IP Networking New technologies
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Transcript IP Networking New technologies
Some main trends in networking and
related open problems
Prof. Daniel Kofman
ENST-Telecom Paris
[email protected]
TAU, Israel, 2004
Content
General
context
Core area networks
Fix and mobile access, and sensor networks
Traffic engineering
Euro-NGI presentation
Open discussions
Internet, historical perspective
First generation, before 1992
Research network
Telnet, Email, File Transfer
Low traffic, low number of users
Second generation , the ’90s
Commercial services, ISPs
Web and basic peer-to-peer
Traffic and number of networks explosion
Mainly Best Effort approach and simple engineering rules
Main issue: capacity (network and addressing)
Third generation, from now on
Services evolution and convergence
Triple play (Internet/Telecom/Media convergence)
Network and services ubiquity, ambient intelligence
New networking architectures are required
New engineering rules are necessary
Towards IP Multiservice Networks
P2P
Grid
Triple
play
Web
VoIP
MmediaoIP
Support of all
services over IP
SERVICES
IP
INFRASTRUCTURE
IP covers the
Technology
diversity
A new organization of the chain of value
Gestion
Contenu
Packaging
Transport
Accès
Terminaux
client
… from
d'uneacompétition
competitionorganisée
organizedpar
perservice
service
sur l'ensemble
over
the whole de
chain
la chaîne
value ...
de valeur ...
Services
Production de
contenus
Production de
contenus
Production de
professionnels
Services domicile
Distribution
E - Médiation
Services
traditionnelle
E - Médiation
Agrégation
A/A&S
Portail
Agrégation
de contenus
Portail
de l'offre
Marketing
A/A&S
de l'offre
de contenus
Agregation
Agrégation
Accès
Transport
Transport
IAP
Access
Accès
Transmission BL
Gestion
de
de
de
l'infrastructure
raccordement abonné
Commutation BL
services
Agrégation
Agrégation
de contenus
Gestion
Client
de contenus
Services mobiles
ServicesMarketing
mobiles
de services
of
services
Bureau
professionnels
Services domicile
client
Management
Home
Area
Network
Mobiles
Terminals
Terminaux
Production de
services
… à un schéma
…towards
a competition
concurrentiel
scheme
organisé
organized
par segment
per activity
d'activité
segment
Source: CSTI
Any service, any time, everywhere
Create New Service
OK
Offered Services
IP centrex
Dist. office
Network Operator
Contracted
Services
Modify Service
Backbone
Customer
Access Network
Customer
Premises
Examples of Internet evolutions
From a data network towards a multiservice-multimedia network
From unicast to multicast
The usage of new lower layer technologies (IP/ATM, IP/SONET,
IP/DWDM, etc.)
From legacy dial-up to ADSL, HFC, WLL, Wi-Fi, FTTx, PLC, satellites,
etc.
From fix to mobile network
From isolation towards service integration with, for example, the
telephony network: NGN architectures
Towards the provisioning of telecommunication services for private
companies: IP VPNs
From software based to hardware based routers architectures (Giga/Tera
routers, flow based routers, etc.)
A very fast evolution of the structure of the traffic requiring new traffic
engineering approaches
The Backbone Evolution, Global View
Different Approaches to Increase
Backbone Capacity
Overlay Networks
R3
R1
R2
IP
C3
C2
C1
C4
ATM
SDH
WDM
Increasing Capacity for IP transport,
Option I: IP over ATM
R
R
R
IP
Customer
Premises
ATM
SDH
Increasing Capacity for IP transport,
Option II: IP over SONET (SDH)
R
R
R
IP
Customer
Premises
SDH
Increasing Capacity for IP transport,
Option III: MPLS
LSR
LSR
LSR
MPLS
SDH
oher
Customer
Premises
LSR
LSR
Switching Capacity, not an issue any
more, but MPLS still needed
LSR
LSR
LSR
MPLS
SDH
(??)
Customer
Premises
• Quality of Service
• Evolved VPN
• Traffic Engineering, Protection
• Multicast
Overlay Networks
R3
R1
R2
IP
C3
C2
C1
C4
ATM
SDH
WDM
Main trends
R3
R1
R2
IP
C3
C2
C1
SDH
C4
ATM
Rapid and Predictable Restoration
Standard Time Division Multiplexing
LSR
IP and ATM integration
Label Swapping Paradigm
G-MPLS
SONET/SDH
Dynamic Allocation and Control?
MPLS
10Gbps
10Gbps
10Gbps
10Gbps
10Gbps
Increasing
Capacity Requirements
10Gbps
OCX
OCX
DWDM
Dynamic Allocation and Control?
Some Interesting problems
Multi-layer
dynamic routing
Multi-layer protection/restoration
Layout optimization under variable traffic
Control and Scheduling in OPS/OBS
From IP over ATM …
IP
ATM
… Towards MPLS over OTN
MPLS
OTN
Required granularity change
The Overlay model
Layers are independent in term of Routing
For instance:
IP routers don’t see physical topology
Physical channels are (semi-)permanent (Static Overlay) or switched
(Dynamic Overlay).
