1 / 13

Optical + Ethernet: Converging the Transport Network

Optical + Ethernet: Converging the Transport Network. An Overview. Trends. R&E Optical Networks Locally-managed fiber termination points Locally-organized peering relationships Locally-controlled layer-0/1/2 services Ubiquitous Ethernet Most-requested client service interface

hertz
Download Presentation

Optical + Ethernet: Converging the Transport Network

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Optical + Ethernet:Converging the Transport Network An Overview

  2. Trends • R&E Optical Networks • Locally-managed fiber termination points • Locally-organized peering relationships • Locally-controlled layer-0/1/2 services • Ubiquitous Ethernet • Most-requested client service interface • Both point-to-point and virtual-LAN topologies • Apps consuming bandwidth in Ethernet-sized increments • Unit of provisioning 100/1000/10000Mbps • Options: L2 WAN, Pseudowires, Converged

  3. L2 WAN • Classical Bridged Network • Transparent handoff to optical transponders • Switches establish topology at L2 • Deployment issues are many • Wide-area spanning tree, ugh • Limited VLAN tag space, or go 802.1ad/ah • No Traffic Engineering, at mercy of STP Optical Core = L2 switch, 802.1q/ad/ah = OADM, transponding only = Ethernet service

  4. Pseudowires • L2 Pseudowires over IP/MPLS Core • Ethernet encapsulated in IP at PE routers • Transport via IP/MPLS core, over optical WAN • VPLS-enabled Control Plane • Full mesh of MPLS LSPs, PE-to-PE • BGP/LDP assigns 802.1q flows to LSPs • Optical layer setup manually or via GMPLS IP/MPLS/Optical = PE routers, MPLS + 802.1Q = Multi-tenant unit (MTU) = OADM, transponding only = Ethernet service

  5. Pseudowires (cont’d) • Benefits • If IP/MPLS already built out, service type is additive • Update IP/MPLS PEs and MTUs with VPLS functionality; software for signaling, possible fw/hw for L2-in-IP encapsulation • Issues • Several distinct control mechanisms • Manual or GMPLS control plane in optical transport • IP/MPLS between PEs to establish full mesh of tunnels • LDP/BGP between PE client ports, to map pseudowires to tunnels • Management complexity • How to coordinate indications/actions/repairs across mechanisms? • Multiple encapsulations • Ethernet, into IP, into perhaps something else, into optical, and out again • Many moving parts • Control planes are complex enough, without having three of them

  6. Converged • Converged Optical + Ethernet • OADMs are adding L2 functionality • Ethernet client interface, Optical transport • Unified Control Method • Optical service established via GMPLS • L2 tunnel within Optical service, also established via GMPLS (PBB-TE/GELS) Optical Core = OADM + 802.1q/1ad/1ah = Multi-tenant unit (MTU) = Ethernet service

  7. PBB-TE / GELS • GMPLS Control Plane for Ethernet • Ethernet as just another transport technology • VLAN or VLAN+MAC becomes the GMPLS “label” • Labels identify end-to-end path, distributed via signaling • Ethernet services become regular GMPLS tunnels • Integrates Ethernet into GMPLS management framework • Same tools (routing, signaling, pce) used by optical GMPLS • Eliminates need for other control mechanisms (RSTP, etc) • Benefits • Traffic Engineering for Ethernet – explicit control over path • Unified Control – eases coordination among layers • Automation – 802.1ad/ah forwarding tables populated via signaling rather than manually • Two methods: “short-label” and “long-label”

  8. OADM+L2 OADM+L2 OADM+L2 OADM+L2 OADM+L2 OADM+L2 “Short Label” • Hardware • Optical DWDM transport • L2-aware client interfaces • Able to switch L2 frames between ports • Able to swap VLAN tags when transiting ports • Control Plane • Optical tunnels setup via GMPLS; label is Lambda • L2 tunnels also setup via GMPLS; label is VLAN tag • VLAN tag changes along service path – unique per-link only VLAN tag Y VLAN tag Z VLAN tag X = Optical LSP, lambda A = Optical LSP, lambda B = L2 LSP, VLAN X = L2 LSP, VLAN Y + Z = swap Y for Z = add/remove VLAN

  9. OADM+L2 OADM+L2 OADM+L2 OADM+L2 OADM+L2 OADM+L2 “Long Label” • Hardware • Optical DWDM transport • “L2-aware” client interfaces • Able to switch L2 frames between ports • Able to encapsulate MAC-in-MAC (802.1ah) • Control Plane • Optical tunnel setup via GMPLS; label is Lambda • L2 tunnel also setup via GMPLS; label is VLAN + MAC • Local L2 forwarding tables provisioned with VLAN + MAC MAC B VLAN tag Y VLAN tag X MAC A = Optical LSP, lambda A = Optical LSP, lambda B = L2 LSP, VLAN X + MAC A = L2 LSP, VLAN Y + MAC B = forward per VLAN + MAC = add/remove VLAN + MAC

  10. Converged Approach • Benefits • Fewer moving parts • Single element with optical transport and L2 capability • Native transport for most-requested traffic • Single, unified control mechanism across all layers • Unified control via GMPLS • Coexistence with existing 802.nnn infrastructure • No dataplane changes for long-label; ships-in-the-night with regular PBB • Traffic Engineering for Ethernet services • Explicit control over path taken; usual benefits • New deployments achieve greatest benefit; existing IP/MPLS less so • Issues • Short label requires VLAN tag swapping • Older switches may not be capable of doing this • Long label requires carrying 8-byte label in GMPLS signaling • Most implementations carry a 4-byte label; software only

  11. Protocol Details • Signaling L2 Labels • Define short-label, long-label formats • Update label-related protocols objects in RSVP-TE: • Generalized Label, Label Request, Upstream Label, Suggested Label, Acceptable Label Set, Explicit Route, Record Route • TE Routing L2 Labels • Advertise L2 Label availability into OSPF-TE • Range of available VLAN tags (short-label) • VLAN+MAC pairs (long-label); under discussion • Hierarchical LSP setup • Lambda LSP setup establishes optical service • Lambda LSP forms L2SC FA-LSP, populates L2 TE database • L2 LSP paths computed on L2 TE database, established thru FA-LSP

  12. References • IEEE • 802.1d – STP/RSTP (2004) • 802.1q – VLAN • 802.1s – Multi-STP • 802.1ad – PB (Q-in-Q) • 802.1ah – PBB (MAC-in-MAC) • PBB-TE – under discussion • IETF • draft-fedyk-gmpls-ethernet-pbt-01 (GELS)

  13. Thank You wdoonan@advaoptical.com

More Related