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JRA1 Task 1Investigation of Emerging Carrier Class Transport Network Technologies (CCTNT)
Victor Olifer (JANET)TNC 2010, Vilnius, 01-06-2010
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Agenda
Introduction to JRA1 Task1CCTNT Introduction.
Why are CCTNT necessary?.Requirements.Benefits.
CCTNT Descriptions:Ethernet developments NG-OTN.MPLS-TP.PBB-TE.
JRA1 Task1 Future Plans.
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Introduction to JRA1 Task 1
JRA1 Task 1 will research the exploitation of the hybrid infrastructure by emerging transport technologies such as Carrier Class PBT and MPLS-TP in order to support point-to-point, point-to-multipoint and VPN services.
Stage 1 – theoretical investigation of promising technologies: to what extent they can be called carrier-class transport
Both emerging and established technologies were in scope: (only new carrier-class features investigated for the latter)
The expected results of the work are the:Production of reference papers for GÉANT and NREN’s future transport network technologies.Not about photonic layer – this is JRA1 Task 2
“GN3 will be revolutionary in terms of the services it provides. Whilst the underlying technology at the lower layers of the network is not going to undergo substantial change, there will be a dramatic change in the services that will be developed and offered to end users”
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Carrier Class Transport Network Technologies (CCTNT)
What is CCTNT?
Requirements: Effective data transmission: to combine flexible multiplexing and provisioning with good performance (latency, bandwidth granularity) for each traffic type Support for standardised services.(e.g. MEF E-LINE & E-LAN)P-OTS readiness Manageability (OAM functionality similar to the traditional SDH/SONET)SimplicityScalability and versatility.Reliability (Protection & Restoration).QoS.Dynamic provisioning (support for Control plane or NMS-based provisioning)Environmental requirementsLow cost
Benefits:Better and more reliable customer services built upon the transport CAPEX and OPEX reduction: simpler infrastructure, converged Possibility to satisfied the special needs from the research communityAdditional functionality (e.g. BoD ) Higher bandwidthBetter possibilities for interoperability and interworking
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JRA1 Task1Technologies & focus areas
Technologies considered as relevant under the scope of JRA1 Task1:Next-Generation OTN (NG-OTN)Ethernet (new features) Layer 2 RoutingSynchronous EthernetEthernet over Multi-Protocol Label Switching (EoMPLS)Multi-Protocol Label Switching Transport Profile (MPLS-TP)Provider Backbone Bridge Traffic Engineering (PBB-TE)GMPLS
and focus areas:Scalability Quality of Service (QoS)Protection and restorationOperations, Administration and Maintenance (OAM) functionalityMulticasting.Control plane protocols (including GMPLS)Multi-domain StandardisationApplicationsCost-effectiveness
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OTN
Optical Transport Networks (OTN)
Single technologyBetter scalability and flexibilityTransparent for Client Signals (does not transfer network synchronization) Better Forward Error CorrectionHierarchical Tandem Connection Monitoring functionality –multidomain supportFast Protection Restoration through GMPLS
Physical Medium - Fibre
SDH/SONET
Ethernet
IP/MPLSA big step from SDH/SONET:
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Next Generation OTN
NG-OTN promises a much more flexible mutiplexing hierarchy, designed for data traffic:
ODU Flex – Flexible low order container that can be ”right sized”.ODU 0 and OPU0 to accomodate 1 GE signals.ODU2e and OPUe2 for transport of CBR10G3 for 10 GE.New ODU3e and OTU3e for transport of 4 x ODU2e.ODU 4 and OTU4 for transport of 100GE.
Enhanced OAM features:OTN Alarms and defects being reviewed by Study Group 15.
Control Plane:GMPLS signalling extensions for G.709 (RFC 4328).
Conclusion:
• Carrier-class technology without any doubts • Worth to trial NG feaqtures: OAM, dynamic provisioning, P-OTS capabilities
Evolution towards Packet-Optical Transport Sysytem
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Ethernet developments
Ethernet is evolving producing:
• Some strands that can be treated as separate transport technologies, i.e.
PBB-TE or EoMPLS
• New elements that might be seen as native Ethernet developments:
MEF technology-agnostic definitions of Ethernet global
services:
• E-LINE (EPL & EVPL), E-LAN and E-TREE
Ethernet OAM
Ethernet QoS
40G/100G Ethernet
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Ethernet OAM
CFM (802.1ag) from IEEE:
Y.1731 from ITU-T adds Performance Monitoring to CFM :
• Continuity Check Messages (CCM) with end-to-end hierarchy:
• Loopback and Linktrace Messages – service troubleshooting
service status monitoring
• Frame Loss Messages.
• Frame Delay Messages.
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MPLS-TP (MPLS–Transport Profile)Background & Definition
MPLS-TP is the result of a joint effort between the ITU-T and the IETF.
