seen PON on a DC level.
As for the campus, none of the projects took off, and here is why:

- PON equipment is proprietary. An OLT (PON hub) from vendor X works only
with ONTs from the same vendor. Every other vendor claims there is "some
interop" but none was able to do demonstrate.
- PON infrastructure - a passive fiber tree - is a) proprietary b) not
flexible. You can make any physical topology of your usual p2p fiber
segments but a tree is always a tree; plus PON usually requires green APC
(angle polished) connectors.
- PON US/DS bandwidth allocation is asymmetric.

Training, maintenance and support are important, too. Ethernet is
ubiquitous, PON engineers are a bit harder to find. Proprietary nature of
the product implies that a Huawei PON would look and feel somewhat
different than, say, Calix PON hence the knowledge is more vendor-specific.
Also, nobody likes vendor lock. If an Access Ethernet switch fails, you can
- potentially - replace it with another fairly easily. PON ONT of different
vendors may all come from the same OEM like Cambridge but the firmware is
different.

What did I miss?... Ah, the usual cabling

There is a more sophisticated WDM-PON. Ericsson and Teradata had it in
development, Infinera offers it as iAccess product - but I haven't tried
that yet.

Overall, it really depends on a project (getting all the MTBF data and
calculating the failure cost was quite a task) but I personally can't see
any PON benefits over Ethernet for either campus or DC even in the midterm.

From my personal experience, flexibility with cables plus cheap CWDM
filters and colored optics can do magic on the campus level.


Stas


On Sat, Jan 21, 2017 at 10:44 AM, Kenneth McRae <kenneth.mcrae () me com>
wrote:

Greeting all,

Is anyone out there using PON in a campus or facility environment?  I am
talking to a few vendors who are pushing PON as a replacement for edge
switching on the campus and in some cases, ToR switch in the DC.  Opinions
on this technology would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks,

Kenneth


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