Common Control and Measurement Plane R. Rokui
Internet-Draft Ciena
Intended status: Informational A. Guo
Expires: 27 November 2025 Futurewei Technologies
P. Bedard
Cisco
B. Swamynathan
Nokia
G. Grammel
Juniper
26 May 2025
Data Modelling and Gap Analysis of Optical Pluggables in Packet Over
Optical Network
draft-rokui-ccamp-actn-wdm-pluggable-modelling-02
Abstract
This draft outlines the pluggable module attributes within a host
device. It includes representations of optical pluggable module
capabilities, configuration, states, and telemetry data. These
attributes draws from existing IETF standards and incorporates input
from other industry forums and standards, such as ITU-T, OpenConfig,
OIF and ONF TAPI, to ensure uniform structuring and consistent naming
conventions. Note that the IETF terminology shall be given
precedence wherever possible. In case there is a duplication of an
attribute, this draft may describe how the attribute is named in the
related document. Only if no attribute exists in IETF RFCs or IETF
WG drafts, new attributes shall be introduced if they are needed.
This draft provides a gap analysis with respect to existing IETF work
in the following areas:
* It provides an analysis of optical attributes provided by other
organizations and identifying modeling gaps in current IETF
drafts.
* It identifies modeling needs addressing the specific aspect of
pluggability of transceiver modules. The authors recognize the
fact that that not all pluggable modules are coherent, not all
coherent pluggable modules are DWDM capable and not all DWDM
capable interfaces are implemented as pluggable modules. This
analysis identifies gaps to manage the lifecycle of an optical
pluggable module, from operator approval and viability assessment,
to deployment, monitoring and phase-out.
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The lifecycle of an optical pluggable module, from operator approval
and viability assessment to deployment and monitoring, is also
addressed.
About This Document
This note is to be removed before publishing as an RFC.
The latest revision of this draft can be found at
https://italobusi.github.io/actn-wdm-pluggable-modelling/draft-rokui-
ccamp-actn-wdm-pluggable-modelling.html. Status information for this
document may be found at https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-
rokui-ccamp-actn-wdm-pluggable-modelling/.
Discussion of this document takes place on the Common Control and
Measurement Plane Working Group mailing list (mailto:ccamp@ietf.org),
which is archived at https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/browse/ccamp/.
Subscribe at https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ccamp/.
Source for this draft and an issue tracker can be found at
https://github.com/italobusi/actn-wdm-pluggable-modelling.
Status of This Memo
This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the
provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute
working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-
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Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
This Internet-Draft will expire on 27 November 2025.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2025 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
document authors. All rights reserved.
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (https://trustee.ietf.org/
license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document.
Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights
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and restrictions with respect to this document. Code Components
extracted from this document must include Revised BSD License text as
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Table of Contents
1. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3. Optical pluggable module in a Device with Packet Functions . 7
4. Optical Module Functional Building Blocks . . . . . . . . . . 9
4.1. Optical Channel/OTSi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
4.2. Media Logical Channels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
4.3. Host Logical Channels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
4.4. Electrical Channels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
4.5. Equipment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
5. Optical modules Data Modeling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
5.1. optical module Capability Attributes (aka,
Supported-Modes) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
5.2. optical module Configurations Attributes . . . . . . . . 14
5.3. optical optical module Performance Monitoring Data . . . 14
5.4. optical module Threshold Definition . . . . . . . . . . . 16
5.5. optical module Alarm Notifications . . . . . . . . . . . 18
6. Addressing optical modules Attributes From Google Sheet . . . 18
7. Optical Module Data Modeling Gap Analysis . . . . . . . . . . 19
8. Optical pluggable modules Lifecycle Management . . . . . . . 20
8.1. Approving the pluggable module type and version . . . . . 22
8.2. Planning the network . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
8.3. Dealing with service demand . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
8.4. Installing and operationalizing the pluggable module . . 24
8.5. Expressing capabilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
9. Appendix A - Coherent pluggable module Examples . . . . . . . 27
9.1. Example-1: Coherent Pluggables Already Provisioned . . . 27
9.2. Example-2: Coherent Pluggables Planning . . . . . . . . . 29
10. Appendix B - Support of Opaque Attributes . . . . . . . . . . 33
10.1. Support of Opaque Capability Attributes . . . . . . . . 35
10.2. Support of Opaque Secret Capability Attributes . . . . . 35
10.3. Support of Opaque Configuration Attributes
(Solution-1) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
10.4. Support of Opaque Configuration Attributes
(Solution-2) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
10.5. Support of Opaque Configuration Attributes
(Solution-3) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
10.6. Support of Opaque Secret Configuration Attributes . . . 38
10.7. Support of Opaque Performance Monitoring Data . . . . . 39
11. Appendix C - Coherent Pluggable Repository . . . . . . . . . 39
12. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
13. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
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14. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
14.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
14.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
1. Terminology
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
"OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
capitals, as shown here.
The following terms abbreviations are used in this document:
* Optical modules: short term for optical transceiver modules. Such
module can be of fixed or pluggable module nature and provides the
optical interface for communication.
* Pluggable modules: short term for pluggable optical transceiver
module. Pluggable modules are a specific form of optical modules
that are field replaceable. They pro
* Coherent module: short term for optical transceiver module
providing coherent optical modulation capabilities.
* DWDM module: short term for coherent module supporting the use of
a DWDM line system.
* Common Management Interface Specification (CMIS): The Common
Management Interface Specification is an Implementation Agreement
(IA) developed by the Optical Internet Forum (OIF) [CMIS]. This
specification defines an interface for managing optical (and
copper) modules in a standardized way while still permitting
vendor-specific functionality. It eases the integration of
modules supporting the CMIS interface into host platforms from
different system vendors. It shall be noted that CMIS targets any
module, not only coherent optical modules, which is the scope of
this document. The CMIS interface is applicable to on-board
module types (fixed optics) as well as pluggable modules types
such as QSFP Double-Density (QSFP-DD), OSFP, COBO, QSFP and other
module types.
* optical module media side:
* optical module host side:
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* Monitored attributes: The optical module attributes which can be
measured, monitored, estimated, or otherwise observed. The
monitored attributes are the inputs to performance monitors which
in turn provide real time samples, threshold crossing supervision,
and sometimes sample statistics.
2. Introduction
Packet traffic has been transmitted across optical networks for many
years, leveraging the advantages of optical transmission and
switching combined with packet switching. Traditionally, Optical
Line Systems were fully integrated with DWDM Transponder modules in
proprietary implementations while non-DWDM (aka. client) modules were
integrated with their hosts. With the advent of open optical
networking, also DWDM transponder modules are now hosted by sytems
outside the Line System.
In numerous network setups, packet and optical networks have been
engineered, operated, and managed separately, leading to siloed
operations that can be suboptimal and inefficient. Advancements in
optical component design have led to increased density, enabling
entire coherent optical terminal systems that previously required
multiple circuit packs to now fit into a single small form factor
"coherent optical module." Integrating coherent optical modules into
switching and routing devices can result in reduced network costs,
power consumption, and footprint, while also enhancing data transfer
rates, reducing latency, and expanding capacity, although in some
cases, separate packet and optical solutions may still be preferred
due to other engineering and deployment considerations.
These trends, coupled with the desire to utilize the best components
available, have given rise to open optical pluggable modules.
Communication between optical modules and the host occurs through the
CMIS standard developed by OIF [CMIS].
While standardized transmission modes like ZR can handle basic
applications, proprietary modes from vendors are often necessary to
achieve optimal performance.
This draft provides a gap analysis of optical pluggable modules in
the context of a packet over optical network. The model presented in
this document analyzes three key functional blocks:
* Photonic/Optical attributes: These attributes defines the
characteristics of the optical and photonic properties such as
spectrum, polarization, dispersion etc.
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* Host/Electrical attributes: These attributes defines the
characteristics of interconnect between the host and the optical
pluggable module, such as lane count, FEC etc., which both the
optical pluggable module and the packet host must understand and
act upon.
* Physical and functional aspects of the pluggable module (i.e.,
equipment): This defines attributes of the optical pluggable
module itself, such as plug type, version, thermal
characteristics, power consumption etc.
For each of these functional blocks, the model shall provide the
necessary attributes in following areas:
* Capabilities: These attributes are read-only and defines the
functional capabilities of the optical module. They are defined
in a profile called "operational-mode" and contains attributes
such as modulation, bit-rate, baud-rate, chromatic-dispersion,
polarization, FEC etc. An optical module might support one or
multiple operational-modes.
* Configurations: Since an optical module can support multiple
operational-modes, these read-write attributes configure the
module to be functional in one of those operational- modes.
Example of configuration attributes are output power, central
frequency and operational-mode.
