AT&T 7400 series, 7500 series, 7100 series, 2500 series Network Synchronization and Engineering

Models: 7400 series 2500 series 7200 series 7500 series 7300 series 7100 series

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B-18SYNCHRONIZATION OF DIGITAL FACILITIES

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NETWORK SYNCHRONIZATION AND ENGINEERING

The primary goals of network synchronization are:

To keep each digital network node reliable

To make sure that each digital termination can meet the network objectives

With the growth in the number of digital facilities and the demands that today’s applications place on these facilities, designing a proper synchronization plan has become a complex and crucial process. Designing a synchronization plan can be accomplished by using the AT&T Synchronization Design Service or by following the guidelines described on the proceeding pages.

The AT&T Synchronization Design Service is an engineering consulting service designed for customers with private digital networks. This service provides a synchronization design that can be economically implemented along with an estimate of the slip performance. This service also includes an optimal synchronization design that improves the synchronization performance with cost effective network additions. Furthermore, this service reevaluates the entire private network synchronization plan each time there is a change in the customer’s network.

A synchronization plan can also be designed by using the following guidelines and rules.

Ensure that all nodes and facilities are synchronized to a single source of timing; or at the worst, to two or more stratum-2 timing sources

Select the most reliable digital facilities to serve as synchronization references at each node

Choose facilities with the greatest availability and least outage. For example, facilities that are located in hostile environments or that have a history of service disruptions should not be used.

Ensure that no timing loops can be created even under failure conditions, that is, timing from one node can never serve as a source of timing back to that node, even if it is looped through several other nodes

Selecting a Timing Source for the Switch

Before selecting a timing source, you should draw or obtain a copy of the network topology (which indicates each node and the interconnecting digital trunk facilities). The nodes in the private network should be stratified (divided) into two levels known as externally referenced and internally referenced (sometimes called unreferenced). Externally referenced nodes are those within the private network that connect directly to public network timing sources. Internally referenced nodes have digital facilities that do not connect directly to public network timing sources. Figure B-11,External and Internal Reference Levels, shows a typical network topology with externally and internally referenced nodes.

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AT&T 7400 series, 7500 series manual Network Synchronization and Engineering, Selecting a Timing Source for the Switch