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WiMAX Transmission Planning and Design

Duration: 2 days or 12 hours Level: Level 4

WiMAX Transmission Planning and Design


IP has fundamentally changed the way that transmission is employed in Next Generation Networks. This started with the rationalization of the core network in mobile service providers networks and has now extended to the ASN core and down towards the cell sites. The deployment of IP in these environments comes with a multitude of challenges that require a number of technologies and protocols to overcome these. This course explores these technologies and challenges as well as the planning and dimensioning of the core and ASN in order to deliver voice, multimedia and data services effectively to the end subscriber. Those attending this course should have a good understanding of IP as would be gained by mpiricals course IP in the Next Generation Network.

Who Should Attend


Transmission Engineers and Network Planning Staff who require an in-depth understanding of the deployment of IP in NGN in support of real and non real time services.

Course Outline
Divided into 8 sections, the topics covered will include:

Section 1: The Backhaul Challenge (1.5 hours)


Where is the data coming from? Todays traffic figures and forecasts for growth. Meeting growth and preserving revenues. The technical challenges ahead, QoS, timing, deployment and management. The road ahead, an overview of NGN wireless networks including HSPA, LTE and WiMAX.

Section 2:Network Coverage and Capacity Planning Overview (1 hour)


Planning for coverage, where cell sites will be deployed, radio coverage performance and the required infrastructure. Meeting capacity requirements, network busy hour calculations for voice and mobile broadband. Radio access performance, transmission capacity calculations to meet real time and non real time services.

Section 3: Network Architecture Scenarios (1.5 hours)


The SDH / SONET reference architecture, what it provides, and how we evolve it. Hybrid solutions, integrating microwave and fixed line transmission systems. Deploying IP, MPLS and Ethernet in the Core and ASN. Extending IP to the cell site, pre aggregation and aggregation considerations.

Section 4: MPLS Basics (1 hour)

MPLS network architecture, Generalized MPLS, Edge Routers and Core Routers, MPLS components, labels, label edge and switching routers. Concept of operation, the Control Plane, routing process and Label Distribution, Penultimate Hop Popping. Establishing the Label Switched Path, Forwarding Equivalence Class and label binding, label distribution protocols, NHLFE, ILM and FTN. Interworking with multiple technologies, deployment in 2G, 3G and 4G networks.

Section 5: MPLS TE and Other Services (1 hour)


What is Traffic Engineering? - MPLS as a suitable protocol for supporting TE. Where to Use MPLS TE, Explicit Routing, Network Utilization, Priority and Pre-emption. MPLS Protection and Restoration, Bidirectional Forwarding Detection, MPLS Fast Reroute. Circuit Emulation over MPLS, Pseudowire End to End Emulation, channel bonding.

Section 6:Carrier Ethernet and VLANs (1.5 hours)


IEEE 802.3 and Ethernet operation, performance and limitations. Introducing Ethernet into the wide area, the Metro Ethernet Forum and Carrier Ethernet concepts. Considerations when deploying Carrier Ethernet. VLAN operation and planning.

Section 7: Packet Switching QoS Techniques (1.5 hours)


The QoS aware router, policy, shaping and dropping. Packet marking at layer 3 and layer 2, IPv4 and IPv6 DiffServ, AF and EF, IEEE802.1p. OQ and IQ routers and switches, scheduling algorithms, optimal algorithms, heuristic algorithms, and packet-mode algorithms. Multicast networks, traffic and QoS.

Section 8: Network Modelling Techniques (3 hours)


Traffic profiles from real networks, golden cells and the impact of congestion on the service providers business plan. Network cost models for cell sites, backhaul, core and IP interconnect. Modelling of IP networks using Excel. Planning Exercise, translating traffic and subscriber forecasts into network CAPEX and OPEX.

2012 Mpirical Limited

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