International Connectivity as of June 1997
Host Count as of July 1999Source: Internet Software Consortium (http://www.isc.org/)
CN 62,935 MY 53,447 TH 27,690 IN 17,979 ID 15,766 PH 9,942 PK 3,027 LK 983 : :
JP 2,072,529
AU 907,637
TW 424,209
KR 260,146
NZ 182,021
SG 103,862
HK 98,183
TOTAL 56,218,330
Outline
I’d like to focus on the networking for the intra-regional connectivity within Asia(-Pacific) region available for the HENP collaboration, but before going into it I’ll talk on the inter-regional connectivity first.
Inter-regional connectivity– general A&R– HENP dedicated
Intra-regional connectivity– HENP dedicated– APAN
Summary
Inter-regional connectivity between Asia(-Pacific) region
and the other regions
Three ways to get the connectivity to outside the region
Hub model– A region has a hub through which each national A&R
network gets the outside connectivity. The hub has big line(s) to the other regions.
Parallel model– Each national A&R network in a region has its own
line(s) to the other regions. Hybrid model
– Some national A&R networks have their own lines, while the others depend on a hub.
Asia is in Hybrid model. Similar to Europe, where many countries
have their own lines to US, many countries in Asia(-Pacific) have also their own lines to US.
General A&R lines to US JP-US NACSIS ~300Mbps
IMnet-HPIIS ~100Mbps AU-US AARnet ~60Mbps KR-US KREN ~45Mbps
KREOnet ~6Mbps TW-US TAnet ~45Mbps SG-USSingaREN ~14Mbps HK-US ~12Mbps CN-US CSTnet ~10Mbps
CERnet ~3Mbps TH-USCAT ~8Mbps
NECTEC ~2Mbps
NACSIS US/EU line
KEK NACSIS
Teleglobe.Net
San Jose
STAR TAP
Chicago
Default Internet: ATM switch
ESnet Router
HEPnet-J Router
LBNL
NewYork London30Mbps 15Mbps
300Mbps
30MbpsTEN155’sMBS
as of today
10Mbps
Abilene
CERNESnet Router
4Mbps
TEN155’sIP Service
Frankfurt
10Mbps
CERN Router
TokyoKyoto
270Mbps
Inter-regional bandwidths dedicated to HENP
•~10Mbps for KEK’s peering with ESnet at STARTAP•~10Mbps for KEK’s peering with ESnet at San Jose
-waiting for an LBNL-SanJose circuit (a T3 circuit)•~5Mbps for KEK’s peering with CERN
-CERN-London is configured in TEN-155’s MBS•(~5Mbps for KEK’s peering with DESY)
ATM-PVC’s configured in the NACSIS US/EU line
These are guaranteed bandwidths configured in the general A&R networks.
existing today
CERN
ESnetKEK
~5Mbps
~10Mbps
inter-regional ATM PVC’s dedicated to HENP
NACSIS’s upgrade NACSIS’s lines are upgraded once per year.
– Domestic lines: every April The biggest backbone will be 405Mbps in April 2000.
– International lines: every October NACSIS’s future prospect
– Aggregated bandwidth to US/EU will be doubled every year:
50Mbps(1997), 150Mbps(1998), 300Mbps(1999), 600Mbps(2000), 1.2Gbps(2001), 2.5Gbps(2002), 5Gbps(2003), 10Gbps(2004), 20Gbps(2005), …
Intra-regional connectivity in Asia(-Pacific) region
(international connectivity within the region)
As the inter-regional bandwidths
for HENP are becoming rather big, the intra-regional connectivity for HENP is becoming more and more important, especially in Asia.