* States and performance monitoring telemetry data: These read-only
attributes will be generated by optical modules and represents
various states and PM data of the optical modules such as channel
input power, channel output power, central frequency, laser
temperature, current OSNR, Link Up/Down State, Alarm State, Laser
On/Off State etc. In most cases these attributes are changing
with time and optical modules report current, average, min and max
values. It is also possible to apply thresholds on each of these
attributes to support threshold crossing alert (TCA).
Both vendor-agnostic and vendor-specific attributes are important
considerations in the modeling of optical pluggable modules.
The document is divided into the following sections:
* Section 3: Optical pluggable module in a Device with Packet
Functions
* Section 4: Optical Module Functional Building Block
* Section 5: Optical Modules Data Modeling
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* Section 6: Addressing Optical Modules Attributes From Google Sheet
* Section 7: Optical Module Data Modeling Gap Analysis
* Section 8: Optical Pluggables Lifecycle Management
3. Optical pluggable module in a Device with Packet Functions
Figure 1 shows a host packet device from vendor X, which is connected
to optical device, equipped with optical pluggable modules from
vendor X and Y. This figure exposes the following internal and
external interfaces:
A. This interface provides the control of the host and all it's
components. Note that the YANG data model addressing pluggable
modules will be provided at interface (A), i.e., the management
interface of the device. In general the HOST can be any devices
(packet, OTN etc.) But in specific this draft addresses this when
the Host is a packet device.
B. The CMIS [CMIS] defines the communication interface between host
devices and optical modules.
C. The data flow between the optical pluggable module and the packet
data function through this interface. This is electrical interface
between optical pluggable module and the host. Section 4 will
discuss this in more details.
D. Optical fiber connecting the optical devices to optical pluggable
modules. This carries the flow of photonic signal from the optical
device to the optical pluggable modules. Section 4 will discuss this
in more details.
The model presented in Section 5 consolidates properties of optical
pluggable module on interfaces (D) and (C) in Figure 1 where
interface (D) provides the photonic/optical attributes and interface
(C) provides the host/electrical attributes.
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|---------------|
| P-PNC(s), |
| O-PNC(s), |
| MDSC |
|---------------|
^
| (A)
+-------------------|-------------------+
| |---------------| |
| |Host Management| |
| |---------------| |
| | | Packet Device
| V | Vendor X
| |---------------------| | (i.e, Host)
| v v |
| |-----------| |----------| |
| | Packet | | optical | |
| | Function |..........| Plug | |
| | Data | | Data | |
| |-----------| |----------| |
| . . |
| . . (B) |
| . . |
| |--------------| (C) |------------------| (D)
| |Packet Device |<------->| optical Plug #1 |=======
| |Function |<---| | Vendor X |
| |--------------| | |------------------|
| | |
| | |------------------|
| |--->| optical Plug #2 |=======
| | Vendor Y |
| |------------------|
| |
+---------------------------------------+
Legend
(A) Packet device management interfaces
(e.g., YANG, NETCONF, gNMI, etc.)
(B) CMIS interface between Optical pluggable module and Host
(C) Host side of coherent optical pluggable module (towards Host)
(D) Media side of coherent optical pluggable module
(towards Optical/Photonic network)
Figure 1: Packet device with optical pluggable modules
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4. Optical Module Functional Building Blocks
The functional building blocks of the optical modules of Figure 1 are
shown in Figure 2 and has three major functions:
* Media side: This functional block represents all Photonic/Optical
attributes of the optical modules (interface (D) in Figure 1).
These attributes define the characteristics of the optical and
photonic properties such as spectrum, polarization, dispersion
etc., which do not directly affect the behavior of the host packet
device. Note that the goal of this draft is to identify optical
module capabilities, configuration, states, and telemetry data
attributes from existing IETF standards and incorporates input
from other industry forums and standards, such as ITU-T,
OpenConfig, OIF and ONF TAPI and then perform the gap analysis to
compare optical module attributes with current IETF drafts,
identifying any modeling gaps. Eventually based on the identified
gaps, the draft proposes solutions to address missing attributes,
such as augmenting or updating existing IETF YANG models. Note
that IETF terminology are given precedence wherever possible. In
case there is a duplication of an attribute, this draft may
describe how the attribute is named in the related document. Only
if no attribute exists in IETF RFCs or IETF WG drafts, new
attributes shall be introduced if they are needed.
* Host side: This functional block represents all Host/Electrical
attributes of the coherent pluggables (interface (C) in Figure 1).
These attributes defines the characteristics of interconnect
between the host and the optical pluggable, such as lane count,
FEC etc., which both the optical pluggable and the packet host
should understand and act upon. Note that the mapping between
host and media might be one to many, i.e., a host logical channel
might map to one or more media logical channel.
* Equipment attributes: These attributes represent all physical and
functional aspects of the optical pluggable module such as plug
type, software version, thermal characteristics, power consumption
etc.
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optical Pluggable Module
|--------------------------------------------------------------|
| |
| |--------------------------------------------------------| |
| | Equipment | |
| |--------------------------------------------------------| |
| |
| Host side Media side |
| |---------------------------| |---------------------------| |
| | | | | |
| | |---------| |---------| | | |---------| |---------| | |(Tx)
-----| Elec. | | Host | | | | Media | | Optical | ----->
-----| Channels|--| Logical |-------| Logical |--| Channel | <-----
-----| | | Channels| | | | Channels| | (OTSi) | | |(Rx)
| | |---------| |---------| | | |---------| |---------| | |
| | | | | |
| |---------------------------| |---------------------------| |
| |
|--------------------------------------------------------------|
Figure 2: Optical pluggable module Building Blocks
The following sections are describing the details of optical
pluggable module functional blocks in more details.
4.1. Optical Channel/OTSi
The media side of the optical module is further divided into two
functional blocks; Optical Channel/OTSi and Media Logical Channels.
The characteristics of the Optical channel/OTSi are (See section
2.3.1 of [I-D.ietf-ccamp-optical-impairment-topology-yang] and also
section 3.2.4 [G.959.1]).
* This is the module interfaces facing the optical network.
* Represents the digital wrapper that transports services over a
wavelength
* Represents the wavelength and the optical aspects of the signal
modulated onto baud-rate, bit-rate, modulation scheme, frequency,
tx-power, etc.
* Optical signal FEC termination/source, FEC characteristic
information – configuration, if possible, Pre-FEC BER, Post-FEC
BER, fail/degrade thresholds, raw corrected/uncorrected counts
* Provides configuration of the signal and monitoring capabilities
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* Provides monitoring capabilities in the Tx (toward fiber/medium)
and Rx (from fiber/medium) directions, Total optical power,
optical channel power, optical statistics
4.2. Media Logical Channels
The characteristics of the Media Logical Channels are:
* Logical representation of the hierarchical view of the digital
framing layers used for transport of services over the wavelength
* Provides access to information for configuration and monitoring
characteristics. For example, for 400ZR/OpenZR+ [OIF-400ZR], it
represents the 400ZR frame structure in which Ethernet services
are mapped and for an OTN encapsulated signal, it represents the
OTU, ODU, OPU frame structures, perhaps with a multi-layer
multiplex structure, in which Ethernet and other types of services
are mapped
4.3. Host Logical Channels
The host side of the optical module is further divided into two
functional blocks; Host Logical Channels and Electrical channels.
The characteristics of the Host Logical Channels are:
* Logical representation of the hierarchical view of the digital
framing layers for services carried on the electrical lanes of the
device
* Provides information for configuration and monitoring
characteristics of each service
* Represents each service carried over the media logical channel and
optical interface/wavelength, e.g., 25GE, 50GE, 100GE, 200GE,
400GE, OTU4, OTUCn etc.
4.4. Electrical Channels
The characteristics of the Electrical Channels are:
Note that the purpose of this section is to clarify the role of
electrical channel in the optical module. This purpose of this draft
is not to define the data model of the electrical channels.
* The host side lanes of the device forming the physical interface
to the host platform data path device(s)
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* Lanes grouped to support the type/format and bandwidth of the
signal used for a service
* Provides information for configuration and monitoring
characteristics of the signal for a service in the electrical
domain, e.g., Interface-format, FEC, alarming thresholds, etc.
* Provides monitoring capabilities in the Tx (toward fiber) and Rx
(from the fiber).
4.5. Equipment
The "Equipment functional block" in Figure 2 represents the pluggable
module itself and has the following characteristics:
* Provides manufacturer identification information for the device
* Advertises capabilities of the device including capabilities for
the host/client side and the media/line side
* Provides monitoring capabilities of physical characteristics and
health of the device, e.g., temperature, voltage, optical
transmitter/receiver characteristics
* Provides for configuration where applicable – e.g., of device
environmental thresholds
* Supports device level capabilities such as firmware installation,
restarts, etc.
5. Optical modules Data Modeling
[Editor's notes: As part of Gap analysis, YANG reference/YANG code
might be added to the data modeling section/subsections and that the
current content shall be considered as placeholder for the model.]
