| United States Patent |
5,398,129
|
|
Reimann
|
March 14, 1995
|
Passive optical telecommunication system for narrow band and broadband
integrated services digital networks
Abstract
In a passive optical telecommunication system in which the signal
transmission from a switching center downstream to remote units proceeds
in a first stream on a time-division multiplex basis and in which the
signal transmission from the remote units upstream to the central
switching center proceeds in accordance with a TDMA method in accordance
wherewith a remote unit transmits each burst in a synchronized fashion
with the assistance of a delay device that is individually set with
respect to each remote unit proceeding from the switching center, the
remote unit already transmits the bursts before the transmission time
required for a desired reception phase relation of the burst in the
central switching center only after a rough delay time of a whole system
clock period (or system clock periods), and the switching center centrally
undertakes a respective individually-dimensioned fine delay of the bursts
incoming thereat from each of the remote units into the desired reception
phase relation.
| Inventors:
|
Reimann; Udo (Munich, DE)
|
| Assignee:
|
Siemens Aktiengesellschaft (Munich, DE)
|
| Appl. No.:
|
690299 |
| Filed:
|
April 24, 1991 |
Foreign Application Priority Data
| May 04, 1990[DE] | 40 14 396.1 |
| May 21, 1990[DE] | 40 16 359.8 |
| Current U.S. Class: |
398/100; 370/442; 370/463; 370/517; 398/99; 398/168 |
| Intern'l Class: |
H04J 014/08 |
| Field of Search: |
359/137,136,135,140,125,123,118,167
370/95.3
|
References Cited [Referenced By]
U.S. Patent Documents
| 4644534 | Feb., 1987 | Sperlich | 370/95.
|
| 4726010 | Feb., 1988 | Ali et al. | 359/125.
|
| 4748621 | May., 1988 | Ballance et al. | 370/95.
|
| 4790616 | Dec., 1988 | Frenkel | 350/96.
|
| Foreign Patent Documents |
| WO88/05233 | Jul., 1988 | WO | .
|
| WO88/09093 | Nov., 1988 | WO | .
|
| WO89/09518 | Oct., 1989 | WO | .
|
Other References
Oakley et al., "Passive Fibre Local Loop for Telephony with Broadband
Upgrade," JSSLS '88 Conf. Papers, pp. 0179-0183.
Hoppitt et al., "The provision of telephony over passive optical networks,"
Br. Telcom Technol. J., vol. 7, No. 2, 1989, pp. 100-113.
|
Primary Examiner: Goldstein; Herbert
Assistant Examiner: Negash; K.
Attorney, Agent or Firm: Hill, Steadman & Simpson
Claims
I claim:
1. In a passive optical communications system of the type in which each of
a plurality of decentralized equipment is connected via a respective light
waveguide line, a respective optical brancher and an optical waveguide bus
to a common light waveguide terminal of a central switching center, in
which the signal transmission from the central switching center to the
plurality of decentralized equipment proceeds on a time-division multiplex
basis, clocked by a system clock, in a burst stream from which each of the
decentralized equipment accepts only a respective burst intended therefor,
and in which the signal transmission proceeding from each of the
decentralized equipment to the central switching center proceeds according
to a time-division multiple access method in which each burst is
transmitted in a synchronized fashion with the assistance of a respective
delay in each of the decentralized equipment which is set for that
particular decentralized equipment proceeding from the central switching
center to obtain a desired reception phase relation, the improvement
wherein:
each of said decentralized equipment consisting means for transmitting a
respective burst before a transmission time required for the desired
reception phase relation of the burst in the central switching center only
after a rough-first predetermined delay time of at least one multiple of
the system clock period; and
means in said central switching center for providing a fine, second
predetermined delay time for the respective burst incoming from a
respective decentralized switching center to produce the desired reception
phase relation.