Intra-regional lines dedicated to HENP
KEK-IHEP (Beijing, China) KEK-BINP (Novosibirsk, Russia) KEK-AcademiaSinica (Taipei, Taiwan)
KEK-IHEP link history
till July 1994, KEK-IHEP traffic was routed via SLAC-IHEP satellite circuit.
in July 1994, KEK-IHEP 64Kbps line was created. – began as a satellite circuit temporarily and replaced by a fiber
circuit in April 1995– SLAC-IHEP link was taken over by this line
upgraded to 128Kbps in October 1998. another upgrade is being studied. routing
– default route for all the outside connection from IHEP
KEK-BINP link history
till March 1998, KEK-BINP traffic was routed via DESY-BINP satellite circuit
in March 1998, KEK-BINP 128Kbps line, a fiber circuit (partly microwave), was created.
in September 1999, Moscow area (ITEP, MSU, …) was connected with KEK via BINP.
upgrade of the line is being studied. routing
– BINP-ESnet, MSU/ITEP-KEK/HEPnet-J
KEK-AcademiaSinica link history
till January 1999, KEK-Taiwan traffic was routed via US.
in January 1999, KEK-AcademiaSinica 128Kbps line was created.
upgrade of the line to a FrameRelay circuit (1.5Mbps port, 512Kbps CIR) is being prepared.
routing– TAnet-AcademiaSinica-KEK-SINET-IMnet
APAN
Asia Pacific Advanced Network Consortium– http://www.apan.net
started in June 1997 KEK will be directly connected with IMnet/
APAN on 1 March 2000.
Intra-regional APAN Lines1999.10.1apan-sec
CountriesJP-AUJP-CN
JP-HKJP-IDJP-KRJP-MYJP-LKJP-PH
JP-SG
JP-TH
JP-VNKR-SGMY-SG
Bandwidth(Mbps) 1.5 1.5 1.5 1.5 1.5
8 1.5 1.5
0.75 1.5 2
1.5 1.5
2 1.5
2 2
AvailabilityNow
1999-20001999-2000
NowNowNow
1999-20002000(?)
Now2000(?)
Now1999-2000
NowNow
1999-2000NowNow
NetworkRWCP-ACSysAI3(CSTNET)SINET(CERNET)AI3(HKUST)AI3(ITB)APIIAI3(USM)AI3(UC)MAFFIN(PHNET)AI3(SICU)APIIAI3AI3(AIT)SINET(NECTEC)AI3(IIT)APIITEMAN (SingaREN)
AUPResearch & EducationResearch & EducationResearch & EducationResearch & EducationResearch & EducationAPII ProjectResearch & EducationResearch & EducationResearch & EducationResearch & EducationAPII ProjectResearch & EducationResearch & EducationResearch & EducationResearch & EducationAPII ProjectResearch
APII Asia Pacific Information Infrastructure, a project initiated by APEC– http://www.crl.go.jp/t/team1/APII
AI3 Asian Internet Interconnection Initiative– http://www.ai3.wide.ad.jp
Countries in Asia(-Pacific) requiring connectivity for the HENP collaboration– JP, KR, CN, TW, PH, SG, IN, ID, VN, TH, RU, MY,
AU HENP lines
– KEK to CN, RU, TW APAN lines
– APAN_Tokyo to KR, PH, TH, SG, AU (now)
to VN, MY, ID (coming)
APAN looks very useful for getting the intra-regional connectivity for HENP.
APAN is not automatically open to all the A&R community. It is per project base. Each project wishing to use the APAN needs to be approved by its committee in advance.
A project application was submitted with the project name “ACFA network” in January 2000.
It is being approved by the APAN committee.
IP multicast with satellite Satellite and data broadcasting might be
interesting especially in Asia. Using IP multicasting with usual TV
antennas and TV tuners for receiving data can be very interesting. It can be cheap and can be used everywhere in Asia.
Data transfer rate is ~30Mbps with usual TV antennas, and can be ~1Gbps with expensive earth stations.
ACFA-NWG
Members from China, Korea, India, Thailand, and Japan
Summary
Compared with the inter-regional connectivity for HENP which is becoming bigger and bigger, the intra-regional connectivity in Asia(-Pacific) still remains poor.
We are trying to improve it – by utilizing APAN and – by upgrading the HENP dedicated lines.