The data modeling of each functional blocks provides attributes in
following areas:
* Section 5.1: optical module capability attributes (i.e.,
supported-modes)
* Section 5.2: optical module configuration attributes
* Section 5.3: optical module performance monitoring data (including
State data)
* Section 5.4: optical module threshold definition
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* Section 5.5: optical module alarm notifications
* Section 10: Support of Opaque Attributes
5.1. optical module Capability Attributes (aka, Supported-Modes)
Coherent optical modules have revolutionized optical networking by
offering a powerful combination of high performance, flexibility, and
ease of deployment. These modules support a broad range of
capabilities, making them both efficient and versatile. Their
extensive functional capabilities further enhance their effectiveness
in diverse networking environments.
From a data modeling perspective, a set of attributes is grouped
together and represented by a single identifier known as the
"Operational Mode." In essence, each operational mode encapsulates a
combination of properties, limitations and capabilities, such as
modulation type, bit rate, baud rate, chromatic dispersion,
polarization, FEC, and more. Some of these attributes limit value
ranges (e.g., minimum and maximum). A optical module can support
multiple operational modes, each of which can be defined by one of
the following methods.
Note that this current draft adheres to the definitions provided in
draft [I-D.ietf-ccamp-optical-impairment-topology-yang]. See
Section 2.6 of draft
[I-D.ietf-ccamp-optical-impairment-topology-yang] for:
* Standard Mode: This mode pertains to optical specifications
developed by standards development organizations (SDOs), such as
the ITU-T recommendation [G.698.2].
* Organizational Mode: In this mode, optical interface
specifications are defined by operators, industry forums (e.g.,
Optical Internetworking Forum (OIF) or OpenConfig), or equipment
vendors. This allows for the utilization of optical module
capabilities that extend beyond existing standards.
* Explicit Mode: This mode enables the explicit encoding of any
subset of parameters (e.g., FEC type, modulation type) to
facilitate interoperability checks by a controller entity through
means not covered within this draft.
For more detailed information, please refer to draft
[I-D.ietf-ccamp-optical-impairment-topology-yang].
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5.2. optical module Configurations Attributes
Referring to Figure 3, optical modules support a set of read-write
attributes which are configurable. Example of such configuration
attributes are output power, central frequency and operational-mode.
Note that as discussed in Section 5.1, since optical modules may
support multiple operational-modes, as part of these configuration
attributes, operator should configure which of these operational-mode
is desired and should be functional.
|-----------------------------------------------------------------|
| optical-channel // OTSi channels |
| configuration // list of R/W plug configuration attributes |
| config-attribute-1 |
| config-attribute-2 |
| ..... |
| config-attribute-m |
|-----------------------------------------------------------------|
Figure 3: Data structure for optical module Configuration Attributes
5.3. optical optical module Performance Monitoring Data
Figure 4 shows the list of optical module Performance Monitoring (PM)
and state data, which are critical components in optical networks,
enabling network engineers to ensure optimal performance, identify
issues, and maintain network reliability. Operators monitor a range
of attributes on both the optical/photonic and electrical sides of
optical modules, including channel input power, channel output power,
central frequency, current Optical Signal-to-Noise Ratio (OSNR), Bit
Error Rate (BER), chromatic dispersion, laser temperature, link
status, and more. These parameters directly impact the quality and
integrity of the transmitted data across both optical and electrical
domains.
|-----------------------------------------------------------------|
| optical-channel // OTSi channels |
| pm and states // list of R/O pm and state attributes |
| // Note-1: Each pm-attribute might have |
| // threshold definitions |
| // Note-2: For each monitored attributes, |
| // one SCTG profile can be assigned |
| monitored-attribute-1 |
| monitored-attribute-2 |
| ..... |
| monitored-attribute-p |
|-----------------------------------------------------------------|
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Figure 4: Data structure for optical module PM Attributes
As coherent optical technology continues to gain traction, PM has
evolved to include more advanced techniques, such as monitoring the
quality of modulated signals and detecting impairments that could
degrade performance over long distances. By leveraging these PM
capabilities, engineers can ensure that the optical layer operates
effectively, optimize the utilization of optical resources, and
maintain high levels of service continuity and performance throughout
the network.
It is important to note that the "monitored attributes" encompass
parameters from the media side, host side, and hardware components of
optical modules.
Performance Monitoring (PM) data is generated for various "monitored
attributes" by optical modules, representing a range of real-time
metrics, including current, average, minimum, and maximum values, as
well as counters and states. The PM data can be categorized as
follows:
* Basic Monitoring PM data: The analogue values which provide the
"current values" of a "monitored attributes" such as laser
temperature, eSNR (Effective Signal-to-Noise Ratio) at media
input, eSNR at host input, laser frequency error, and more.
* Advanced Monitoring PM data: The analogue values which provide the
"current, average, minimum, and maximum values" of "monitored
attributes" such as transmit signal power, Bit Error Rate (BER),
chromatic dispersion, etc.
* Up Counters: The discrete counter values of "monitored attributes"
that only increment, such as Bit Error Count, FEC (Forward Error
Correction) Uncorrected Errors, Loss of Signal (LOS) count, Loss
of Frame (LOF) count, and others.
* Up/Down Counters: The discrete counter values of "monitored
attributes" that can both incremented and decremented.
* Operational/Admin States: Represents the states of "monitored
attributes" such as link up/down state, alarm state, laser on/off
state, Automatic Power Control (APC) status, and more.
For "Up Counters" there might be two approaches:
* Continuous Increment: The counter value continuously increments
without resetting upon read.
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* Reset on Read: The counter value resets either on read or based on
a predefined condition.
For "advanced monitoring performance management (PM) data", where
current, average, minimum, and maximum values are provided by the
optical module, a "windowing mechanism" is essential. Currently,
this mechanism is implemented by the host platform, not the module
itself. For instance, the host platform utilizes the windowing
mechanism to segment the PM data collected by the optical module.
Within each window, the host calculates the minimum, maximum, and
average values of the PM data, enabling a granular and time-specific
analysis of the module's performance.
A variety of performance monitoring metrics, including minimum,
maximum, average, and instantaneous values, can be collected. These
metrics offer a comprehensive view of performance fluctuations,
allowing for precise monitoring and quicker response times to
anomalies. Minimum and maximum values help identify the extremes of
performance, while average values give a sense of typical performance
levels. Instantaneous values, on the other hand, provide real-time
insights, which are crucial for immediate issue detection and
resolution. This multi-faceted approach ensures that network
performance is consistently monitored and maintained at high
standards.
Section 5.4 will discuss the collection type and how they are related
to the above-mentioned PM data. It also covers the optical modules
support for threshold crossing alerts (TCA) for all or a subset of
monitored attributes.
5.4. optical module Threshold Definition
As indicated in Section 5.3, optical modules are capable of providing
the threshold crossing alert (TCA) for all or subset of "monitored
attributes". In this situation, the optical module raises an alert
which informs the host about operationally undesired situations or
about critical threshold crossings of monitored attributes. The
optical module raises an alert by setting an associated Flag on
module memory-map that represents the alert.
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As mentioned previously, the TCA might be supported for a subset of
optical module monitored attributes. Since it is possible that the
optical module has different capabilities to raise threshold for
different monitored attributes, to provide a general solution for
threshold definition on optical module monitored attributes, this
draft introduces the concept of "Supported Collection and Threshold
Group (SCTG)" shown in Figure 5 which defines the configurable
threshold values and collection types (i.e., the collection of
current value, average value, min/max value are supported).
In summary, as outlined in Section 5.3 and Section 5.4, each optical
module PM/State attribute can have multiple Performance Monitoring
(PM) values, such as current, average, minimum, and maximum, as well
as multiple threshold levels, including warning, minor, major, and
critical. To streamline this representation in a Google Sheet, each
optical module PM/State attribute will be associated with a
corresponding SCTG-Type reference.
For example, consider the optical module PM attribute "channel-input-
power." Tthe optical module collects PM values for current, average,
minimum, and maximum, while also supporting the configuration of
threshold values for warning, minor, major, and critical levels. As
illustrated in Figure 5, the PM attribute "channel-input-power" is
linked to "SCTG-Type-1" to simplify its representation in Google
Sheet.
Supported-Collection-and-Threshold-Group (SCTG)
|----------------------------------------------------------------|
| SCTG-Type-1: |
| Collection: current, average, min, max |
| Configured Threshold: warning, minor, major, critical |
| |
| SCTG-Type-2: |
| Collection: current |
| Configured Threshold: warning, minor, major, critical |
| |
| SCTG-Type-3: |
| Collection: current, average, min, max |
| ... |
| SCTG-Type-n: |
|----------------------------------------------------------------|
// Note:
// These are just a few examples. More SCTG can be defined
Figure 5: optical module Collection and Threshold Group Definition
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To define the warning, minor, major, critical threshold values for a
optical module monitored attribute, operator should set upper and
lower limits that delineate acceptable performance ranges. This
ensures that any deviations can be quickly identified and addressed.
