List of Terms

Cable Modem Termination System (CMTS)—A termination system located at the cab le television system headend or distribution hub which provides complementary functionality to the cable modems, enabling data connectivity to a wide-are network.

cable router—A modular chassis-based router optimized for data-over-CATV hybrid fiber-coaxial (HFC) applications.

carrier—A signal on which another, lower-frequency signal is modulated in order to transport the lower-frequency signal to another location.

Carrier-to-Noise—C/N (also CNR). The difference in amplitude between the desired RF carrier and the noise in a portion of the spectrum.

channel—A specific frequency allocation and bandwidth. Downstream channels used for television are 6 MHz wide in the United States; 8 MHz wide in Europe.

CM—cable modem.

CMTS—Cable Modem Termination System.

coaxial cable—The principal physical media over which CATV systems are built.

dB—Decibel. A measure of the relative strength of two signals.

dBm—Decibels with respect to one milliwatt. A unit of RF signal strength used in satellite work and other communications applications.

dBmV—Decibels with respect to one millivolt in a 75-ohm system. The unit of RF power used in CATV work in North America.

DHCP—Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol. This protocol provides a mechanism for allocating IP addresses dynamically so that addresses can be reused when hosts no longer need them.

DOCSIS—Data Over Cable Service Interface Specification. Defines technical specifications for equipment at both subscriber locations and cable operators’ headends.

downstream—The set of frequencies used to send data from a headend to a subscriber.

FDM—Frequency Division Multiplexing. A data transmission method in which a number of transmitters share a transmission medium, each occupying a different frequency.

FEC—Forward Error Correction. In data transmission, a process by which additional data is added that is derived from the payload by an assigned algorithm. It allows the receiver to determine if certain classes of errors have occurred in transmission and, in some cases, allows other classes of errors to be corrected.

headend—Central distribution point for a CATV system. Video signals are received here from satellite (either co-located or remote), frequency converted to the appropriate channels, combined with locally originated signals, and rebroadcast onto the HFC plant. For a CATV data system, the headend is the typical place to create a link between the HFC system and any external data networks.

HFC—Hybrid fiber-coaxial (cable network). Older CATV systems were provisioned using only coaxial cable. Modern systems use fiber transport from the headend to an optical node located in the neighborhood to reduce system noise. Coaxial cable runs from the node to the subscriber. The fiber plant is generally a star configuration with all optical node fibers terminating at a headend. The coaxial cable part of the system is generally a trunk-and-branch configuration.

host—Any end-user computer system that connects to a network. In this document, the term host refers to the computer system connected to the LAN interface of the cable access router.

ingress noise—Over-the-air signals that are inadvertently coupled into the nominally closed coaxial cable distribution system. Ingress noise is difficult to track down and intermittent in nature.

Troubleshooting Tips for the Cisco uBR924 Cable Access Router 5

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Cisco Systems UBR924 manual List of Terms