2. The improved passive optical communication system of claim 1, wherein:
a delay device is provided in the central switching center and is coupled
to the common light waveguide terminal thereof, said delay device being
set to the time delay of a respective decentralized equipment in response
to receipt of a signal burst transmitted by that decentralized equipment;
a delay time memory is provided in the central switching equipment and
includes a plurality of memory locations each assigned to and storing data
representing the fine, second predetermined delay for the respective
decentralized equipment; and
control means connected between said delay means and said delay time memory
for reading the respective information from said memory locations and
setting said delay means to the respective delay.
3. The improved passive optical communication system of claim 2, wherein:
given a signal transmission from the central switching center to the
decentralized equipment proceeding in a continuous time-division multiplex
burst stream and a signal transmission from the decentralized equipment to
the central switching center proceeding in accordance with time-division
multiple access time channels reserved for the individual decentralized
equipment;
said central switching center comprises a memory including a plurality of
memory locations for respectively storing the delay time assigned to the
individual decentralized equipment, delay means for delaying the burst
received in the time-division multiple access time channels; and
means connected between said delay means and said memory for cyclically
reading said memory locations with a chronological offset in comparison to
the time-division multiplex burst stream that corresponds to the loop
running time achieved with the respective rough, predetermined delay time
to set said delay means based on the criterion of the respective stored
fine delay time information.
4. The improved passive optical communication system of claim 2, wherein:
given a signal transmission from the central switching center to the
decentralized equipment proceeding in an asynchronous transfer mode cell
stream from which each decentralized equipment accepts only the
asynchronous transfer mode cells intended therefor and given a signal
transmission from the decentralized equipment to the central switching
center proceeding in a time-division multiple access method in accordance
wherewith a decentralized equipment is capable of transmitting an
asynchronous transfer mode cell after the rough, first predetermined time
delay only after the respective prior acceptance of an asynchronous
transfer mode cell by that decentralized equipment,
said central switching center comprises a delay time memory including a
plurality of memory locations each storing the fine, second predetermined
delay time of a respective decentralized equipment; and
said central switching center comprises means operable to read the
respective time delays from said memory locations after the loop running
time achieved with the respective delay time and to set said delay device
to the respective fine, second predetermined delay time.
5. The improved passive optical communications system of claim 4, wherein:
said delay device comprises a plurality of taps for providing the
individual fine, second predetermined delay times.
6. The improved passive optical communication system of claim 5, wherein:
each of said plurality of decentralized equipment includes a delay circuit
coupled to its respective light waveguide line and controlled by the
system clock based on the criterion of the rough, first predetermined
delay time.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to optical telecommunication systems and more
particularly to passive optical telecommunication systems which provide
integrated services digital networks that comprise a star structure of
light waveguides in the level of the subscriber lines. Such integrated
services digital networks equipped with light waveguides are basically
suitable for narrow band and broadband services, as disclosed in the
German patent 24 21 002, corresponding to U.S. Pat. No. 3,980,831, fully
incorporated herein by this reference.
Insofar as electrical front-end equipment are not provided, a
subscriber-associated light waveguide subscriber line is provided between
a subscriber location and a switching center in a pure star network of
light waveguide subscriber lines. The expense involved with
subscriber-associated light waveguide subscriber lines which extend
between subscriber locations and a switching center can be reduced by
light waveguide bus networks (potentially topologically appearing as a
star network), whereby a respective plurality of decentralized equipment,
for example, subscriber-associated network terminations or network
terminations respectively shared by a plurality of subscribers that are
located directly at the subscriber or at a distance therefrom in the front
end of the traffic, is respectively connected via its own light waveguide
central office line to an optical brancher that is connected via a light
waveguide bus to a common light waveguide terminal of the switching
center, either directly or by way of at least one further optical branch.
In this connection, one is referred to, for example, the publication
ISSLS'88, Conference Papers 9.4.1-9.4.5; Br. Telecom Technol. J. Vol. 7,
No. 2, 1989, pp. 100-113, FIG. 5; WO-A1- 88/05233; and WO-81-89/09518.
