On Mon, Aug 21, 2017 at 03:26:20PM -0500, Colton Conor wrote: > We are building a new fiber network, and need help creating a circuit ID > format to for new fiber circuits. Is there a guide or standard for fiber > circuit formats? Does the circuit ID change when say a customer upgrades > for 100Mbps to 1Gbps port?
I've seen a few different methods for this, the most common includes some form of the source/dest pop locations for the service delivery. an example: yy-chcgil-dllstx-xx where yy and xx may provide some more detail. the pop codes might include more detail about the equipment in use, same for yy/xx that might encode the underlying service/speeds or numbering in the case of multiple things involved. from the circuit-id you would be able to look up other details like underlying carriers, service or abstraction layers such as what routers/DWDM/fiber the service rides upon. > What do the larger carriers do? Any advice on creating a circuit ID format > for a brand new fiber network? I would stick with some variant of A-Z location data and leave any service speeds at the phy speed of the device, eg: don't call it 300m if it's 1G ethernet rate-limited. > Originally we ran a CLEC using a LECs copper, and our circuit ID was > historically a telephone number for DSL circuits. The ILEC had a complex > method for assigning circuit IDs. I've seen a few different types over the years from ISDN to T1 to much faster services. They all have merit, but the key is to be usable and readble. Don't use both 0 and O for example, don't make case sensitive, avoid lookalikes like l and 1. I would even consider putting in a check digit if you are creating your own. > I am sure anything will work as long as you keep track of it, but any > advice would be great! - Jared -- Jared Mauch | pgp key available via finger from ja...@puck.nether.net clue++; | http://puck.nether.net/~jared/ My statements are only mine.