Well it doesn't exist in either
SIN 498 which is Openreach's description of it, in particular Section 2.2.5
Dynamic Line Management (DLM) is employed in GEA-FTTC. DLM constantly manages lines to maintain a target stability. It does this for as long as the product exists.
At provision, the line is put on wide open profiles, allowing downstream line speeds of up to 40Mbit/s, and upstream line speeds of up to 2Mbit/s, or 10Mbit/s. depending on the upstream product option selected.
On the first day of operation, DLM will intervene if severe instability is detected. Otherwise, DLM will wait until the day after provision before intervening, provided that the line has been trained up for at least 15 minutes during the preceding day.
If DLM intervenes it will set a capped profile with a maximum rate and a minimum rate, where the minimum rate is set at approximately half of the maximum rate.
nor in
SIN 495 which is BT Wholesale's description of their part of it.
That refers to SIN 498 and also to
SIN 472, the standard WBC document, with this note
This SIN (472) provides the interface information between BTW�s WBC product and the SP. All sections are relevant with the exception of Section 3 End User Access.
As this has not been revised since Issue 1 in November 2009, I suggest it should also exclude the section about WBC DLM, or at least the 10-day period for line stabilisation. The line stabilisation is under the control of the OR DLM in the cabinet, as above.
It even says
The main difference between the WBC FTTC service and the WBC ADSL1 and 2+ Service is that the DSLAM (�Digital Subscriber Line Access Module�) for the WBC ADSL1 and 2+ Service is situated in an exchange building but for WBC FTTC the DSLAM is situated in a street cabinet (the �Street DSLAM�).
Joined up thinking was not present in 2009, when I don't think the system was only in its infancy. Or was it only in development?
Whichever, the stabilisation by the OR DLM supercedes and replaces any possible stabilisation by the BTW one. The only possible relevance of the BTW DLM logically has to be to forward the pre-existing ISP-requested stability settings to the OR one, i.e. the Standard, Stable and Super Stable options, and possibly to set the IP Profile, thus saving completely re-engineering those parts of the system.
Note - I haven't yet found any SIN that has been updated for 80/20.
Edit - it has been brought to my attention that the link to SIN 472 went to SIN 495. Now corrected.
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Edited by RobertoS (Fri 27-Apr-12 13:20:20)