In such a passive optical telecommunication system in which a respective
plurality of decentralized equipment (distant units) is respectively
connected via its own light waveguide central office line to an optical
brancher that is, in turn, connected either directly or via at least one
further optical brancher to a common light waveguide terminal of the
central switching system via a light waveguide bus, the signal
transmission from the switching center to the decentralized equipment can
proceed continuously in a time-division multiplex (TDM) burst stream from
which each decentralized equipment accepts only those bursts that are
transmitted in time channels allocated accurately to these decentralized
equipment, whereas the signal transmission from the decentralized
equipment to the switching center proceeds in accordance with a
time-division multiple access (TDMA)method in which a decentralized
equipment is capable of transmitting its bursts in a time channel reserved
for the decentralized equipment in a synchronized fashion with the
assistance of the delay device that is set from the switching center. In
this connection, one may refer to the publication ISSLS'88, op. cit, p.
9.4.2 and WO 88/09093. To that end, it is known that, based on the
prescription of the loop running time between the decentralized equipment
and the switching center, the switching center periodically sets a
programmable, digital delay device in the decentralized equipment such
that the loop running time has a prescribed value with which the bursts
transmitted from the decentralized equipment lie exactly in the time
channel reserved for this decentralized equipment (WO-A1-88/05233 and
WO-A1-89/09518), whereby the setting can be undertaken in two stages in
which, first of all, a rough delay having an accuracy of +1 bit (50 ns.)
is set, this being followed by a fine delay having an accuracy of +1/10
bits (see Br. Telecom Technolog. J., op. cit, pp. 100 and 108).
A fine delay implemented in the decentralized equipment in addition to the
rough delay, for example with the assistance of a variable, analog delay
line, involves a corresponding circuit-oriented expense and the present
invention discloses a manner of avoiding this expense.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is directed to a passive optical telecommunication
system in which a respective plurality of decentralized equipment (distant
units) is respectively connected via a respective light waveguide central
office line to an optical brancher that is, in urn, connected either
directly or via at least one further optic brancher to a common light
waveguide terminal of a switching center via a light waveguide bus,
whereby the signal transmission proceeding from the switching center to
the decentralized equipment proceeds in a burst stream from which each
decentralized equipment accepts only the burst destined for each
particular decentralized equipment, and whereby the signal transmission
proceeding from the decentralized equipment to the switching center
proceeds in a TDMA method in accordance wherewith a decentralized
equipment transmits each burst in a synchronized fashion with the
assistance of a delay device set in an equipment-associated manner
proceeding from the switching center. This telecommunication system is,
according to the present invention, particularly characterized in that the
decentralized equipment already transmits the burst before the
transmission time required for a desired receiving phase relation of the
burst in the switching center after only a rough delay time of one or more
entire clock system periods, and in that it is the switching center that
centrally undertakes a respective equipment-associated and dimensioned
fine delay of the burst incoming thereat into the desired receiving phase
relation.
The present invention yields the advantage of enabling the fine delay
following the decentrally-effective rough delay without the corresponding,
decentralized circuit expense, enabling this merely with the assistance of
a centralized fine delay device, advantageously realized with a variable
delay line, whose delay time is respectively set in an equipment
associated manner, i.e. set anew for each burst incoming from a
decentralized equipment and being set based on the criterion of the
reception phase relation resulting from the respective loop running time
that is identified and stored in the switching center for each
decentralized equipment.
In accordance with a further development and feature of the invention,
employable both in a synchronous transfer mode (STM) telecommunication
system as well as in an asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) telecommunication
system, the light waveguide input side of the switching center can be
provided with a delay device that is set by a delay time memory having
respective memory locations assigned to the individual, decentralized
equipment and being set in accordance with the criterion of a fine delay
time just required for this particular decentralized equipment upon
receipt of a burst transmitted from the decentralized equipment.
