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Encyclopedia > Cable modem termination system

A cable modem termination system or CMTS is equipment typically found in a cable company's headend and is used to provide high speed data services, such as Cable Internet or Voice over IP, to cable subscribers.


In order to provide these high speed data services, a cable company will connect its headend to the Internet via very high capacity data links to a network service provider. On the subscriber side of the headend, the CMTS enables the communication with subscribers' cable modems. Different CMTS's are capable of serving different cable modem population sizes - ranging from 4,000 cable modems to 150,000 or more. A given headend may have between half a dozen to a dozen or more CMTS's to service the cable modem population served by that headend.


One way to think of a CMTS is to imagine a router with Ethernet interfaces (connections) on one side and coax RF interfaces on the otherside. The RF/coax interfaces carry RF signals to and from the subscriber's cable modem.


In fact, most CMTS's have both Ethernet interfaces (or other more traditional high-speed data interfaces) as well as RF interfaces. In this way, traffic that is coming from the Internet can be routed (or bridged) through the Ethernet interface, through the CMTS and then onto the RF interfaces that are connected to the cable company's hybrid fiber coax HFC. The traffic winds its way through the HFC to end up at the cable modem in the subscriber's home. Obviously, traffic going from a subscriber's home systems go through the cable modem and out to the Internet in the opposite directions.


CMTS's typically only carry IP traffic. Traffic destined for the cable modem from the Internet, known as downstream traffic, is carried in IP packets encapsulated in MPEG packets (yes, that's IP within MPEG). These MPEG packets are carried on data streams that are typically modulated onto Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (QAM) signals.


Upstream data (data from cable modems to the headend or Internet) is carried in Ethernet frames (not MPEG) on, typically, QPSK signals.


A typical CMTS allows a subscriber's computer to obtain an IP address by forwarding DHCP requests to the relevant servers. This DHCP server returns, for the most part, what looks like a typical response including an assigned IP address for the computer, gateway/router addresses to use, DNS servers, etc.


The CMTS may also implement some basic filtering to protect against unauthorized users and various attacks. Traffic shaping is sometimes performed to restrict the transfer speeds of end users - perhaps based upon subscribed plan or download usage. A CMTS may act as a bridge or router.


A customer's cable modem cannot communicate directly with other modems on the line. In general, cable modem traffic is routed to other cable modems or to the Internet through a series of CMTS's and traditional routers. A route could conceivably pass through a single CMTS.


A CMTS provides many of the same functions provided by the DSLAM in a DSL system.


See also

External link

  • TechWeb: CMTS (http://www.techweb.com/encyclopedia/defineterm.jhtml?term=CMTS&x=29&y=11) - explanation and diagram.

  Results from FactBites:
 
Cable modem termination system - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (550 words)
A cable modem termination system or CMTS is equipment typically found in a cable company's headend and is used to provide high speed data services, such as Cable Internet or Voice over IP, to cable subscribers.
Traffic destined for the cable modem from the Internet, known as downstream traffic, is carried in IP packets encapsulated in MPEG packets.
Upstream data (data from cable modems to the headend or Internet) is carried in Ethernet frames modulated with Quadrature Phase Shift Keying.
DSL vs Cable modem (11969 words)
Cable modems, which allow users to connect using the cable television network, seem to be first out of the gate with broader availability and lower costs with some concern about the security issues.
Cable modems are designed to take advantage of the "broadband" cable infrastructure enabling peak connection speeds over 100 times faster than traditional dial-up connections.
Because some cable networks are suited for broadcast television services, cable modems may use either a standard telephone line or a QPSK/16 QAM modem over a two-way cable system to transmit data upstream from a user location to the network.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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