Il 10/12/2011 8.03, Olivier ha scritto:
Yes, assuming no hardware/configuration problems this shouldn't happen
>  on PTP.

Can you explain why taking down layer 1 on idling spans happens on
PtmP and can't happen on PTP ?

Where possible worse than my English: "ne devrait pas arriver", "généralement pas utilisés". Ok, i'd like to be sure my statement above will never misunderstood. I wanted to say that L1 deactivation in PTP provisioning is not commonly used. However, nothing prevents the telco to do so because (ETSI*) specifications allow it. The ETSI L1 specification says that "The choice to eventually deactivate is up to higher layers at the network side." without any distinction between PTP or PTMP.

I believe that the L1 deactivation in PTP is not commonly used for the sake of convenience: - PTP lines are usually provisioned for a pbx using a basic NT (no a/b ports, less power). A pbx doesn't drain power from the network so there is little to save. - PTP lines are also provisioned to share a single number or DDI spans to multiple BRI. The result of permanent L1 and a fixed TEI is a faster response from the user side, that is convenient on the network side to find and allocate a resource on incoming calls.

* ETS 300 012-1: http://tinyurl.com/bwycqcz

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