This Topic is legacy now but just to keep reader aware about the basic concepts, compiling all together SONET/SDH here.
- Bellcore defines GR.253 (SONET) and ITU-T defines G.691 (SDH)
- SONET means Synchronous Optical NETwork
- First North American Fiber-Optic Telecommunications Standard to overcome the limitations of the traditional asynchronous network.
- Formulated by the Exchange Carriers Standards Association for the American National Standards Institute
- Incorporated into the Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH) recommendations of the International Telecommunications Union (ITU).
- SDH is mostly used outside North America and principally in Europe
- Synchronous systems (e. g. SONET) :
- — Average frequency of all clocks in the system are same or nearly—Clocking provided by a highly stable reference supply
—Allows many STS- 1s to be stacked together without of bit- stuffing
—STS- 1s as well as VTs easily accessed from higher rates signals
—Pointers accommodate differences in reference source frequencies, and phase wander
- STS-1: Synchronous Transport Signal – level 1
- STM-1: Synchronous Transport Module – level 1
- The telecommunications industry adopted the Synchronous Optical Network (SONET) or Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH) standard for optical transport of TDM data. SONET, used in North America, and SDH, used elsewhere, are two closely related standards that specify interface parameters, rates, framing formats, multiplexing methods and management for synchronous TDM over fiber.
- SONET/SDH takes “n” bit streams, multiplexes them and optically modulates the signal, sending it out using a light emitting device over fiber with a bit rate equal to (incoming bit rate) multiplied by “n.” Traffic arriving at the SONET/SDH multiplexer from four places at 2.5 Gigabits per second will go out as a single stream at 4 times 2.5 Gigabits per second, or 10 Gigabits per second.
SONET/SDH Digital Hierarchy
Optical Level |
SONET Electrical Level |
SDH Equivalent |
Line Rate (Mbps) |
Payload Rate (Mbps) |
Overhead Rate (Mbps) |
SONET Capacity |
SDH Capacity |
OC-1 |
STS-1 |
– |
51.840 |
50.112 |
1.728 |
28 DS-1s or 1 DS-3 |
21 E1s |
OC-3 |
STS-3 |
STM-1 |
155.520 |
150.336 |
5.184 |
84 DS-1s or 3 DS–3s |
63 E1s or 1 E4 |
OC–12 |
STS–12 |
STM-4 |
622.080 |
601.344 |
20.736 |
336 DS-1s or 12 DS–3s |
252 E1s or 4 E4s |
OC–48 |
STS–48 |
STM-16 |
2488.320 |
2405.376 |
82.944 |
1,344 DS-1s or 192 DS-3s |
1,008 E1s or 16 E4s |
OC-192 |
STS-192 |
STM-64 |
9953.280 |
9621.504 |
331.776 |
5,376 DS-1s or 192 DS-3s |
4,032 E1s or 64 E4s |
Although an SDH STM–1 has the same bit rate as the SONET STS-3, the two signals contain different frame structures. STM = Synchronous Transport Module (ITU–T) STS = Synchronous Transfer Signal (ANSI) OC = Optical Carrier (ANSI) |
SONET/SDH Tributaries
Tributary Signal |
Tributary Bit Rate |
SONET Name |
SDH Name |
DS-1 |
1.728 Mbps |
VT-1.5 |
TU–11 |
E-1 |
2.304 Mbps |
VT-2 |
TU–12 |
DS-1C |
3.456 Mbps |
VT-3 |
– |
DS-2 |
6.912 Mbps |
VT-6 |
TU-2 |
E-3 |
49.152 Mbps |
– |
TU-3
|