Skip to the article content

This is is a test for red alert, with close icon. Should show only on one page.

test    

nbn Ethernet

A single product construct has been created across Fibre to the Premises (FTTP), Fibre to the Building (FTTB), Fibre to the Node (FTTN), Fibre to the Curb (FTTC), Hybrid Fibre Coaxial (HFC), Fixed Wireless and Sky Muster® satellite technologies, called nbn® Ethernet.


How the nbn Ethernet product works

The product provides an Ethernet virtual circuit to deliver Layer 2 packets between the nbn® network boundaries, the Network-to-Network Interface (NNI), to the User Network Interface (UNI) at your customers’ premises. The nbn Ethernet product is composed of four configurable components. The components act as building blocks for you to tailor the nbn Ethernet product into your retail offers. The diagram below illustrates our product structure:







Traffic classes

The nbn network features three traffic classes, to enable you to develop targeted retail offerings for key segments. Traffic classes must be ordered on both Connectivity Virtual Circuits (CVC) and Access Virtual Circuits (AVC).

There are three traffic classes:

Traffic Class Designed for Access Technology
Traffic class 1 (TC1) nbn’s highest priority traffic class. It is delivered as a Committed Information Rate (CIR) with defined latency, jitter and loss characteristics – suitable for applications that require highly deterministic traffic parameters such as voice.* All
Traffic class 2 (TC2) Provides support for latency sensitive, interactive applications such as video conferencing, converged business collaboration, IPTV or gaming. It is delivered as a Committed Information Rate (CIR) with defined latency, jitter and loss characteristics.* FTTP, FTTC, FTTN, FTTB
Traffic class 4 (TC4) Designed for browser based applications such as the internet and web browsing. It is delivered in a range of Peak Information Rate (PIR) speeds that are asymmetrical.* All


* nbn provides services to its wholesale customers, telephone and internet providers, and does not provide services directly to end users. End user experience including the speeds actually achieved over the nbn network depends on some factors outside our control like equipment quality, software, broadband plans and how the end user’s provider designs its network.