Title: Power saving in (X)GPONs
1Power saving in (X)GPONs
Joint ITU/IEEE Workshop on Ethernet - Emerging
Applications and Technologies(Geneva,
Switzerland, 22 September2012)
- Frank Effenberger
- Rapporteur Q2/15
- VP Access RD, Futurewei
2Introduction
- Power saving in the ITU
- Supplement G.45
- Actual power consumption
3Initial activities
- First contributions were made by semiconductor
vendors, to consider signaling methods - The Q2/15 group thought these were premature
- The requirements for power saving were not clear
- The impact on existing systems was not clear
- There was a concern it would degrade the user
experience - It was agreed that a survey would be made of the
operators to learn their requirements
4Power saving survey 1
- Survey gathered information on
- Basic power supply designs
- Who pays, Who changes the battery?
- Overall requirements and interest in power saving
- The most telling result was Which is a higher
priority, service availability or power savings? - The answer was overwhelmingly Service quality is
much more important that saving power - Apparently, the Green Revolution had not yet
happened
5Power saving surveys 2 and 3
- Survey 2 focused on the case of power failure
- What UNIs are in common use?
- How do they get powered down if the main power
fails? - Who can control this powering down process?
- Survey 3 focused on regulations about lifeline
- Are their regulations that force the maintenance
of service during a power failure? - How do those regulations vary from service to
service (POTS vs. video vs. Internet)?
6Outcome of the surveys
- It was clear that there was interest in power
saving - For the most part, power saving was seen as a way
to lengthen the life of the battery during an
outage - Operators were not willing to compromise much in
the name of power saving - Cant cost any more
- Services cant be effected
- This set the stage for the G.sup45 document
7Introduction
- Power saving in the ITU
- Supplement G.sup45
- Access power consumption
8Outline of G.sup45
- Requirements
- Classification of techniques
- Signaling of ONU operations
- Comparative analysis
- Conclusions
9Requirements
- Surveys were used as a primary requirement
- Power saving mode should be triggered by power
failure, and NOT low traffic or unused ports - EU CoC
- The current state of these power targets was
reviewed - The low power mode was noted to be only half of
full power mode - There are two main requirements
- To maintain service during a power failure
- To save power at all times
- No operator consensus on the balance between
these two requirements
10Classification of techniques
11Power Shedding
- When triggered, the ONU turns off the UNIs
- Turn off in this context means fully powering
down the circuit (not just deactivating service) - Each UNI type can have a different shut-down
period (e.g., video can turn off after 30
minutes, but POTS is maintained for several
hours) - When to trigger is a question
- During power failure, some UNIs can be turned
off safely (e.g., video, because the TV sets will
not have power in most cases) - During normal times, it is difficult to judge if
UNI is busy - This is the least service effecting method
- ONU maintains contact with OLT at all times
12Dozing
- When triggered, the ONU should stop transmitting
in the upstream, even if it is given BW
allocations - This allows transmitter circuitry to go into low
power mode - Lower than normal off in between bursts
- May take longer to recover (10s of milliseconds)
- Trigger would be the inactivity of the ONU
- Difficulty is that data services (and VoIP) tend
to chatter all the time - Downstream receiver and signal chain remains on
- ONU can be signaled by the OLT
- Incoming calls can be received without delay
- This impacts services slightly
- Outgoing communications might suffer a delay, as
normal bidirectional communication is
reestablished
13Fast Sleep
- When triggered, the ONU shuts off entire PON
interface for a short period of time - ONU periodically wakes up to see if OLT has
anything to say - During the shutdown, the ONU could conceivably
have nearly zero power drain (only the wake-up
timer would be powered) - Key issue is how fast can you wake up the optics
- Normal transceiver designs are not optimized to
turn on fast - However, proper optimization could get times down
to 1 ms - Side note Recent result have shown circa 60
reductions - This method can have relatively low service
impact - ONU maintains contact with OLT (albeit
transiently) - Interactions with higher layer protocols must be
considered
14Deep Sleep
- When triggered, the ONU completely shuts off
- Services are definitely impacted, no apologies
for that - Power drain is zero, or nearly so
- Challenge How to wake up?