MPLS-TP is a subset of MPLS with extensions to support the requirements for transport networks.
T-MPLS
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MPLS-TPTransport requirements (I)
MPLS-TP OAMSould be independent on IP forwarding and control plane MPLS-TP provides In-band OAM similar to transport modelMPLS-TP generalises the use of Generic Associated Channel (G-ACh) to provide a mechanism to carry management and OAM information (RFC5586).MPLS-TP defines a set of tools to provide “pro-active” and “on-demand” OAM.On going work in the IETF for definition of these tools.
Tools under discussion:
•ITU-T Y.1731
•LSP Ping
•BFD
•Virtual Circuit Connectivity
Verification (VCCV).
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MPLS-TPTransport requirements (II)
ProtectionProtection for different transport entities: sections, LSPs and PWs< 50 ms switching time.1+1, 1:1, n:1 protection.Protection for uni-directional and bi-directional paths.Linear and ring protection
Restoration (Control plane & Management Plane)Manual control. Triggered by operator.Failure triggered actions.OAM signalling.Control plane (GMPLS).
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MPLS-TPConclusions & Status
Conclusions:MPLS-TP provides packet effiencicy inherited from MPLS, adds transport capabilities and removes some unnessary featuresWorth to trial and demonstrate
Current status:MPLS-TP is currently under development. There are five published RFCs and a lot if Internet Drafts At MPLS World Congress in Paris (February 2010) it was said that the core MPLS-TP standards would be complete by July 2010
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Provider Backbone Bridge Traffic Engineering
Initially developed by Nortel (in 2006) as Provider Backbone Transport (PBT) – it was Provider Backbone Bridges extension to support:
Deterministic paths for point-to-point services (E-LINE) with bandwidth guarantees and QoS.Fast path protection switching (1:1 and m:n)
Standardised by the IEEE as PBB TE (802.1Qay) in 2009(E-TREE services were added).Switches off MAC learning and STP but preserves the forwarding table format, population of which might be:
Manual NMS-basedGMPLS-based
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PBB TE scalability: Two-tier connection hierarchy
мс
мс
мс
мс
мс
Provider network Customer A
Customer B
Customer C
Customer D
Outer transport tunnel:{B-VID, B-MAC DA} as a globally unique transport label
Inner service connections:- identified by I-SID as a service label: up to 16 millions per tunnel
B-MAC=0x35
B-VID=117B-MAC=0x35
B-VID=117B-MAC=0x35
B-VID=117
B-MAC=0x35
B-VID=117
B-MAC=0x35
The technique is very similar to MPLS “tunnels+pseudowires” scheme but it uses well-known MAC addresses and VLAN Ids – globally unique labels Edge switches know:
Nothing about customer VIDs & MACs for EPL (port-based) serviceCustomer VIDs for EVPL (VLAN-based) service
PE-1PE-2
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PBB TE features and status Resilience
Primary and backup tunnels (1:1) or groups (n:m); 50 ms.CFM heartbeat messages test tunnels and trigger protection switching.
OAMNo specific mechanisms; all new Ethernet OAM features can be used; CFM –mandatory for protection switching
Control PlaneZero control plane – main option; NMS-based provisioning systems.GMPLS - Internet draft exists, no implementations known.
Multi-domain support• Mostly a single-domain technology (access for IP/MPLS) • Can be used in multi-domain environment a cording MEF E-NNI spec
Current statusStandardised but immature yet (early releases).Eco-system shrunk after early enthusiasm – but there are several major vendors that support it
Conclusion: worth to trial
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Comprehensive study and demonstrationComprehensive study and demonstration
JRA1 T1 Status: Carrier Class Transport Network Technologies
Next step:
NGN IP
MPLS
Ethernet over MPLS
MPLS-TP
PBB-TE
NGN OTN
Control Plane (GMPLS)
Ethernet
Synchronous Ethernet
Layer 2 routing
NGN OTN
Control Plane (GMPLS)
Further study and testing- OAM.- Protection & Restoration.- Control Plane (GMPLS).- Cost-effectiveness.- Multi-domain implications.
Further study and testing- OAM.- Protection & Restoration.- Control Plane (GMPLS).- Cost-effectiveness.- Multi-domain implications.
Deliverable DJ1.1.1
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JRA1 Task 1 participants
Contributors:
Alberto Colmenero – NORDUnet (Task Leader)Rebecca Corn – DANTEMarcin Garstka – PSNCJac Kloots – SURFNETVictor Olifer – JANETJan Radil – CESNETKrzysztof Stanecki – PSNCSue Tyley – DANTE (Technical writer)
Please check JRA1 Task1 report at: http://www.geant.net/Media_Centre/Media_Library/Pages/Deliverables.aspx
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