A rolling window between min-time and max-time should be employed to
dynamically adjust these thresholds based on recent data trends,
providing a more accurate reflection of current network conditions.
By continuously updating the thresholds, network performance can be
maintained within optimal parameters, reducing the risk of undetected
issues.
Note that sometimes these thresholds are configurable and sometime
they are hard-coded. It is also possible that a vendor can support a
sub-set and super-set of monitored attributes (for super-set they
need to augment the yang model).
5.5. optical module Alarm Notifications
[Editor's note: To be added in a later release.]
The optical modules might generate various alarm notifications due to
the various reasons.
6. Addressing optical modules Attributes From Google Sheet
[Editorial Note: This section in under review. It depends on the Gap
Analysis as well]
As discussed in the sections on capabilities, configuration, and
performance monitoring in Section 5.1, Section 5.2, and Section 5.3,
the optical module module includes various read-only capability
attributes, read-write configuration attributes, and read-only
performance monitoring attributes. For a comprehensive list of these
attributes, refer to the accompanying optical module Google Sheet (Q:
how can we incorporate the Google Sheet?).
Based on outcome of Gap analysis, we need to address the module
attributes using approaches such as:
* Augmentation of existing IETF YANG data model (e.g. augmentation
of draft [I-D.ietf-ccamp-optical-impairment-topology-yang])
* Extend the content of an existing IETF YANG model via "bis/update"
The detail of this provided after gap analysis on optical module
attributes on Google Sheet.
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7. Optical Module Data Modeling Gap Analysis
[Editorial Note: This section in under review. Will start after
finishing the Google Sheet]
This draft on "coherent optical module data model and gap analysis"
was initiated to examine existing IETF models related to modules for
"completeness" to assess existing IETF properties/structures which
are relevant to coherent optical modules and also to look for missing
properties/structures. The goal of current work is to achieve best
positioning of the IETF work with respect to the other related
activities in the industry.
To carry out this ongoing examination, properties/structures from
relevant external bodies are collected and compared with properties/
structures present in IETF models related to coherent modules. Where
properties/structures differ the differences are examined and
justifications considered and justification provided for changes to
the IETF models these are proposed.
The following items are identified as initial gap related to optical
modules. Note that the complete list will be provided after
finishing the Google Sheet.
* Syntax gaps: Naming inconsistency on existing IETF drafts
[I-D.ietf-ccamp-optical-impairment-topology-yang],
[I-D.ietf-ccamp-rfc9093-bis] and
[I-D.ietf-ccamp-dwdm-if-param-yang] if any.
Naming convention:
direction [tx/rx/both/none]-
[name of the attribute]-
value [min / max / current / none]
Examples:
for IETF attribute rx-channel-power-max, use
rx-channel-power-max (no change)
for ITU-T attribute "Min (residual) chromatic dispersion", use
residual-chromatic-dispersion-min
for IETF attribute "max-central-frequency", use
central-frequency-max
for IETF attribute "channel-output-power", use
tx-channel-power
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* Semantic gaps: As part of gap analysis and for a complete solution
for optical module, there should be some alignment between the
capabilities, configuration, PM attributes and PM thresholds
supported by IETF optical module and OIF supported by [CMIS].
This needs further investigation.
* [Editor's note: More to be added after Gap Analysis.]
8. Optical pluggable modules Lifecycle Management
[Editorial Note: it is under review. It was agreed that this section
is important. Having said that, there are a few potential solution
to address this topic:
* Keep it is this draft
* Talk to author of use-case draft to be included in that draft
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-ccamp-actn-poi-
pluggable-usecases-gaps/
* Move it to other IETF draft]
This section discusses the complete lifecycle of an optical pluggable
module as shown in Figure 6. It includes discussion on the pre-
purchase evaluation of pluggable modules through installation to the
operation of a pluggable module in a live network.
Most of this lifecycle discussion applies to a majority of equipment
types. Where the pluggable module is special, this is highlighted.
The figure below provides a high level flow. In a real environment,
all stages will be running in parallel for various plug versions etc.
and there may be feedback from any stage to a previous stage. For
example, the research, evaluation and planning exercises are ongoing
activities that continue as the network grows and changes and as new
pluggable module type & versions are introduced by vendors and
insight from deployment may feed back to the evaluation stage.
Throughout the lifecycle specific use cases and scenarios will be
considered and applied. These will be developed during the early
stages and applied in service design.
Note: The stages and the terminology used are not intended to reflect
any specific operational practice. They are intended to be neutral
with respect to any existing operator's processes, aligning with the
essence of the processes.
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Market research \
| |
v |
Testing of pluggable module samples | Refer to
| | Section 9.1
v |
Trials & PoCs |
| |
v |
Approve pluggable module type /
| ---------
v \
Service demand Analysis |
| |
v | Refer to
Network planning | Section 9.2
| |
v |
Service type realization analysis |
| |
v |
Purchase pluggable modules /
| ---------
v \
Optical infrastructure creation |
| |
v |
Service demand received | Refer to
| | Section 9.3
v |
Design service |
| |
v |
Validate optical design /
| ---------
v \
Work Order (physical) |
| |
v |
Installation of pluggable modules etc. |
| | Refer to
v | Section 9.4
Service configuration |
| |
v |
Service validation & test |
| |
v |
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Enable Service |
| |
v |
Operate service /
Figure 6: Lifecycle of a optical pluggable module
The following sub-sections discuss the overall flow of activities and
then work through the lifecycle stages in some detail.
8.1. Approving the pluggable module type and version
pluggable modules, like all equipment, are carefully chosen. A
network operations company (the operator) will decide what pluggable
modules to use in the network based upon research and an
understanding of capabilities of the pluggable modules available in
the marketplace. These capabilities will be considered against the
specific applications, use cases and scenarios that are of relevance
to the operator's business.
It is expected that these applications, use cases and scenarios will
be developed through "Market research" and as pluggable modules etc.
are assessed. The use cases and scenarios will be applied
extensively in later stages.
The operator will acquire samples of each type & version of pluggable
module of interest and probably test and then trial them. They will
also probably carry out "type approval" considering each type&version
of pluggable module for a particular set of applications (where those
applications may be defined by the operator themselves or may be
standardized definitions) etc. The full detail of the capability of
each type & version of pluggable module is relevant at all of these
stages (see Section 8.5). The capabilities are expected to be
expressed in a Repository.
[Editorial Note: As the main goal of this draft is to identify, we
might want to move a portion of this section to an annex or separate
draft].
8.2. Planning the network
Specific pluggable modules (type&version) will be purchased only
after detailed planning of the network. To carry out this planning,
full knowledge of each type&version of pluggable module will be
required. The planning process will account for key pluggable module
properties to explore viability and compatibility. The planning will
use predictions of "service demand" (e.g., using a demand matrix) and
hence infrastructure need to determine purchase volumes, phasing etc.
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During the "Network planning" process different types of service
relevant for the applications, use cases and scenarios (identified in
Section 8.1) will be explores and specific approaches to realizing
each resulting type of service will be determined. This will result
in design of specific "service realization" patterns and templates
that will be used in later stages of the process. The approach to
deploying each service type is defined for each operational context
(application etc.)
As a result of the planning exercise, numbers of each pluggable
module type&version required will be known and purchasing can be
initiated. The purchased pluggable modules will be added to the
inventory and spares holdings.
8.3. Dealing with service demand
The planning exercise leads to optical infrastructure requirements
with some timetable for deployment. The "Optical infrastructure" is
designed (using the patterns/templates designed in Section 8.2. The
infrastructure will be deployed as appropriate based upon predicted
and actual service demand etc.
When optical "services demand" is received, perhaps to provide
underlay for the packet network or driven by a specific service
contract, optical network analysis is carried out to evaluate how to
efficiently and effectively achieve the specific service demanded.
This analysis will consider the whole optical network including the
plugs and ROADMs etc. In most cases this "Service design" will use
patterns/templates constructed in Section 8.2 in conjunction with
relevant capability information for the pluggable module
type&version.
Prior to progressing further it is important to note that pluggable
modules are highly valuable, and correspondingly expensive. They are
deployed in a controlled fashion. There are a range of policies for
deployment of pluggable modules.
In some cases, at one extreme end of the range of policy choices, an
operator may decide to fully populate a packet device with a
selection of pluggable modules and may cable them to adjacent ROADMS.
However, it is more likely that pluggable module deployment will be
on a just-in-time basis, at the other end of the range of policy
choices, so a pluggable module is not deployed (and hence is not
cabled) until the solution to realization of the optical service has
been determined.
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Regardless of the deployment approach, the module capability will be
accounted for in the optical network analysis activity. Where
modules are present, the range of installed modules constrain the
possible realizations, where pluggable module modules have not been
deployed all approved pluggable module modules (type&version) could
be considered during the analysis, although capability of the
relevant packet devices to support specific pluggable module modules
will also need to be considered, and this may eliminate some
pluggable module modules. In addition, if there is some urgency, the
availability of the type of pluggable modules to the installation
engineer and/or in the local spares holding inventory may also be
considered.
