Unidirectional 1+1 signaling APS

In Uni 1+1 Sig APS switching mode the Tx data is sent on the active link only (it is not bridged to both links simultaneously). 1+1 signaling, however, is used for full interoperability with signaling-compliant 1+1 architectures.

In the ingress direction (Rx), the decision to accept data from either the working or protection circuit is based on both locally detected failures/degradation and on what circuit the far-end is listening on (as indicated in the K bytes). Although it is not required in the APS standards, the system’s implementation of Unidirectional 1+1 Signaling APS uses standards based signaling to keep both the Rx and Tx on the same circuit / port. If the far-end indicates that it has switched its active receiver, then the local node also switches its receiver (and Tx) to match the far-end. If the local Rx changes from one circuit to another it notifies the far end using the K bytes.

In the egress direction (Tx), the data is only transmitted on the active circuit. If the active Rx changes, then Tx also changes to the same circuit.

Because the router transmits on active circuits only and keeps active TX and RX on the same port, both local and remote switches are required to restore the service. For a single failure a data outage is limited to a maximum of 100 milliseconds.

The APS channel (bytes K1 and K2 in the SONET header – K bytes) exchanges requests and acknowledgments for protection switch actions. In Unidirectional 1+1 Signaling APS switching mode, the router sends correct status on the K bytes and requires the far-end to also correctly update/send the K-bytes to ensure that data is transmitted on the circuit on which the far-end has selected as its active receiver.

Line alarms are processed and generated independently on each physical circuit.

In Unidirectional 1+1 Signaling APS switching mode:

In all other cases a momentary L-AIS is sent. The system provides debugging information that informs operators about the APS-induced L-AIS.