In a signal transmission proceeding in a continuous TDM burst stream from
the switching center to the decentralized equipment and in a signal
transmission proceeding in TDMA time channels reserved for the individual
decentralized equipment from the decentralized equipment to the switching
center, the memory locations of the delay time memory assigned to the
individual decentralized equipment can be cyclically read with a
chronological offset compared to the TDM burst stream that corresponds to
the loop running time respectively achieved with the rough delay time and
the delay device is set based on the criterion of the respective, stored
fine delay time information. Given a signal transmission proceeding from
the switching center to the decentralized equipment in an ATM cell stream
from which each decentralized equipment takes only the ATM cells intended
therefor and given a signal transmission proceeding from the decentralized
equipment to the switching center in a TDMA method in accordance wherewith
a decentralized equipment is respectively capable of transmitting an ATM
cell after the equipment-associated dimensioned rough delay time only
following the prior acceptance of an ATM cell on its part, the
transmission of an ATM cell addressed to a defined, decentralized
equipment after the loop running time achieved with the respective rough
delay time advantageously causes the reading of the memory location of the
delay time memory assigned to this decentralized equipment and effects the
setting of the delay device based on the criterion of the stored fine
delay time information.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Other objects, features and advantages of the invention, its organization,
construction and operation will be best understood from the following
detailed description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawing,
on which there is a single figure which is a block circuit diagram of a
bidirectional light waveguide telecommunication system constructed and
operated in accordance with the present invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
In a scope required for an understanding of the invention, the drawing
schematically illustrates a bidirectional waveguide telecommunication
system having a passive (preferably monomode) light waveguide bus network
BPON that extends between a central telecommunication location, that is
represented here by a switching center VSt, and a plurality of
decentralized telecommunication equipment, here represented by what are
referred to as distant units DU2, DU3.
As also indicated on the drawing, for example, such distant units can be
interface equipment provided with an electro-optical/opto-electrical
transducer o.vertline.e and provided with a multiplexer/demultiplexer
Muldex at the electrical side thereof with whose assistance the remote
unit may be assumed to potentially combine or, respectively, split up to
32 integrated services digital network B channels.
In this waveguide telecommunication system, the remote units DU2, DU3 are
connected via a single-fiber light waveguide bus OB to a common light
waveguide multiplex terminal of the switching center VSt. It is assumed
that the equipment-associated light waveguide central office lines
OAL1-OALn are thereby connected to the appertaining light waveguide bus OB
via passive, i.e. non wavelength-selective, optical branchers V1-Vn,
accommodated, for example, in cable brancher housings and being connected
either directly thereto, as explicitly illustrated on the drawing, or via
further such branchers. For example, tandem mixers or optical directional
couplers can thereby be employed as optical branchers. It is also possible
to provide a common optical brancher for a plurality of
equipment-associated light waveguide central office lines, as is
inherently known in the art (for example from EP-A2-0171080), this
therefore not having to be set forth in greater detail herein.
In the telecommunication system illustrated on the drawing, a wavelength
divinen mode (bidirectional wavelength multiplex) is provided for
directional separation, whereby light having a first wavelength .lambda.1
lying, for example, in the 1300 nm band is employed for signal
transmission in the downstream direction from the central
telecommunication center VSt to the decentralized telecommunication
locations DU2, DU3 and light having a somewhat longer, second wavelength
.lambda.2 lying, for example, in the 1500 nm band is employed for the
signal transmission in the upstream direction from the decentralized
telecommunication locations DU2, DU3 to the central communication location
VSt. To this end, an appropriate electro-optical transducer e/o
advantageously formed by a laser diode and an appropriate opto-electrical
transducer e o advantageously formed by an avalanche diode are provided in
the switching center VSt that forms the central telecommunication
location, these transducers being connected to the appertaining light
waveguide bus OB via a wavelength-selective, optical filter F, for example
via a known optical separating module provided with an interference beam
splitter, as disclosed, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 4,790,616, fully
incorporated herein by reference.
