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Comment Dark Fiber Networking (Score 3, Insightful) 97

Hmmm...seems everyone wants to either be a smart*** or overanalyze this. First off: It appears that he is working with the local cable company, so, actually, he has already defined what sort of issues and designs he will have with this. Dark fiber from a cable company means a point to point link. If he has multiple offices, this will generally mean that there will be a hub and spoke design on the fiber from a central location to the edge sites. In addition, the local cable co will most certainly provide the distances and loss budget for the fiber, making selection of equipment an act of trivia. The only thing not defined was the type of network he really wants, but in this case, it is also probably completely irrelevant. If you can't put all your services over TCP/IP, then you shouldn't be maintaining a network. First off, gear selection. I work for a Cisco-centric company, so most of my experience is with Cisco, but I have worked with Foundry and Nortel and a few others. If you want reliable, Cisco is certainly acceptable, and you can always put a contract on it to meet your needs. Second, protocol selection. Well, he wants TCP/IP. This will certainly be easy enough. Engineer the backend properly (IP addressing 101, and get a router for the links, your done. If you need to convert Analog Video to H.323, there are plenty of vendors who can do this. If you need COS, again, there are plenty of solutions. Layer 2 Selection. My recommendation would be to go with GigE. This is certainly cheaper than going with outdated FX technology if you buy new, and more reliable. When you have the distances and loss budget of the fiber links, you can select the appropriate GBIC's for the link, and if you get light at both ends, you have a network. In Cisco terms, I'd go with a 3550-12G at the core if you have more than 2 locations. This will be a reasonable fiber concentrator ($9,999 list) and also does QOS, policing, and routing (both packet and protocols, such as EIGRP). At the edge, depending on how much intelligence you need, you can put in Cisco 3550-24's, either EMI or SMI flavor. The EMI boxes are routers (same code as the 3550-12G. The SMI boxes have port routing in the newest code, but won't run routing protocols. These boxes will allow you to converge your network (data, VOIP, and video) and really don't have a horrible price tag. The SMI lists at $2,999 and the EMI at $4,999. This doesn't include GBIC's but the max cost on those is long-haul (Cisco ZX) which lists at $5,995. The intermediate reach LX is only $995. Don't mess around with MMF (SX GBIC's) if you don't have to. Even if you do short haul, this will be a more stable solution and will allow you to repurpose gear in the future. The big gotcha with this is support of the fiber. Most of the time Cable dark fiber contracts mean that the customer is responsible for paying for repair of the fiber. Find out who is responsible for the fiber, and make sure you budget appropriately if the cable company is going to charge you for repairs on the lines. If they won't do it, find someone who can (check the contractors who already work with the cable company, they already know the systems and people) and get them on retainer or whatever. Many schools and governments have ended up shocked because they had to find someone in the middle of the night with a fusion splicer to fix a damaged link. Or the cable company sent them an outrageous bill for repair after the fact. This sucks, because it is hard to budget for an 18-wheeler gone awry in an ice storm. If you do it this way, you can treat the fiber just like Ethernet, and be done with it. You don't have to relearn protocols, and you will have a decent growth path for the future. My networks (that look just like this!) are WAN's that I treat like LAN's, and they are easy to support. Gybrwe

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