American Telecom AM64/128A manual Frame Structure, Service Test Facilities

Models: AM64/128A

1 55
Download 55 pages 42.17 Kb
Page 47
Image 47

Appendix C - In Service Test

AM64/128A User Manual

 

 

APPENDIX C - In Service Test

BACKGROUND INFORMATION

The information passing between master and slave BBM’s comprises of user data and control data; the latter is used for controlling and supervising the operation of the transmission system. In order that these components can be separated the composite data is transmitted in frames with a fixed framing pattern to identify the frame boundary. Data is transferrred at 71.1 kbps at the high rate and 142.2 kbps at double rate.

C.1 Frame Structure

For both rates the frame structure is the same. Figure C.1 shows the basic frame structure. Each frame consists of 160 bits of which 12 are allocated to the framing pattern and 4 to the control channel. (These 4 bits per frame are termed the Comms channel). This leaves 144 bits, or 18 octets for user data. With most rates the user data actually occupies 6 bits out of every octet, as one bit is used as the user status line, and the other bit is used as an envelope alignment bit, (this bit is used by the system for the multiplexing of lower user rates into the 71.1 / 142.2 kbps over all bit rates). There are several user rates which do not have an alignment bit; these are 16, 32, 56, 64 and 128 kbps, consequently these rates will not be able to use the envelope alignment error monitoring schemes. At the high rate the maximum throughput for the user is 64 kbps (no status, no alignment); at double rate it is 128 kbps.

C.2 In Service Test Facilities

The In Service Test has access to two basic sources of information:

(1)The envelope alignment bits

(2)The comms channel

The use of the envelope alignment bits is slightly more straight forward.

At either end of the link the BBM monitors these alignment bits against tables held in ROM. Any bits received in error are counted and can be displayed. For each frame there are 18 envelope alignment bits for 18 x 6 bits of data. The effective data error rate can then be found from:

Envelope Error Count x6

Bit Error Rate (BER) = _______________________

User Data Rate x Time

A-8

Page 47
Image 47
American Telecom AM64/128A manual Frame Structure, Service Test Facilities