The optical design will be "validated" in terms of "viability" and
compatibility prior to proceeding. This analysis takes into account
the full definitions of the pluggable module type&versions of
interest, where each is defined in a corresponding and referenced
Repository.
8.4. Installing and operationalizing the pluggable module
Once the design is available, any necessary physical installation
exercise (pluggable module installation, cabling etc.) is carried
out, driven by "Work orders" that identify the type&version of
pluggable module to instal etc.
On detection of the pluggable module instance, the control system
will validate that the work order has been carried out correctly. To
do this, the full type&version of the pluggable module is read and
compared with the intent. Where there are discrepancies, either a
work order is constructed to correct the installation error after the
detected pluggable module type&version is evaluated for compatibility
with the specific design. This evaluation is done using the
Repository for that type&version. It is possible that the
type&version may be acceptable although perhaps a little more
expensive than the optimum choice etc.
Once the type&version of pluggable module has been confirmed, the
cabling to the pluggable module will be validated and the service set
up and validated. Depending upon the operator practices, there may
be an extensive service test phase prior to handing over the service.
The service may not be enabled immediately, but will be at some point
after which the service will become operational. From this point on,
normal live service/equipment management/control will be active.
Beyond this point normal operational activities such as engineering
works, restoration, upgrade, fault location etc. will be carried out.
Clearly, there is also the reverse sequence which includes
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deactivating a service and removing the plug and there are also
various edits and refinements that result from changes in demand and
changes in understanding of the service needs etc. These steps have
not been covered at this stage as the initial list above is
sufficient to the develop a deep understanding of the control of the
plugs. Further stages will be added in a future version of this
document.
In addition, during transition towards a more automated future, there
are processes related to discovery of existing network etc. In many
of these processes the current state of the network is understood
including the type&version of each pluggable module. Some degree of
understanding of capability of pluggable modules (and any other
equipment) is relevant.
8.5. Expressing capabilities
As highlighted above, prior to installation of an optical pluggable
module in a device, various research, approval, planning and design
activities must be carried out (as they would be for any hardware).
All of these activities will require information on the capabilities
of the pluggable module.
Detailed information on the capability of the pluggable module is
required long before it is installed and operating. This points to
the need for a model of capability (of a type of pluggable module)
that is independent of the model of a running instance (and hence
points to decoupling of the model of capability from the model of the
operation of the pluggable module). This also suggest that discovery
of capability detail from the pluggable module is not sufficient/
appropriate for deployment (although it may be useful in a lab
context).
A machine interpretable definition/specification for the pluggable
module should be available (independent of the pluggable module
instance) for each pluggable module type&version where the statement
of type&version (complete type&version) used is to the degree
sufficient to precisely identify the relevant (unique) definition/
specification. The complete type&version may include hardware
type&version, firmware type&version and software type&version details
(where the firmware/software influences the operation/control of the
pluggable module). This is essentially the type&version used when
considering spares holding and like-for-like replacement in the
field.
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From this perspective, all that is required from a running pluggable
module is to report the complete type&version detail so that this can
be confirmed as the right type&version. The type&version can be used
to reference the relevant unique specification.
It is important to clarify the definition of capability. In this
document, the term capability means "A quality or facility that
enables something to carry out some activity and/or take some role".
In the context of an equipment, the term applies to its functional
and physical properties.
Considering a pluggable module (as for many other equipments), this
would include specification of capabilities such as:
* physical size, form factor and shape (the capability to fit in a
particular type of location)
* connector type (the capability to physically interconnect with a
compatible connector)
* bus architecture (the capability to communicate with a compatible
component)
* optical termination characteristics (the functional capabilities
emergent from the powered physical equipment, allowing
interconnection with corresponding compatible functions)
* measurement opportunities (the functional capabilities to provide
information to various control functions)
A capability statement may be a precise single value with no
uncertainty, a range, a collection of related ranges and thresholds
etc. Where some aspect has variability or is controllable, this is
also required to be specified.
For an equipment to be understood and used by a control system, the
detailed information on capabilities must be available in machine
interpretable form (to the degree necessary for any particular
function to be carried out). The machine interpretable statements
may be in the form of software, but preferably should be in the form
of data (information) that can be readily ingested by tooling and
ideally in a standardized language.
Traditionally, the published statements of capability have been in
somewhat ambiguous text that require interpretation and conversion
into a machine interpretable form through a manual intermediate step
(normally performed, with errors and performed many times for any
particular device type etc.). It is suggested here that the best
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source of the machine interpretable data is the specifying authority
(e.g., ITU-T for standard applications, the vendor for plug
capabilities, an operator for non-standard applications).
9. Appendix A - Coherent pluggable module Examples
Within this section, we present a few use-cases showcasing the
practical application of the coherent pluggable repository. In this
section, we present several use cases that demonstrate the practical
application of coherent pluggable life cycle management.
9.1. Example-1: Coherent Pluggables Already Provisioned
The first example is illustrated in Figure 7. This is a simple
example where the packet over optical network has been already
provisioned with both optical underlay and packet overlay services.
The role of SDN controller is just to discover and manage the
network. In other words, the SDN controller was not involved in
various aspects of service provisioning and viability. The second
example will come all these aspects in more detail.
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<------------------ L3 service-1 ------------------->
<------------------ TE-Tunnel-1 ------------------>
<----------------- IP link-1 ----------------->
<------------- L0 service-1 ------------->
|------------| |------------------|
| Coherent | | |
| Pluggable | <--> | SDN Controller |
| Repository | | |
|------------| |------------------|
^
|
v
|------------------|
port_a | |
|------| p1 |------| |
| R1 ++-\ | m1 | | port_b
|------| \ |------| |------| p2 |------|
\ | | m3 |-----++ R2 |
\ |------| |------| |------|
\-| m2 | |
|------| |
| |
|------------------|
Legend:
---- Optical fibers
++ p1,p2 Coherent pluggables
R1, R2 Packet device (i.e., Router)
m1, m2, m3 Photonic node (ROADM)
Figure 7: Coherent Pluggable Repository Example-1
In this example, all optical and IP/MPLS services had been already
provisioned and deployed and the packet over optical network is fully
functional.
Within packet devices R1 and R2, coherent pluggables p1 and p2, are
installed, interfacing through ports port_a and port_b, respectively.
Both coherent pluggables are provisioned for the following
operational-mode (see section 3 YANG Model of
[I-D.ietf-ccamp-optical-impairment-topology-yang]):
* [organization-identifier, operational-mode] = [OIF, 0x3E]
A single photonic service is established between these pluggables and
an IP link is mapped to this L0 photonic service. The overlay TE-
Tunnel-1 and L3 service-1 had been also provisioned. The following
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steps outline the details of how this network is discovered and
managed by SDN controllers (note that the SDN controller was not
involved in provisioning):
* Packet devices (R1, R2), pluggables (p1, p2), and photonic devices
(m1, m2, m3) are all discovered by SDN controllers.
* The SDN controller also discovers all underlay and overlay
services, i.e., L0 service-1, IP link-1, TE-Tunnel-1 and L3
service-1.
* The SDN controller has the network inventory, including coherent
pluggables p1 and p2. In particular for coherent pluggables,
basic information such as pluggable type, vendor, manufacturer,
serial number and software version will be provided by pluggables
to SDN controller.
* The inventory of packet devices R1 and R2 contains the
configurations of pluggable attributes such as "configured
operational-mode," "configured central frequency," and "configured
output power".
* Specifically, using the basic information of pluggables p1 and p2
such as pluggable type, vendor, manufacturer, serial number and
software version collected earlier from packet devices R1 and R2,
the SDN controller can use the "Coherent Pluggable Repository," to
access the entire information of both pluggables p1 and p2. This
includes all supported operational-modes along with all attributes
related to each supported operational-mode.
* The SDN controller can collect all PM telemetry data from the
network (including pluggables).
* The SDN controller can collect all alarm notifications from the
network (including pluggables).
* The SDN controller can further change, modify, optimize the
network (if needed).
9.2. Example-2: Coherent Pluggables Planning
The example in Figure 8 demonstrates the usage of the "Coherent
Pluggable Repository" for entire lifecycle of photonic service from
including service planning, viability, provisioning, collection of PM
telemetry, collection of alarm notifications and optimization.
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Note that the packet over optical network in Figure 8 is not created
yet. The ports port_a and port_b of packet device R1 and R2 are
empty and can accept coherent pluggables. In addition, ports port_a
and port_b are not connected to the optical network yet, i.e., there
is no connection between packet devices R1, R2 and optical network.
The port_a and port_b of packet device R1 and R2 can be potentially
connected to any photonic nodes m1, m2 or m3.
Operator's goal is to use the SDN controller to plan, provision and
monitor an optimal IP link-2 between packet devices R1 and R2.
