DOCSIS 3.0 - The Upside and Downside for the Access
Network
Authored by:
Bob Loveless, Director Advanced Planning and Technology
Transmission Network Systems
Scientific Atlanta, A Cisco Company
Ron Hranac, Technical Leader
Broadband Marketing
Cisco Systems, Inc.
Abstract
The opportunities for cable operators provided by DOCSIS
(Data Over Cable Service Interface Specification) have been
pretty much by the numbers: as in DOCSIS 1.0, 1.1, 2.0 and
now DOCSIS 3.0. Version 1.0 got the data ball rolling; 1.1
added a number of features, including quality of service (QoS),
more robust scheduling, packet classification and other
enhancements that facilitate voice services; 2.0 increased
upstream throughput; and, now, 3.0 is here with significant
jumps in both upstream and downstream speeds.
While those increases in upstream and downstream speeds from
DOCSIS 3.0 are very attractive, they don’t come without a
price in terms of how they impact the cable access network.
From an access standpoint, the early DOCSIS environment has
focused on deployment and maintenance of only one channel to
the modem, and one channel coming back from the modem.
Operators had to be aware of how many subscribers they had
and the size of the service area, but bottom line was they
had to worry about one channel in each direction. In the
reverse path the big problems were traffic, ingress, node
size: you couldn’t make the node size too big or things
wouldn’t work reliably.
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