P
T
The Peer model
Equipments of both layers are “peers” w.r.t.
routing and signaling.
Routers “see” physical topology and can open ondemand channels by signaling.
In this example, optical switches don’t necessarily “see”
IP topology but transport IP routing information as IP
opaque information.
Interesting problems
Multi-layer
dynamic routing
Multi-layer protection/restoration
Layout optimization under variable traffic
Control and Scheduling in OPS/OBS
Extension of G-MPLS for multipoint to
multipoint connections
Grooming strategies and
Statistical multiplexing modeling issues
Narrowband access, high aggregation
Broadband access, low aggregation
Realistic costs functions lead to MINLP problems
Given the increase in broadband network access, core
network flows are sporadic and network flows do not
simply add
Hence, need for new statistical models and related
grooming strategies
From LAN ATM towards MAN/WAN
Ethernet
First attempt of technology convergence, pushing ATM from the WAN to the
LAN
Second attempt of technology convergence, pushing Ethernet from LAN to
Access, MAN and WAN
What about the AN and the MAN ?
In order to face the increasing requirements of LANs, ATM was introduced based in the
LANE architecture standardized in 1995 by the ATM Forum
But ATM lost the terminal battle and then, partially as a consequence, the LAN war.
From SDH to NG-SDH
From A-PON to E-PON
Ethernet rings and RPR
ATM based xDSL architectures and
Ethernet based xDSL architectures
UMTS, from R99 ATM towards R5 and beyond: all IP
Ethernet over Metro WDM
Etc.
Requirement for a control plane: G-MPLS, L2LSPs and FA-MAs
Requirement for new equipment architectures
Generic / Hybrid Switches
Design of the switching fabric scheduler
Capacity optimization vs QoS guarantees
IP Transport Overview: Overlay
Networks
Applications
IP
Ethernet
ATM
SDH
WDM
The Access Network
Technologies for the Access Network
Access Networks Evolution
Context
New technologies and regulatory conditions
xDSL and
Unbundling of the local loop
HFC-Hybrid Fiber Coax
802.11 and WiFi, 802.16 and WiMax
Satellites (LEO/MEO/GEO)
3rd Generation and beyond Mobile Systems
Power Line Communication (PLC)
FTTx, PON, Metro WDM
Next Generation SDH rings
Ethernet rings
Historical non competing operators would like to
compete on every service on every market.
Main issue: multi-technology integration
3G and beyond Mobile Networks
Cell capacity optimization and fairness in
HDR/HSDPA networks
Back
to TDMA
Considering traffic evolution increases the capacity of the cells
Admission control and scheduling
Opportunistic policies
Transport protocols for wireless and mobile networks
Horizontal integration, All IP mobility
Ubiquity,
vertical handover and roaming
Network Architecture Evolution,
Technology Integration, Network Control
Horizontal
integration
From extremely small to immensely big
Sensor networks, PAN, Ad-hoc networks, access to
infrastructure networks
– The IP networking model is no longer applicable
Ubiquity, Mobility, Context Awareness, Location Based Services
Vertical roaming
Seamless interworking and handover, transparent and dynamic
adaptation of the used technology
End
to End services availability in a Multi-domain
context
Network Architecture Evolution,
Technology Integration, Network Control
Vertical
Integration
Multi-layer
networks
Unified control and management planes
Multi-layer routing, protection, restoration, etc.
Integrated
design of physical, MAC, routing and
upper layers including innovative air interfaces,
optical packet/burst switching, etc.
Services Overlays
Service planes and related middlewares
P2P, Grids, others
Sensor Networks
Deployment
optimization
Coverage,
connectivity and lifetime optimization
Heterogeneous sensor networks
Integrated
Coverage
Enhancing
level 2 and level 3 design
under routing constraints
used models by including physical
and MAC layers constraints
Services overlays
Optimal
and fair resources allocation in P2P
systems
Optimal inter-working between P2P and CDN
systems
Traffic Engineering for IP
networks
Traffic Engineering : Introduction
Various time scales
Physical Resources Planning
Layouts and virtual topologies design
Load sharing
Routing (e.g. QoS sensitive routing)
Admission control
Flow and congestion control
Scheduling and buffer management
Resource Oriented Vs. Traffic Oriented
Trend: Flow aware networking (FAN)
The traffic evolution at the various time scales became very
difficult to predict
Thus, there is a requirement for measurement based traffic
engineering approaches
Different approaches has to be applied to different families of
traffic but the classification has to remain simple
Streaming, elastic long, elastic short
DiffServ requires a complicated traffic engineering to be
efficient
Intserv do not scale
Requirement for other approaches: Flow aware Networking
Flow aware networking and cross-protect
Traffic Engineering : Introduction
Various time scales
Physical Resources Planning
Layouts and virtual topologies design
Load sharing
Routing (e.g. QoS sensitive routing)
Admission control
Flow and congestion control
Scheduling and buffer management
Resource Oriented Vs. Traffic Oriented
Content
General
context
Core area networks
Fix and mobile access, ad-hoc and sensor
networks
Traffic engineering
Euro-NGI presentation
Open discussions
Euro-NGI
57
institutions, 173 researchers, more than 300
PhD students, 18 countries
Academy
and industry
See www.eurongi.org for the list
Leader: GET-Telecom Paris
European
Commission Contribution:
5 000 000 Euros (10% of the total budget)
For
the first 3 years
Starting
Date: December 1st, 2003
Organization of Research Activities
Joint Research Activities: 6
JRA and 25 WPs for which
Specific workshops
Advanced tools for
communication and sharing of
information
Management Committees in
charge of controlling that
integration is achieved
Architectural Domains
Core
Fixed
Access
Mobile
IP
Services
Access Networking Overlays
Network Architecture Evolution, Technology Integration,
Control, Managing the diversity
Traffic Engineering, Traffic Management, Congestion
Control and End to End QoS
Optimisation of Protected Multi
-Layer Next Generation
Networks: Topology, Layout, Flow and Capacity Design
Experimentation and Validation Through Platforms
Modeling, Quantitative Methods and Measurements
Socio-Economic Aspects of the Next Generation Internet
Research Domains
Integration and
rationalization of research
efforts
Large working groups have
been created
Workshops have been
scheduled
The field for cross fertilization
between activities and
workpackages has been
prepared
Technology explosion, examples
Core Networks and MAN: Optical Packet/Burst/Flow
Switching, WDM, NG-SDH, Ethernet, IP over OBS, ...