Optionally they can also provision overlay TE-Tunnel-2 and L3
service-2. To achieve this, the SDN controller should first plan an
optical service-2, perform the viability to make sure this photonic
service is feasible, provision it and then map it to an IP link-2.
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<------------------ L3 service-2 ------------------->
<------------------ TE-Tunnel-2 ------------------>
<----------------- IP link-2 ----------------->
<------------- L0 service-2 ------------->
|------------| |------------------|
| Coherent | | |
| Pluggable | <--> | SDN Controller |
| Repository | | |
|------------| |------------------|
^
|
v
|------------------|
port_a | |
|------| |------| |
| R1 .........| m1 | | port_b
|------| . |------| |------| |------|
. | | m3 |....... R2 |
. |------| |------| |------|
..| m2 | |
|------| |
| |
|------------------|
Legend:
..... Packet device can be potentially
connected to photonic nodes m1, m2, m3
R1, R2: Packet device (i.e., Router)
m1, m2, m3 Photonic node (ROADM)
port_a Router R1 port which is empty and can
potentially populated by coherent pluggables
port_b Router R2 port which is empty and can
potentially populated by coherent pluggables
Figure 8: Coherent Pluggable Repository Usage 2
Let's assume that the operator of this network has already purchased
coherent pluggables from Vendor-X, which can support the following
two operational-modes. Note that the detail information of these
operational-modes including all optical and photonic attributes are
already uploaded to "Coherent Pluggable Repository" by Vendor-X and
OIF (see section 3 YANG Model of
[I-D.ietf-ccamp-optical-impairment-topology-yang]):
* [organization-identifier, operational-mode] = [OIF, 0x3E]
* [organization-identifier, operational-mode] = [Vendor-X, 0x22]
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The following steps outline the details of how this network is
planned, provisioned, discovered and managed by SDN controllers:
* At first, there are no coherent pluggables installed in the packet
devices yet. There are also no connection between packet devices
and optical network.
* All packet devices (R1, R2) and photonic devices (m1, m2, m3) are
managed by the SDN controller.
* As a result, the SDN controller maintains an inventory of packet
and photonic devices within the network (i.e., nodes R1, R2, m1,
m2, m3).
* To create the IP link-2, the SDN controller should plan and then
provision the optical service-2 between port_a and port_b.
* To this end, the SDN controller should first design an optical
service and then performs the viability check to make sure the
optical service is viable in this network.
* So, the SDN controller calculates the best optical path from
port_a to port_b.
* Next, the SDN controller performs the viability on optical route
to make sure the optical path is viable in the network.
* To do viability, the SDN controller checks all attributes of all
operational-modes to find the most optimal operational-mode. To
do this, the SDN controller connects to the "Coherent Pluggable
Repository" and access all optical and photonic attributes of all
operational-modes (such as chromatic dispersion, FEC, modulation,
polarization mode dispersion etc.) and performs the viability.
* After performing the optical path calculation and optical
viability, the SDN controller selects the best coherent pluggable
to be installed on port_a and port_b and the best optical route
from port_a to port_b.
* Upon completion of the photonic viability check, the SDN
controller determines which photonic devices (m1, m2, m3) should
be connected to ports port_a and port_b.
* The SDN controller informs the operator of the selected coherent
pluggables for ports port_a and port_b and provides instructions
on how to connect them to the respective photonic devices (m1, m2,
m3).
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* The operator installs the designated pluggables into ports port_a
and port_b and connects them to the specified photonic devices.
* The SDN controller then manages the newly installed pluggables.
* As part of the photonic viability process, the SDN controller
knows the specific attributes of the pluggables, including
"configured operational mode," "configured central frequency," and
"configured output power."
* As a result, the SDN controller configures these configurations to
each pluggable on port_a and port_b
* The SDN controller should also configure optical nodes m1, m2, m3
with attributes such as output power.
* The SDN controller provisions the optical service_1 between two
coherent pluggables on port_a and port_b.
* The SDN controller also provisions the IP link-2 between packet
device R1 and R2.
* The SDN controller can collect all PM telemetry data from the
network (including pluggables).
* The SDN controller can collect all alarm notifications from the
network (including pluggables).
* The SDN controller can further change, modify, optimize the
network (if needed).
10. Appendix B - Support of Opaque Attributes
[Editorial Note: This section in under review. The GihHub issue #14
addresses this].
In certain cases, a coherent pluggable may support attributes that
are specific to a particular vendor. This draft refers to such
attributes as "Opaque Attributes". Given that coherent pluggables
encompass capability, configuration, and performance monitoring
(PM)/state attributes, each category may contain opaque attributes.
Consequently, the opaque attributes could include the following:
* Read-only opaque capability attributes
* Read-write opaque configuration attributes
* Read-only opaque PM/state attributes
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As part of coherent pluggable work, we need to address this situation
where a coherent pluggable contains some proprietary capability,
configuration and PM/states attributes which are needed to be
configured or accessed from coherent pluggables. In this situation
we need to address how opaque attributes are treated by packet device
host. This allows different coherent pluggables to be used in
various multi-vendor hosts in plug-and-play fashion.
It is important to note that "opaque attributes" are not simply
attributes that can be addressed through augmentation of the YANG
data model. The reason for this is that the coherent pluggable is
exposed to external systems via the host packet device northbound
interface as shown in Figure 1. If the host packet device does not
recognize any of these "opaque attributes". it may prevent the
discovery of the coherent pluggable.
When such opaque attributes exist, although the host packet device
may not comprehend the semantics of these opaque attributes, it
should function as a proxy and mediator between the coherent
pluggable and the northbound SDN controller. Specifically, the host
packet device should understand the syntax of the opaque attributes
and facilitate communication between the coherent pluggable and the
northbound SDN controller. To achieve plug-and-play functionality in
a multi-vendor environment, the host packet device should be capable
of supporting these opaque attributes. The rest of this section will
provide details on how to achieve this.
Another consideration is the privacy of opaque attributes, i.e.,
there are situations where these attributes may be commercially
sensitive. In these cases, it would be reasonable to assume that the
opaque attributes are in encrypted format allowing them to be passed
from coherent pluggable to northbound of the host without being
observed or interpreted in any way by host.
To achieve this, the coherent pluggable YANG data model (the work
done as part of this draft - Google Sheet) should first be augmented
with vendor proprietary capability, configuration or PM attributes.
As noted above, it might be also necessary to define how these new
attributes are mapped to the internal protocol between the host and
the pluggable via CMIS protocol. A key consideration is that the
host does not need to understand the semantics of these new
attributes and may not even need to know their syntax.
There are multiple solutions to this problem which will be discussed
below. To demonstrate these solutions, consider the host Vendor-X
and pluggable Vendor-Y in Figure 1. Let's assume:
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* Vendor-Y has a new read-write proprietary configuration attributes
"AA" which should be configured in pluggable (in addition to well-
known attributes such as central-frequency, power and operational-
mode). The value of attribute AA is 100 and its memory map in
coherent pluggable is 0x1100.
* In addition, consider a new read-only proprietary capability
attributes "CC" supported on pluggable in range of {CC-min, CC-
max}={1.1,3.3}.
10.1. Support of Opaque Capability Attributes
The coherent pluggable YANG data model is augmented with a list of
new capability attributes. As demonstrated in Figure 9, the YANG
data model is augmented with the following information:
* ID of new capability proprietary attribute
* Name of new capability proprietary attribute
* Minimum value of new attribute
* Maximum value of new attribute
The Figure 9 shows an example of new capability attribute "CC" whose
min and max values are 1.1 and 3.3, respectively.
+--ro opaque-capability-attribute-list* [cap-attribute-id]
+--ro cap-attribute-id uint32
+--ro cap-attribute-name string
+--ro cap-min-value decimal64
+--ro cap-max-value decimal64
1
CC
1.1
3.3
Figure 9: Support of Opaque Capability Attributes
10.2. Support of Opaque Secret Capability Attributes
to be added
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10.3. Support of Opaque Configuration Attributes (Solution-1)
To support the opaque configuration attributes, there are a few
potential solutions which are discussed below. This approach is the
simplest solution, as it requires no interpretation by the host
platform. The coherent pluggable YANG data model is augmented with a
list that directly maps the values of new configuration attributes to
the corresponding memory-map locations on the pluggable device. In
this solution, the memory-map locations must be known to the
operator, potentially provided in the Coherent Pluggable Repository.
The Figure 10 illustrates the coherent pluggable YANG data model,
which has been augmented with the following information:
* ID of new proprietary configuration attribute
* Name of new proprietary configuration attribute
* Value of new proprietary attribute
* The memory map of new proprietary attribute (which is used in CMIS
communication between host and pluggable)
For instance, consider a scenario where the operator intends to
configure a new proprietary attribute, "AA," with a value of 100, and
a memory-map location on the pluggable set to 0x1100. In this
process, the host platform receives the attribute "AA" as defined in
Figure 10. The host platform then relays this information to the
coherent pluggable via the CMIS protocol, without performing any
interpretation. In other words, the host platform is not required to
understand the syntax or semantics of these attributes; it functions
merely as a conduit, transmitting the values from the NBI to the
designated memory-map locations on the pluggable.
