Yes that is correct and DLM is a pain but that doesn't answer my question.
I can't find anything that says, Ofcom requires isp's/wholesale, to use DLM on broadband lines.
DLM may be perceived to be a pain to an individual user, but the real point is that it balances usage between many users, if done properly. Full DLM doesn't just employ interleaving & error correction, but also power masking, power backoff and other techniques. They're getting a lot of research study, and are getting a lot more complicated. Try not to be so dismissive of the newer techniques based on criticism of the original ones!
The full title, Dynamic Spectrum Management, is a toolbox of techniques which work to varying effect - one of the better known "future" ones is called "vectoring" which people expect to use to counter crosstalk on FTTC lines, gaining some 20-30 Mbps for a lot of lines. *That* kind of DSM I most certainly approve of.
Anyway...
Ofcom delegates the rules for connecting equipment to BT's metallic access network to a group known as NICC. One aspect they control is the ANFP, which can be found
here. The ANFP defines the power masks, which are a part of DSM techniques (but not DLM).
They haven't specified that DLM *must* be used, but they have certainly studied DLM, and specified that it *should* be used as one technique of many.
DLM as we knew it in ADSL-Max (in BT) was a variant known as AMA (changing SNR targets). DLM as it is employed in FTTC is better known as TRA (restricting speeds). The technique used in ADSL2+ (in BT) is a cross between the two.
NICC have
a report on the use of DSM in the UK, with this as part of the executive summary:
1) DLM or DSM Level 1 is undoubtedly a useful capability for UK DSL network operators.
2) The use of the TRA approach should be considered for any DSM Level 1/DLM deployment because of its potential to lower the impact of crosstalk as well as improving overall performance (speed versus stability versus transmit power trade-off) compared with AMA. AMA was evaluated with or without the use of VN, while TRA was evaluated only without VN. Improved politeness and consequential reduction in transmit power and crosstalk levels may bring benefits to UK DSL operators and their end-users.
3) Techniques such as DSM, AL-FEC (Application Layer � Forward Error Correction) and retransmission continue to develop and DSL service providers should consider DSM Level 1/DLM as one technique within a �toolbox� of techniques available to improve DSL transmission performance and stability.
...
7) At the time of publication DSM Level 2 and 3 techniques are at early stages of implementation and analysis of their benefits in the UK access network is left for further study.
The various techniques for DLM and DSM are discussed by "The Broadband Forum" in document TR-197, "DQS: DSL Quality Management Techniques". These specification govern the protocols that the equipment manufacturers build into their equipment. The editors of that document come from Ericsson, ECI and Huawei.