Wired Access Networks: xDSL, HFC, FTTx, PONs,
Metro-DWDM, PLC,
WL / Mobile Networks: WLL,, Wi-Fi, Wi-Max, AdHoc, Sensor, Satellite (constellations), GSM/GPRS,
UMTS, 4G, etc.
Network protocols and architectures: IPv6, Mobile IP,
Cellular IP, Transport protocols (TCP optimization
for mobile channels, etc.), MPLS, G-MPLS, etc.
Services infrastructures: Services overlays, Peer-topeer, Grid, IP telephony/multimedia, LBS/CBS,
Midlewares, etc.
JRA.1 Network Architecture Evolution,
Technology Integration, Network Control
Horizontal
integration
From extremely small to immensely big
Sensor networks, PAN, Ad-hoc networks, access to
infrastructure networks
– The IP networking model is no longer applicable
Ubiquity, Mobility, Context Awareness, Location Based Services
Vertical roaming
Seamless interworking, transparent and dynamic adaptation of
the used technology
End
to End services availability in a Multi-domain
context
JRA.1 Network Architecture Evolution,
Technology Integration, Network Control
Vertical
Integration
Multi-layer
networks
Unified control and management planes
Multi-layer routing, protection, restoration, etc.
Integrated
design of physical, MAC and upper layers
including innovative air interfaces, optical
packet/burst switching, etc.
Services Overlays
Service planes and related middlewares
P2P, Grids, others
JRA.2 Traffic Engineering, Traffic Management,
Congestion Control and End to end QoS
Mechanisms and protocols for controlled bandwidth sharing
Traffic management in a multi-provider context
Admission control, Implicit admission control, resources allocation,
services differentiation, QoS and pricing, etc.
Traffic engineering for a cost effective network
Evolution of Congestion Control protocols, beyond TCP
Interaction with MAC layers (e.g. in wireless networks)
Control algorithms in networks with variable-capacity links.
Active queue management
Per-flow aware networks
Routing in multilayer networks, constrain based routing, load sharing,
layout optimization, etc.
QoS in multi-service wireless networks
Application of techniques for congestion control, traffic management
and traffic engineering to the specific context of multiservice wireless
networks: CDMA, WLAN (802.11x), WiMax, ad hoc and sensor
networks.
Planning of new generation celular networks and of hybrid wireless
access networks
JRA.3 Optimisation of Robust Multi-Layer NGIs:
Topology, Layout, Protection, Flow and Capacity Design
Optimisation
of protected multi-layer core
networks: topology, layout, flow and capacity
design
Optimisation of protected access networks
topology, layout, flow and capacity design
Study of methods for achieving network
resilience/robustness
Development of a European Network Design
Tool for Next Generation Internet
JRA.4 Experimentation and Validation
Through Platforms
Integration and sharing of Platforms
Experimental
European wide IP over WDM, MPLS,
IPv6 network deployment
Evaluation of innovative services: Grids, virtual
reality based CAD, Telemedecine, etc.
Software-based
Test-Beds Development for
Traffic Engineering Experimentation
Distributed
European
emulation of next generation networks
wide Measurement Platforms
JRA.5 Modelling, Quantitative Methods
and Measurements
IP traffic
characterization, measurements and
statistical methods
Dynamics of networks under new traffic
paradigms
Spatial network modelling and stochastic
geometry
Networks optimization and control
Numerical and analytic methodologies
JRA.6 Socio-Economic Aspects
Quality
of Service from the users perspective
and feed-back mechanisms for quality
control
Payment and cost models for Next Generation
Internet
Security Spreading of excellence
Content
General
context
Core area networks
Fix and mobile access, ad-hoc and sensor
networks
Traffic engineering
Services overlays
Euro-NGI presentation
Open discussions