- Snow White method A prince (the user) kisses the
deep sleeper (presses a button on the ONU) - Rip Van Winkle method Deep sleeper wakes up
after a preset time, and sees if anything has
changed - This method only appropriate for long outages
- It seems that the usual obligations are excused
if power is out for a long time, and users and
regulators understand that
15Signaling of ONU operations
- Dying gasp Enhancing the existing message
- For G-PON, not accepted, because it changes the
TC-layer - PLOAM-based Signaling for fast sleep method
- For G-PON, not accepted , because it changes the
TC-layer - OMCI-based Configuration of power features
- For G-PON, OMCI additions have been made
- Extended Power shedding Detailed control
- For G-PON, fine-grain control of shedding has be
standardized - Implicit signaling OLT suppresses alarms
- No standards impact, so OLT vendors are free to
implement - Security aspect Impostor attack
- When the ONU is asleep, impostor can more easily
jump in
16Comparative analysis
- Model of ONU power consumption is given, and used
to evaluate the savings for each type power
saving - This model is only an example, based on a
particular ONU design and circuit power values
(these change over time) - Key findings of this evaluation
- Power shedding accomplishes a lot (70) of power
saving - The other methods have increasing implementation
difficulty and declining efficacy of power saving
17Conclusions of G.sup45
- Power saving is an important topic
- Main object is to improve handling of power
failures - Recommendations to improve power usage
- Continuous improvement of design (ASIC, optics,
power conv. Etc.) - Power shedding should be supported and activated
- Dozing can be implemented with little cost
- Aggressive sleeping modes are of lowest
priority - Final note G-PON saves power in ICT field and
other industries, so some credit should be given
for that
18Introduction
- Power saving in the ITU
- Supplement G.45
- Access power consumption
19System architecture of a VDSL system
DSLAM
CPE
LT
SW
LT
WAN
LT
CPE
SW
LT
WAN
LT
CPE
Typical VDSL linecard consumption today is 2W
per line (i.e., per user)
Typical VDSL HG CPE consumption is 10W per user
20System architecture of G-PON system
OLT
ONU
LT
SW
LT
WAN
LT
ONU
SW
LT
WAN
LT
ONU
Typical OLT linecard consumption today is 7W per
PON port (_at_ 28 users/PON 250mW/user!)
Typical GPON HG CPE consumption is 10W per user
21Central office / Node power crunch
- Central office dissipation is dictated by NEBS
- Typical US number 2000W per bay, 3 racks per bay
- Typical DSLAM has 16x24 lines 768W per rack
- This barely fits in the 2000W number
- Typical OLT has 16x8 PONs 896 W per rack
- Have to leave 1 rack-space empty!
- Is PON hitting the crunch? NO!
- One OLT serves 3584 users, while a DSLAM serves
only 384 users - We need 9 times fewer OLTs than DSLAMs
22Trend in broadband access CO equipment
- The power per chassis is increasing marginally
- Perhaps a 30 increase generation-over-generation
- The capability per chassis is increasing
incredibly - Aggregate bandwidth increases 410x per
generation - Users per chassis increased 10x from copper to
fiber - Total access power per user is already declining
- Driven by the acceptance of fiber access
- Power density is increasing
- Suggests a rethinking of the CO power design
guidelines - Perhaps even a redesign of the cooling method
entirely - Diffused air cooling (typical in todays CO) is
inappropriate for intense point heat loads
23The CPE power issue - Functional blocks
Mem
POTS Interf (x2)
MAC
WAN interface
Ethernet Interf (x2)
Typical Single family home gateway CPE
consumption is 10W
24Breakdown of ONU (VDSL is similar)
25Observations on baseline consumption
- Power consumption is reasonably balanced amongst
functions there is not one bad actor - The majority of power (60) lies in functions
that are not particularly related to PON - You find them in any access system
- Many are legacy dictates (ringing a bell)
- They are designed for reliability and performance
- E.g. Power converters consuming 20 of the power
why? To handle the stress environment that Telco
requirements give us - Flexible hardware (e.g., CP instead of ASIC) is
used - The flexibility is a meta requirement of the ever
changing market - But, this is never the most power efficient way
to build equipment - If the true power cost of all the requirements
was rationalized, just imagine what we might save!
26Power saving technologies
- Most natural path is intrinsic improvement
- Current designs were not designed with power as a
key requirement - Time to market, performance, and simplicity were
always more important to the designer - Example burst mode laser driver
- The average ONU duty cycle is 3 (32 ONUs per
PON) - But, the typical laser driver consumes current
100 of the time - Why? Because it was easier that way
- This is straightforward to fix
- The designers only need to be guided that power
consumption is an important goal that has value - This process is underway already!
27Always on means always polluting
- Recall the original telephone network
- You only used power when off hook very
efficient, and natural behavior to the user - Data separated the session from user
- Ideally, users interact with their computer, and
the computer establishes the (logical) sessions
automatically - User involvement in session control (dial up) was
slow and painful - This quickly drove the always on model
- Power consumption was not considered!
28Sleep modes for access equipment
- Protocols for sleeping and dozing are
standardized in the XG-PON system
ONU state diagram
OLT state diagram
29Future possibilities
- OLT power consumption could be reduced in future
PON systems - OLT shedding If a port is not used, it should
be powered down - As deep into the card as possible
- OLT sleeping If a TWDM-PON is underused,
reduce the active waves - ONUs would be concentrated onto fewer channels
- This could improve the load-dynamic power
consumption of the CO
30Getting a good nights sleep
- Standardization is only the beginning
- The hardware must be designed to use it
- Optoelectronics must have fast turn-on/off
- Logic devices must support the protocols
- Switching must recognize that link is transient
- The operators must be motivated to use it
- Operators respond to competitors and users
- In a choice between performance and power-saving,
which wins? - Example ADSL has power saving for some years now
almost never used
31Conclusions
- Current access power consumption is trending in
the right direction, considering the incredible
BW improvements - The CO-side solution is in our hands deploy PON,
and you cut your CO power by an order of
magnitude - The CPE-side is much larger problem
- Legacy interface requirements are an issue
- If we could only redesign POTS
- If only Telcos could agree on a service profile
and stick to it - Power saving modes have good potential
- Changing always on into always available
- Already standardized we just have to do it