An STM is simply a group of time slots over the existing physical path.  It
would be pretty strange for an STM to go down without the entire circuit
going down.  Less strange would be misconfiguration, but that has all the
standard hooks.  If you own the layer-1 equipment then change control
policies would help with this.  I'm personally not aware of a way to monitor
capacity from within the circuit without testing and trying to use all the
available bandwidth, which would defeat the purpose.


On Tue, Oct 26, 2010 at 1:56 AM, jack daniels <[email protected]>wrote:

> Hi guys,
>
> I have a EOSDH as a primary link in which GE is mapped to 4 STM-1
>
> and backup path is another GE Link.
>
> In case 2 STM-1 out of 4 STM-1 in EOSDH fail my routing will not be
> aware of that and will not reroute the traffic to backup GE.
> This will lead to congestion on Primary link , while backup path not
> at all be used.
>  Is there any way to work out this issue.
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