As likewise indicated on the drawing, the decentralized telecommunication
locations, namely the distant units DU3, DU3 are correspondingly provided
with electro-optical/opto-electrical transducers o.vertline.e.
As likewise indicated on the drawing, the signal transmission in the
outlined telecommunication system proceeds downstream from the switching
center VSt to the decentralized equipment DU2, DU3 in a burst stream
Z.sub.down, for example an ATM cell stream. Such ATM cells (each
respectively comprising 53-bit-octets) each respectively comprising a (5
bit-octet) control information field (header) and a useful information
field (covering 48 bit-octets). Part of the header (covering 16 bits) is
what is referred to as the virtual path identifier; another part of the
header is what is referred to as the access control field. When no useful
information is to be transmitted, synchronization cells having
pre-established bit patterns for synchronization of the decentralized
equipment to the respective cell start can be mixed into the ATM cell
stream Z.sub.down (what is referred to as pure ATM); however, it is also
possible that the ATM cell stream Z.sub.down is, in turn, embedded into a
time frame structure (for example, a SONET time frame structure) having
synchronization signals (overhead) that occur at defined, fixed intervals
(what is referred to as a frame-structured ATM). Each decentralized
equipment DU takes only the bursts intended for it from the burst stream
(ATM cell stream) Z.sub.down, i.e. those ATM cells in the example that
have their header, preferably the virtual path identifier therein
addressed with an identifier assigned to precisely this decentralized
equipment DU. The subdivision into header and useful information field is
illustrated on the drawing for four ATM cells of an ATM cell stream
Z.sub.down, whereby the identifiers (3, 3, 2, n) marked in the headers of
these four ATM cells indicate that the first two cells, carrying the
useful information A and B, are intended for the decentralized equipment
DU3, that the third cell, carrying the useful information C, is intended
for the decentralized equipment DU2, and that the fourth cell carrying the
useful information D, is intended for a decentralized equipment that is
not illustrated on the drawing because of the lack of space and is reached
via a light waveguide subscriber line OALn.
In the opposite transmission direction, the signal transmission from the
decentralized equipment (distant units) DU upstream to the switching
center VSt proceeds in a TDMA method with bursts (potentially, ATM cells)
Z.sub.up, in accordance wherewith a decentralized equipment DU transmits
each burst in synchronized fashion with the assistance of a delay device
that is set associated with a particular decentralized equipment DU from
the switching center VSt, so that each burst is transmitted in the
upstream direction in a time slot reserved for the appertaining
decentralized equipment DU. What is thereby of essence for a reliable
burst acceptance by the central telecommunication equipment VSt is that
the bursts forming the upstream burst stream Z.sub.up are not merely
simply transmitted in the respective reserved time slot, but that the
centralized equipment VSt can also accept the same within this time slot
with a desired, optimum reception phase relation.
This can be achieved with an appropriately finely-tuned delay time interval
between the acceptance of a burst from the downstream burst stream
Z.sub.down intended for a decentralized equipment DU by this same
decentralized equipment DU and the subsequent transmission of an upstream
burst Z.sub.up, by this same decentralized equipment DU or, on the other
hand, as likewise indicated on the drawing, can be achieved in that the
decentralized equipment DU already transmits the bursts before the
transmission time required for a desired reception phase relation of the
burst in the switching center VSt, only after a rough delay time of one or
more entire system clock periods and that it is the switching center VSt
that centrally undertakes a respective, DU-associated dimensioned fine
delay of the bursts incoming thereat into the desired reception phase
relation. To that end, it is indicated on the drawing that the
decentralized equipment DU2, DU3 are each respectively provided with a
rough delay circuit GV leading to the electro-optical transducer
o.vertline.e which may be assumed to enable a burst delay by whole
multiples of the system clock periods, and that the central equipment
(switching center) VSt has its input side provided with a variable fine
delay device FV following its opto-electrical transducer e o, this fine
delay device FV being adjustable based on the criterion of the fine delay
time of fractions of a system clock period that is required for this
particular decentralized equipment DU via a central control device CC upon
the respective receipt of a burst transmitted from a decentralized
equipment DU. The adjustment is fashioned proceeding from a delay time
memory FZ having memory locations assigned to the individual,
decentralized equipment DU2, DU3. At the start up, either an initial start
up or a re-start up as well of the decentralized equipment DU or,
repeatedly from time-to-time as well, the fine delay time required for a
specific decentralized equipment DU can thereby be identified by a central
evaluation device (TDMA LOGIC) CL in a manner corresponding to the
initially-mentioned, known identification of the loop running time or,
respectively, of the delay time required based on the criterion of the
loop running time and can have been written into the delay time memory FZ.
