Cisco Systems PA-POS-1OC3 Manual De Usuario

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PA-POS-1OC3 Single-Port Port Adapter Installation and Configuration Guide
OL-6514-04
Chapter 1      PA-POS-1OC3 Overview
  Interface Specifications
Interface Specifications
The physical layer interface for the PA-POS-1OC3 is Optical Carrier-3 (OC-3c), the specification for 
SONET STS-3c and SDH STM-1 transmission rates, and the PA-POS-1OC3 is designed to comply with 
Packet-over-SONET specifications. The PA-POS-1OC3 provides one 155.520-Mbps packet OC-3 
network interface for all supported platforms.
The PA-POS-1OC3 has a duplex LC-type receptacle that allows connection to single-mode or multimode 
optical fiber. (For more information on the optical fiber cables you should use with this port adapter, see 
the
 
Packet data is transported using Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) and is mapped into the STS-3c/STM-1 
frame. The encapsulations used add approximately half the number of bytes of transport overhead as that 
involved with ATM using ATM Adaptation Layer 5 (AAL5) and line card control (LCC) Subnetwork 
Access Protocol (SNAP) encapsulations.
The PA-POS-1OC3 interface is compliant with RFC 1619, PPP over SONET/SDH, and RFC 1662, PPP 
in HDLC-like Framing
. The PA-POS-1OC3 supports RFC 1619 PPP over SONET/SDH encapsulation, 
and provides support for SNMP agent v1 (RFC 1155–1157), and Management Information Base (MIB) 
II (RFC 1213). 
OC-3 Optical Fiber Specifications 
The OC-3 specification for optical fiber transmission defines two types of fiber: single-mode and 
multimode. Within the single-mode category, two types of transmission are defined: intermediate reach 
and long reach. Within the multimode category, only short reach is available. 
Modes can be thought of as bundles of light rays entering the fiber at a particular angle. Single-mode 
fiber allows only one mode of light to propagate through the fiber, and multimode fiber allows multiple 
modes of light to propagate through the fiber. 
Multiple modes of light propagating through the fiber travel different distances depending on the entry 
angles, which causes them to arrive at the destination at different times (a phenomenon called modal 
dispersion
); therefore, single-mode fiber is capable of higher bandwidth and greater cable run distances 
than multimode fiber. 
 lists nominal OC-3 optical parameters for single-mode and multimode 
optical fiber transmission. 
Note
If the distance between two connected stations is greater than the maximum distances listed, significant 
signal loss can result, making transmission unreliable.