Hey all,
I am looking to see what the community's experience has been with different
types of labeling systems and XC tracking systems for intra-facility
crossconnects.
In addition to the standard practice of labeling every fiber at both ends,
if you're using a system that wraps a cable marker around the cable every 3
ft/1 meter, what type of system are you using to track XCs?
If you have implemented a standards-based system with some type of GUID for
every cable, and a unique per-cable tracking system that is utilized with a
ticketing system for each distinct cable (whether -48VDC, fiber, cat5e,
alarm wire, whatever), what did you have to customize for your needs?
If you have implemented such a system in an older facility where every
cable did not previously have a unique ID#, what hiccups did you run into?
If you were designing such a system from a 'green field' approach for a
brand new datacenter/colo/IX facility that is yet to be constructed, what
would you do differently (both at OSI layer 1, and in the operational
support software tracking the XCs?)
Hey all,
I am looking to see what the community's experience has been with different
types of labeling systems and XC tracking systems for intra-facility
crossconnects.
I haven't used these in a long time, but here are a few example cable
run lists that can be modified to your hearts content:
http://bit.ly/CRL2016
I found the format useful to create implementation detail and generate
labels. It was easy to pay the data forward and reverse afterwards.
Exported data should be loaded into a management system. It could also
work in reverse, but being able to have dynamic documentation to end
with as-builts is generally a win.
In addition to the standard practice of labeling every fiber at both ends,
if you're using a system that wraps a cable marker around the cable every 3
ft/1 meter, what type of system are you using to track XCs?
Greybar or Anixter-like supply houses can sell you/your vendor striped
fiber optic bundles. It's an additional expense, but it's not entirely
ugly. The last deployment I worked on with respect to a fiber
interconnect system IIRC we asked the electricians to wrap a loop
every N' using different colored electrical tape for the A and B runs.
That worked too.
If you have implemented a standards-based system with some type of GUID for
every cable, and a unique per-cable tracking system that is utilized with a
ticketing system for each distinct cable (whether -48VDC, fiber, cat5e,
alarm wire, whatever), what did you have to customize for your needs?
I don't have any advice other than don't over think it. If a text file
or excel spreadsheet works; embrace it.
Best,
-M<