For example, a delay line provided with appropriate, controllable taps can
be provided as the fine delay device FV, the tap thereat that respectively
corresponds to the respective required fine delay time being unlocked or
unblocked thereat controlled proceeding from the delay time memory FZ.
Given a downstream signal transmission proceeding from the switching center
VSt to the decentralized equipment DU and proceeding in an ATM cell stream
from which each decentralized equipment DU accepts only the ATM cells
intended therefor, and an upstream signal transmission proceeding from the
decentralized equipment DU to the switching center VSt in a TDMA method in
accordance wherewith a decentralized equipment DU is respectively capable
of transmitting an ATM cell after the equipment-associated, dimensioned
rough delay time only following the prior acceptance of an ATM cell on its
part, this can occur in such a fashion that the transmission of an ATM
cell addressed to a specific, decentralized equipment DU causes the
reading of the memory location of the delay time memory FZ assigned to
this decentralized equipment DU after the loop running time achieved with
the respective rough delay time and effects the setting of the delay
device FV based on the criterion of the stored fine delay time
information. In a downstream signal transmission from the switching center
VSt to the decentralized equipment DU proceeding in a continuous TDM burst
stream and in an upstream signal transmission from the decentralized
equipment DU to the switching center VSt proceeding in TDMA time channels
reserved for the individual centralized equipment DU, the memory locations
of the delay time memory FZ assigned to the individual decentralized
equipment DU can be cyclically read with a chronological offset compared
to the TDM burst stream that corresponds to the loop running time achieved
with the respective rough delay time, whereby the delay device FV is set
based on the criterion of the respectively-stored fine delay time
information.
The rough delay circuit GV that is respectively provided in the individual
switching equipment DU, can be realized, for example, with a digital delay
element in the form of a system (bit) clock-controlled shift register and
is set based on the criterion of the rough delay time required at the
appertaining decentralized equipment DU, the setting being accomplished
proceeding from a decentralized evaluation device DL following the
opto-electrical transducer o.vertline.e via a decentralized drive device
DC, so that the decentralized equipment DU transmits in the time slot
reserved therefor. This setting can proceed in a manner corresponding to
the initially-mentioned, known setting of a programmable digital delay
device and therefore need not be set forth in greater detail here.
However, it should also be pointed out that the rough delay time and the
fine delay time for each decentralized equipment DU can be individually
dimensioned at the start up thereof, the initial start up or a re-start up
as well. To this end, the switching center VSt can potentially output a
plurality of immediately-successive ATM cells addressed in the header to
the appertaining decentralized equipment DU, the plurality thereof being
prescribed based on the criterion of the maximum running time and their
useful information type being identified in the header as maintenance
information. After receipt of these (maintenance) ATM cells, the
decentralized equipment DU to be initialized answers without delay,
likewise answering with (maintenance) ATM cells whose useful information
type is identified in the header as maintenance information. Based on the
time interval between transmission and reception of (maintenance) ATM
cells, the switching center VSt then calculates the rough delay time of
the appertaining decentralized equipment DU required for achieving the
prescribed loop running time and, subsequently, calculates the required
fine delay time. Since, upon initialization of a decentralized equipment
DU, the ATM cell stream carrying the useful information is interrupted for
a certain time, for example, for approximately 40 ATM cells given a
maximum loop running time of, for example, 100 .mu.s and given an
aggregate bit rate of 150 Mbit/s on the light waveguide bus OB, the useful
information arising during this time for transmission is to be
intermediately stored in corresponding cell buffers that can then be
emptied in turn after the conclusion of the phasing event.