+--rw opaque-config-attribute-list* [conf-attribute-id]
+--rw conf-attribute-id uint32
+--rw conf-attribute-name string
+--rw value decimal64
+--rw memory-map decimal64
1
AA
100
1100
Figure 10: Solution-1 for support of opaque config attributes
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10.4. Support of Opaque Configuration Attributes (Solution-2)
This approach is similar to Figure 10 but requires the host platform
to implement lookup logic to determine the memory-map location on the
pluggables. In this solution, the coherent pluggable YANG data model
is augmented with the following new attributes, as shown in
Figure 11:
* ID of new proprietary configuration attribute
* Name of new proprietary configuration attribute
* Value of new proprietary attribute
The operator does not have visibility into the specific memory-map
locations for these attributes on the coherent pluggable device.
Instead, the memory-map for each new attribute is provided in the
Coherent Pluggable Repository. In this scenario, the host platform
must search the pluggable Repository to locate the corresponding
memory-map location for each new attribute. These values are then
communicated to the pluggable via the CMIS protocol for
configuration. As in Figure 10, the host platform does not need to
understand the syntax or semantics of the new attributes; it only
needs to search the pluggable Repository to identify the memory-map
locations for the new attributes.
As illustrated in Figure 11, the host platform receives the new
attribute "AA" via its Northbound Interface (NBI), with a
configuration value of 0x1100. The host then searches the coherent
pluggable Repository to determine the memory-map location associated
with this attribute and identifies it as 0x1100. Without
interpreting the attribute's syntax or semantics, the host platform
communicates this information to the coherent pluggable via the CMIS
protocol. Essentially, the host platform functions as a proxy,
transmitting the values from the NBI to the appropriate memory-map
locations on the pluggable without needing to understand the meaning
of the attributes.
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+--rw opaque-config-attribute-list* [conf-attribute-id]
+--rw conf-attribute-id uint32
+--rw conf-attribute-name string
+--rw value decimal64
Note: The memory-map for each new attribute is provided in
pluggable Repository.
1
AA
1100
Figure 11: Solution-2 for support of opaque config attributes
10.5. Support of Opaque Configuration Attributes (Solution-3)
This solution represents an advanced approach when a new opaque
configuration attribute is mapped to multiple memory-map locations on
a pluggable device, or when multiple such attributes are mapped to a
single memory-map location on pluggable. Similar to Figure 11, the
mapping between these new attributes and their corresponding memory-
map locations should be detailed in the pluggable Repository. For
each new opaque attribute, the host platform is required to perform a
lookup in the pluggable Repository to identify the relevant memory-
map locations. The platform then assembles the corresponding values,
which are communicated to the pluggable device via the CMIS protocol.
Although this solution is included for completeness, it is not
practical or desirable due to its complexity and the need for
interpretation by the host software
10.6. Support of Opaque Secret Configuration Attributes
There are situations where opaque configuration attributes are
confidential, and the vendor wishes to conceal their meanings and
values. When considering the interface from the pluggable device to
the host via CMIS, it is crucial that the pluggable does not expose
the meaning or value of these confidential attributes. Ideally, the
pluggable device would encrypt the data. Within the context of CMIS,
it may be sufficient to allocate an array of register locations to
convey the property values. These registers would store an encrypted
data blob for read-only properties and accept an encrypted blob for
writable registers. The specific value might be set or read through
different register positions on each read/write, depending on the
encryption technique used.
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It is important to note that since the pluggable device encrypts the
data, mapping the data offers no additional benefit. The YANG model
would simply convey the register values as requested. The properties
are applied to the memory map in a manner that may appear disordered.
The location values must always be read together and written as
specified, potentially requiring multiple reads to retrieve all
properties. This approach could be incorporated into the basic
register-based option discussed in Section 10.3.
As an example, let's assume a vendor defines secret attribute "DD"
for its coherent pluggable. Vendor first needs to augment IETF data
model with a list of encrypted values and memory-maps shown in
Figure 12. This very similar to Figure 10 where essentially the host
functions as a proxy, transmitting the values from the NBI to the
appropriate memory-map locations on the pluggable without needing to
understand the meaning and semantics of these attributes.
+--rw opaque-config-attribute-list* [conf-attribute-id]
+--rw conf-attribute-id uint32
+--rw encrypted-attribute-name string
+--rw encrypted-attribute-value string
+--rw memory-map decimal64
Figure 12: Solution-4 for support of opaque secret configuration
attributes
10.7. Support of Opaque Performance Monitoring Data
The host packet device is informed of the properties via YANG
augments and appropriate mapping definitions. The mapping
definitions tell the host that the related properties are related to
performance monitoring data such that the host will periodically read
the appropriate parts of the pluggable interface as for any other
performance monitoring data. AS for all other performance monitoring
data, the host does not need to understand the data. The client
controller can carry out analysis or can propagate the measures
transparently to some other controller etc.
11. Appendix C - Coherent Pluggable Repository
[Editor's note: Formerly Manifest. GitHub issue #15 covers this].
[Editor's note: Based on CCAMP WG's suggestion, this section is moved
to Appendix for now. It might be moved from this draft to an
existing IETF draft or to a new draft. We need to align with draft
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-ccamp-actn-poi-pluggable-
usecases-gaps/ as well]
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Referring to Section 5.1, the coherent pluggable capability
attributes (i.e., supported-modes) are crucial aspects of coherent
pluggables and should be easily accessible for various reasons and
activities. Those might include:
* Network Engineers: Network engineers needs to know the
capabilities and characteristics of any coherent pluggable whether
the coherent pluggable is already deployed or will potentially be
installed and deployed in their network
* SDN Controllers: The optical, packet or higher-layer SDN
controllers need to have detailed knowledge of the coherent
pluggables for various reasons such as network planning, viability
assessment of the photonic services from plug-to-plug,
configuration and performance monitoring collection, alarm
notifications etc.
* Packet Device (e.g., Router): Optionally the host packet device
need also access to coherent pluggable capabilities to provide
details of coherent pluggables already installed in packet devices
for example during the debugging and troubleshooting of
pluggables.
To facilitate the utilization of coherent pluggable attributes, this
draft introduces the concept of the "Coherent Pluggable Repository"
The term serves as a comprehensive collection of information that is
appropriately structured and interrelated, providing a detailed
description of the capabilities of a pluggable device. In
alternative terminology, the Coherent Pluggable Repository may also
be referred to as a Specification, a Profile, or a Plug database,
among other terms.
It should be noted that any equipment could have a repository
describing its capabilities and it may be broken down into units that
can be referenced and reused, i.e., the definition can be modular.
To facilitate the stages, each vendor would be expected to provide
this information for each pluggable type & version.
A pluggable type & version may offer a subset of standard
capabilities. The subset is described by simply omitting
definitions.
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A pluggable type & version may offer a super-set. The super-set is
detailed by adding definitions via "augmentation" to the set of
standard definitions available for use in the Coherent Pluggable
Repository. These capability augmentations relate to augmentations
to the YANG model used at the interface to the host. Note that host
has no need to understand the semantics of the augmented properties,
but does need to know the mapping to the pluggable interface. This
is discussed in more detail elsewhere in this document.
We should also consider the fact that some proprietary attributes and
capabilities of the coherent pluggable might be commercially
sensitive and hence confidential and a vendor might not want to
provide it to publicly to everyone. In other words, some guidelines
and restriction might be applicable to some portion of "Coherent
Pluggable Repository". To provide more security, the access to the
pluggable Repository could be restricted or password protected and
potentially encrypted. It is also possible to provided restrict
access to an operator or a team or group of people of an operator
where there may also be a requirement for an NDA to enable access to
the data. It is also possible that the encrypted section of the
Repository might only be passed to a specific vendor control
component (without being meaningfully observed by other control
components from other vendors). The encrypted information may be
passed via a special secure channel directly to a component
authorized to decrypt the information into machine interpretable form
and use it.
Considering the above, it appears reasonable that all pluggable
capabilities whether they be proprietary or standard should be fully
described in the Repository (considering that some portions of the
Repository might have restrictions as previously described). This
may be achieved by a reference to a standard that is itself fully
defined in machine interpretable form. This approach would allow for
a far more flexible and future-proofed control solution.
In summary, to facilitate easy access to coherent pluggable
attributes, the details of coherent pluggable operational-modes are
collected in a repository (access restriction might be applicable to
some portions of this document), such as GitHub and SharePoint,
called "Coherent Pluggable Repository". The Repository must be both
human and machine-readable repository and can be read and interpreted
easily by any SDN controller, operators, or other devices in the
network. A Repository contains multiple records which are uniquely
identified by tuple [organization-identifier, operational-mode].
