Dear Frank, As representing a network service provider who works with affiliates with cable, DSL, fiber, and wireless networks I think I can help you answer some of your questions. Our company supports many cable company, and since I started working here is March I have learned much about cable. First the speeds listed are for the optimal configuration (which requires a clean cable plant and free bands). In a Docsis 1.x environment you only get 10.240 Mbps if you are using a 3.2 MHz wide channel and using 16qam modulation. My experience is that many of the affiliate networks I work with do not have that configuration. I have been working with one provider upgrading them from a 1.6 MHz qpsk config to 3.2 MHz 16qam (in Docsis 1.x you only have qpsk and 16qam modulation types.) For a 30 Mbps Docsis 2.0 configuration, you need to have a 6.4MHz wide channel with 64qam modulation. 64qam is more sensitive to noise than 16qam and much more sensitive than qpsk. Also the 6.4MHz channel is wider and eats up spectrum realestate, particularly if you use more than one upstream frequency. The other problem with using 6.4MHz upstreams is that any Docsis 1.x modems that you still have out there will not work at all with it, and all modems on that node must be Docsis 2.0. If a provider uses a 3.2MHz channel with 64qam they can let a docsis 1.x 16qam subchannel coexist on the same frequency. Using a 3.2MHz channel with 64qam only gives a theoretical (not counting overhead) limit of 15.360 Mbps. Docsis 3.0 acheives most of its speed by bonding channels together. Note that each downstream channel is a possible TV channel, and the cable company will have to determine the value of using a given channel for TV or data. Docsis 2.0/3.0 also can use 128qam, but many modems do not support it nor are many cable plants clean enough either. You mentioned upstreams and ports. Cable unlike DSL is a shared resorce meaning that the 10 Mbps or 30 Mbps upstream is shared by everyone on the node. Also note that the 27Meg/45Meg downstream is shared by all users connected to that downstream. Many CMTS's are in a 1:4 or 1:6 configuration which means that there are 4 or 6 upstreams to every downstream. Remember that everyone in that node shares the bandwidth. What I normally see as a general limit is about 500-1000 customers per blade. That means that there are between 83-250 people per upstream port. If the speed was distributed evenly (an not over subscribed) each person would get at most 180Kbps down and 120Kbps up. Docsis 3.0 will help with speeds, but providers may not want to give up TV channels for extra data speeds. While many cable systems have more room for uploads, many others do not. When an older configuration works most people are reluctant to change, and many cable technicians do not like locating and troubleshooting noise issues. Sorry for making things muddy, but cable is not the best long-term solution for speed. Fiber to the home/node is much more attractive and quite a few people are offering it. -- Brian Raaen Network Engineer braaen@zcorum.com On Tuesday 23 October 2007 23:46, Frank Bulk wrote:
We're living in a DOCSIS 1.1 and 2.0 world, which gives us 40 down, 9 up in a best case. Considering that there are ~4 upstream ports for every downstream port, the MSOs are already operating their network in a 40:36 or almost 1:1 ratio. It's just that upstream is a much more precious item that that they can't afford to fill up on a particular node, and most people find download speeds much more important most of the time.
We'll talk about DOCSIS 3.0 in a year from now and see how it's being deployed.
Frank
-----Original Message----- From: owner-nanog@merit.edu [mailto:owner-nanog@merit.edu] On Behalf Of Leo Bicknell Sent: Tuesday, October 23, 2007 11:05 AM To: Joe Provo Cc: nanog@merit.edu Subject: Re: BitTorrent swarms have a deadly bite on broadband nets
In a message written on Tue, Oct 23, 2007 at 10:34:00AM -0400, Joe Provo wrote:
While I expect end-users to miss the boat that providers use stat-mux calculations to build and price their networks, I'm floored to see the sentiment on NANOG. No edge provider of geographic scope/scale will survive if 1:1 ratios were built and priced accordingly. Perhaps the M&A colonialism era is coming to a close and smaller, regional nation- states... erm last-mile providers will be the entities to grow with satisfied customers?
I'm not sure NANOGers are missing the boat, just bemoaning the economics of the situation and some companies choices.
As an example, if I believe http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DOCSIS (as I'm no cable export):
DOCSIS 1.x, 10.24Mbps upstream. With this providers regularly offered 384-768k upload speeds to customers.
DOCSIS 3.0, 122Mbps upstream. That's about 12x. Applying the 12x to the original upload speed that's 4.6-9.2Mbps upload speed per user.
And yet, today most of the major national providers don't over more than 1Mbps of upload speed in their fastest packages.
Perhaps the real issue here is that broadband providers don't have enough diversity in their products. Picking on an unnamed cable provider and looking at their web site I can get:
4M down, 384k up. $39. 6M down, 768k up. $49. 8M down, 768k up. $59.
That's their entire portfolio of residential services. How about a $99 package with 10M down, 3M up? How about $5 per meg download, $20 per meg upload, pick any combination of speeds you want where both are under 20Mbps?
And why-o-why are they still giving me modems? Is not the stack of 5 that I already have enough waste? How much of my service charge goes to replacing equipment over and over because it's "how they work". (For instance I moved, and got a new modem with the new install, same make and model as the old modem, which they didn't want back.)
So, while NANOGers may float the idea of 1:1, what I think really honks them off is that the current standard (4M down, 384k up) is 1:10, and I think they feel it's time it became more like 1:4 (4M down, 1M up), and that seems to be completely within reach of the technology. Which leaves the only thing holding it up being big company management and marketing.
I will point out, one of the smaller providers on the Wikipedia page under US, CableVision, is said to have 30Mbps down 5Mbps up. That's 1:6, at a heck of a lot higher speeds. I think most people here would be quite happy with that offering.
-- Leo Bicknell - bicknell@ufp.org - CCIE 3440 PGP keys at http://www.ufp.org/~bicknell/ Read TMBG List - tmbg-list-request@tmbg.org, www.tmbg.org