During operation, the switching center VSt can monitor the time gaps
occurring between the received ATM cells Z.sub.up for observation of the
prescribed limits and, when these are upwardly or, respectively,
downwardly exceeded, can correspondingly modify the appertaining,
DU-associated delay time, so that the time gaps can be brought back to the
reference value on the basis of DU-associated readjustment of the delay
time. To this end, the switching center VSt can communicate, an
appropriate readjustment information to the appertaining decentralized
equipment DU in the access control field of the ATM cells Z.sub.down, that
are addressed to this decentralized equipment DU and carry the useful
information or, respectively, can correspondingly correct the fine delay
time stored in its own delay time memory FZ for the appertaining
decentralized equipment DU.
In conclusion, the present invention may be summarized once again as
follows.
In the TDM/TDMA transmission, the central equipment (switching center) VSt
continuously transmits data bursts for all connected decentralized
equipment (distant units) DU. Each decentralized equipment DU extracts the
data bursts intended therefor and transmits a data burst back to the
switching center. This latter data burst is transmitted in a time slot
reserved for the respective decentralized equipment DU. The incoming data
bursts are accepted and processed further in the central switching
equipment VSt. Although the incoming data thereby, in fact, initially have
the same frequency corresponding to the system clock frequency of the
central switching equipment VSt, the individual data packets nonetheless
have different phase relationships when they arrive at the switching
center VSt because of the different running times on the transmission link
to or, respectively, from the individual distant units (due to the
different lengths of the respective optical fiber paths). Both the
different running times are to be compensated so that the data fall into
the time slot assigned thereto, and the respective phase. In order for the
incoming data to be sampled without acceptable errors, it is necessary to
accept these data in the middle of the data.
In order to overcome this problem, it is known that both a rough shift and
a fine shift are implemented at the distant unit (Br. Telecom Technolog.
J. op. cit, pp. 100 and 108). Rough shift denotes that the transmission
data are delayed into the proximity of a reference transmission position
with the system clock internal to the distant unit DU. The transmission
data are delayed by n-fractional clock steps with the fine shift (for
example, with analog delay lines), so that the phase relation of the
remote unit DU transmission data is in phase in the central equipment VSt
with the central switching equipment VSt system clock and can be accepted.
The rough shift in accordance with which the data burst is delayed by whole
multiples of the clock (realized, for example, with a digital delay
element) is set such via a control logic that the remote unit transmits in
the time slot reserved therefore. For example, an adjustable analog delay
line that is present in each remote unit effects the following fine shift.
The present invention produces a solution that is more technologically
beneficial in comparison thereto with the elimination of a fine delay at
each remote unit DU and by undertaking a respective fine delay that is
dimensioned associated to the remote or distant unit DU of the data bursts
incoming into the central switching equipment VSt with a central fine
delay device provided thereat. For each remote or distant unit DU, the
appertaining phase relation of the bursts incoming thereat is first
defined and is stored in a memory and, thereupon, the corresponding fine
delay is set with the control logic based on the criterion of this phase
relation at the respective arrival of a data burst. The incoming data are
therefore delayed by n-fractional system clocks and are then in an optimum
phase relation for acceptance. Only a single, variable fine delay line for
all connected remote units is required with this central fine setting of
the phase.
Although I have described my invention by reference to particular
illustrative embodiments thereof, many changes and modifications of the
invention may become apparent to those skilled in the art without
departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. I therefore intend
to include within the patent warranted hereon all such changes and
modifications as may reasonably and properly be included within the scope
of my contribution to the art.
* * * * *