The Coherent Pluggable Repository contains four sections:
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* Photonic/Optical capability section: This section contains all
photonic/optical capabilities of the coherent pluggable and
identifies all read-only attributes. It also allow augmentation
of this section for vendor-specific attributes.
* Configuration attributes: This section contains all read-writer
attributes which can be configured on coherent pluggable. It also
allow augmentation of this section for vendor-specific
configuration attributes.
* PM Collection style for monitored attributes: List of all read-
only monitored attributes where the coherent pluggable can collect
PM data. This section identifies if the collection of current,
average, min and max values are possible.
* PM Threshold values: For all or a subset of read-only monitored
attributes, this section contains the threshold settings for
threshold crossing alerts (TCA) if applicable.
Figure 13 illustrates the overall structure of the "Coherent
Pluggable Repository". It contains several operational-mode records
where each record includes all the capability attributes for tuple
[organization-identifier, operational-mode]. As discussed in
Section 5.1, "organization-identifier" refers to any authority that
defines these attributes.
Each record in the coherent pluggable Repository is machine readable/
interpretable and is uniquely identified by a tuple [organization-
identifier, operational-mode].
Using "Coherent Pluggable Repository", the format of all operational-
modes are identical whether it is defined by for example ITU-T, OIF,
OpenConfig, or defined by a vendor.
A record identified by
tuple [organization-identifier, operational-mode]
|--------------------------------------------------------|
| |-|
| organization-identifier | |-|
| operational-mode | | |
| version: | | |
| | | |
| Photonic/Optical capabilities attributes | | |
| ----------------------------------------- | | |
| (i.e., Read-only attributes defined in | | |
| operational-mode of this draft. For each attribute, | | |
| min, max, default values might be available) | | |
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| - attribute A1 | | |
| - attribute A2 | | |
| ... | | |
| - attribute An | | |
| - List of vendor-specific capability attributes | | |
| (augmented yang model) | | |
| | | |
| Configuration attributes | | |
| -------------------------- | | |
| ( The list of all read-write attributes where | | |
| can be configured on coherent pluggables ) | | |
| are possible ) | | |
| - attribute C1 | | |
| - attribute C2 | | |
| ... | | |
| - attributeCWm | | |
| - some vendor specific config attributes | | |
| (augmented yang model) | | |
| | | |
| Monitored attributes PM collection | | |
| ------------------------------------ | | |
| (i.e., list of monitored attributes where | | |
| coherent pluggable can collect PM data for | | |
| current, average, min, max values) | | |
| - attribute M1 | | |
| - attribute M2 | | |
| ... | | |
| - attribute Mp | | |
| | | |
| Monitored attributes Threshold setting | | |
| --------------------------------------- | | |
| For all or some attribute M1,... Mp, define | | |
| - threshold-for-warning-alert (if applicable) | | |
| - threshold-for-minor-alert (if applicable) | | |
| - threshold-for-major-alert (if applicable) | | |
| - threshold-for-critical-alert (if applicable) | | |
| | | |
|--------------------------------------------------------| | |
|--------------------------------------------------------| |
|--------------------------------------------------------|
Coherent Pluggable Repository
- Contains one or more operational-mode records
- Each record for tuple [organization-identifier,operational-mode]
- It is machine-readable/interpretable
Figure 13: Coherent Pluggable Repository
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Below are several examples that demonstrate the concept of the
"Coherent Pluggable Repository." Figure 14 illustrates the content
of a Repository record for operational mode 0x3E, as defined by the
OIF forum. This operational mode is widely recognized and supported
by nearly all coherent pluggable devices. Detailed information
regarding this operational mode can be found in [SFF8024], Table 4-7.
organization-identifier: OIF
operational-mode: 0x3E
// Photonic/Optical capabilities attributes
list of attributes
modulation: DP-16QAM
bit-rate: 478.75 Gbps
baud-rate: 59.84375 Gbd
more attributes ...
// Configuration attributes
// Monitored attributes PM collection
// Monitored attributes Threshold setting
Figure 14: Coherent Pluggable repository Defined by OIF
Figure 15 is anther repository record where the Vendor-X has defined
the operational-mode 0x22. In this case, Vendor-X defines all the
attributes related to this operational-mode, which might not be
supported by other pluggable vendors.
organization-identifier: Vendor-X
operational-mode: 0x22
// Photonic/Optical capabilities attributes
list of attributes
modulation: 16-QAM
bit-rate: 400 Gbps
baud-rate: 56 GBd
more attributes ...
// Configuration attributes
// Monitored attributes PM collection
// Monitored attributes Threshold setting
Figure 15: Coherent Pluggable repository Example-2
"Figure 16" presents an example where the Vendor-Y defined an
operational-mode 0x22 as well. In this scenario, the organization
associated with the pluggable module is Vendor-Y, which defined the
same operational-mode 0x22 as "Vendor-X"
It is important to note that while the operational-modes in both
Figure 15 and Figure 16 share the same values, they are defined by
different vendors. Consequently, these operational-modes are not
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related and may differ significantly in their attributes. In other
words, although the semantics of these modes are identical, their
actual content might vary significantly. This is one of the reasons
that any record in Coherent Pluggable Repository is uniquely
identified by tuple [organization-identifier, operational-mode].
organization-identifier: Vendor-Y
operational-mode: 0x22
// Photonic/Optical capabilities attributes
type: NON-STANDARD
list of attributes
modulation: QPSK
bit-rate: 800 Gbps
baud-rate: 96 GBd
more attributes ...
// Configuration attributes
// Monitored attributes PM collection
// Monitored attributes Threshold setting
Figure 16: Coherent Pluggable repository Example-3
12. Security Considerations
TODO Security
13. IANA Considerations
This document has no IANA actions.
14. References
14.1. Normative References
[CMIS] OIF Forum, "OIF Implementation Agreement (IA) Common
Management Interface Specification (CMIS))", OIF CMIS IA ,
September 2024, .
[G.698.2] ITU-T Recommendation G.698.2, "Amplified multichannel
dense wavelength division multiplexing applications with
single channel optical interfaces", November 2018,
.
[OIF-400ZR]
OIF Forum, "Implementation Agreement 400ZR", November
2022, .
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[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
.
[RFC8174] Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
May 2017, .
[SFF8024] SNIA SFF Technology Affiliate (TA) Technical Work Group
(TWG), Small Form Factor Technology Affiliate, "SFF Module
Management Reference Code Tables", November 2023,
.
14.2. Informative References
[G.959.1] "Optical transport network physical layer interfaces",
February 2012, .
[I-D.ietf-ccamp-dwdm-if-param-yang]
Galimberti, G., Hiremagalur, D., Grammel, G., Manzotti,
R., and D. Breuer, "A YANG data model to manage
configurable DWDM optical interfaces", Work in Progress,
Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-ccamp-dwdm-if-param-yang-12, 12
February 2025, .
[I-D.ietf-ccamp-optical-impairment-topology-yang]
Beller, D., Le Rouzic, E., Belotti, S., Galimberti, G.,
and I. Busi, "A YANG Data Model for Optical Impairment-
aware Topology", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-
ietf-ccamp-optical-impairment-topology-yang-18, 11 April
2025, .
[I-D.ietf-ccamp-rfc9093-bis]
Belotti, S., Busi, I., Beller, D., Le Rouzic, E., and A.
Guo, "Common YANG Data Types for Layer 0 Networks", Work
in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-ccamp-rfc9093-bis-
13, 17 March 2025, .
Acknowledgments
TODO acknowledge.
module
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Contributors
Nigel Davis
Ciena
Email: ndavis@ciena.com
Italo Busi
Huawei Technologies
Email: italo.busi@huawei.com
Sergio Belotti
Nokia
Email: sergio.belotti@nokia.com
Dieter Beller
Nokia
Email: dieter.beller@nokia.com
Roberto Manzotti
Cisco
Email: rmanzott@cisco.com
Prasenjit Manna
Cisco
Email: prmanna@cisco.com
Gabriele Galimberti
Individual
Email: ggalimbe56@gmail.com
Harish Venkatraman
Infinera
Email: hvenkatraman@infinera.com
Gyan Mishra
Verizon
Email: gyan.s.mishra@verizon.com
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Stefan Melin
Telia
Email: stefan.melin@teliacompany.com
Majid Hossein Poor
Telstra
Email: majid.hosseinpoor@team.telstra.com
Dacian Demeter
Telus
Email: dacian.demeter@telus.com
Authors' Addresses
Reza Rokui
Ciena
Email: rrokui@ciena.com
Aihua Guo
Futurewei Technologies
Email: aihuaguo.ietf@gmail.com
Phil Bedard
Cisco
Email: phbedard@cisco.com
B Swamynathan
Nokia
Email: swamynathan.b@nokia.com
Gert Grammel
Juniper
Email: ggrammel@juniper.net
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