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OIF Challenges: Enabling Broadband On-Demand Services

OIF Challenges: Enabling Broadband On-Demand Services. A genda. Service Drivers, Challenges and Transformations in Network Infrastructure OIF Development and Test of Interoperable Networking Solutions OIF 2009 Worldwide Interoperability Demonstration.

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OIF Challenges: Enabling Broadband On-Demand Services

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  1. OIF Challenges: Enabling Broadband On-Demand Services

  2. Agenda • Service Drivers, Challenges and Transformations in Network Infrastructure • OIF Development and Test of Interoperable Networking Solutions • OIF 2009 Worldwide Interoperability Demonstration

  3. Service Drivers, Challenges and Transformations in Network Infrastructure

  4. Service Drivers and Challenges • Users demanding lower cost, converged and personalized services • Broadband services with high performance, feature richness, dynamic control and reliability • Complexity in networks, services, vendors and markets • Increasing network diversity in: • Industry standards • Carrier models • Product architectures • Need for vendor innovation while preserving interoperability

  5. Optical Network TransformationA Work in Progress • Key drivers • Convergence • Operational efficiency • Availability Data CapacityFeature richness • Key drivers • Service assurance • Bandwidth optimization • Automation • Key drivers • Capacity • Performance • Reliability Transparent photonics NG-SONET/SDH ASON/GMPLS ROADM SONET/SDH rings DCS WDM pt-to-pt Packet-based Transport ASON/GMPLS OTN Tunable ROADM Past Today Future • Much attention is on emerging technology, yet carriers must deliver services over diverse networks based on legacy, contemporary and cutting edge technologies. • There is no universal convergence layer or technology that meets everyone’s requirements

  6. DCN DCN ASON Architecture and OIF IAs • ASON architecture addresses the transport network evolution • Heterogeneous network topologies, technologies, and applications • Diverse internal control plane protocols, including management-based • Separation of transport and control planes • OIF complements the work of optical standards bodies • Implementation Agreements (IAs) based on standards • Interoperability testing and prototyping of solutions Management plane Domain A Domain B Domain C Client Client Control plane E-NNI E-NNI UNI UNI NM • Each domain can use either management or control plane internally • Control plane topology can differ from transport plane topology Transport plane NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE • Transport technology and topology can differ in each domain

  7. OIF Development and Test of Interoperable Networking Solutions

  8. OIF UNI and E-NNI Development * E-NNI does not directly support Ethernet bearer interfaces but can carryEthernet services adapted into SONET/SDH or OTN signals

  9. L1-TDM SONET/SDH L1-TDM OTN/ODUk L0-Lambda OTN/OCh/WSON L2-Packet MPLS-based/PBB/ PBB-TE Control Plane EvolutionExtending the Control Plane for Emerging Technologies

  10. Domain A Domain B Domain C Client Client E-NNI E-NNI UNI UNI NE NE NE NE NE NE Service Layer N Call/Connection Flow (e.g. IP, Ethernet) Transport Layer N-1 Call/Connection Flow (e.g. SDH) Transport Layer N-2 Call/Connection Flow (e.g. OTN) OIF Multi-layer Control Plane ModelGeneric Technology Layers with Recursion • Edge nodes typically provide layer adaptation and multi-layer control plane. Core nodes typically operate in single server layer • Supports non-disruptive modification (BW or VLAN IDs) to meet varied demands of client while in-service • Versatile – supports only layers needed (e.g Eth-VCAT-SDH, packet over WDM) yet supports multiple layer adaptations • Server layer call/connection signaling flow completes before client layer

  11. OIF Multi-layer Control Plane ExampleEthernet Services over Connection-Oriented Packet Transport Domain A Domain B Domain C Client Client E-NNI E-NNI UNI UNI NE NE NE NE NE NE Client Ethernet Layer Call Provider Bridge Layer Call Control Plane Layering Packet Transport Layer Call (e.g. MPLS-based, PBB-TE) Ethernet Virtual Circuit (EVC) Transport Plane Layering Provider VLAN L2 Tunnel

  12. OIF 2009 Worldwide Interoperability Demonstration

  13. 2007 2008 2006 2005 2004 2003 2001 2002 Putting the Pieces TogetherOIF Implementation Agreements and Interoperability Demos OIF Implementation Agreements ASON/GMPLS Interworking UNI 1.0r2 signaling E-NNI 1.0 signaling UNI 2.0 signaling E-NNI 2.0 signaling UNI 1.0 signaling E-NNI 1.0 routing 2009 Lab Location Trade Show New Capabilities Tested UNH SUPERCOMM Draft UNI 1.0 UNH OFC Draft E-NNI signaling & routing Global – 7 carriers SUPERCOMM CP-enabled SONET/ SDH data plane Ethernet over SONET/SDH data plane-only test (GFP/VCAT/LCAS) Global – 7 carriers SUPERCOMM Draft extensions for CP-enabled EPL Data plane-only test of EVPL and ELAN Global – 7 carriers ECOC EPL services via pre-IA UNI 2.0 and E-NNI 2.0 over SONET/SDH transport layers CP failure recovery BW modification CP neighbor discovery • Global – 7 carriers • Worldwide Interop • EVPL services via UNI 2.0 and E-NNI 2.0 over diverse transport layers • Packet (PBB-TE and MPLS-based) • SONET/SDH • OTN • CP-based restoration OIF Networking Interoperability Demonstrations

  14. Verizon OIF Global Topology 2009 USA Europe Asia Alcatel-Lucent Ciena Ericsson Marben Products Alcatel-Lucent Ciena Ericsson Marben Products NEC Corporation of America KDDI Deutsche Telekom Alcatel-Lucent Ciena Huawei Marben Products Nokia Siemens Networks Orangs Labs Alcatel-Lucent Marben Products NEC Corporation of America NTT Ciena Marben Products Sycamore Tellabs ZTE Alcatel-Lucent Huawei ZTE Telecom Italia Alcatel-Lucent Ericsson Tellabs China Telecom

  15. OIF 2009 Worldwide Demonstration FeaturesHigh Level Technical Objectives • EVPL over diverse transport technologies • End-end domain-based service restoration • Simultaneous control plane and data plane testing • Wide range of signal formats and data rates • Switched connections (with UNI-C) and soft permanent connections (no UNI-C, triggered by management device) • Connections set up over both pre-provisioned and dynamically established server layer trails • Graceful and forced teardown • Vendor I-NNI interworking with UNI 2.0 and E-NNI 2.0 • Test buildup from lab-local to regional to global scope

  16. OIF 2009 Worldwide Demonstration FeaturesExamples of Detailed Technical Objectives • EVPL over connection-oriented packet transport • Uni- and bi-directional connections • EPL, EVPL type 1, 2, 3 and E-tree • Packet-based forwarding, multiplexing, QoS, OAM and protection (both failure-induced and user-initiated) • Restoration • Triggers: node failure, inter/intra domain link failure, user command • E-NNI based restoration flow using upstream Notify message and make-before-break process • Intra-domain or end-end multi-domain restoration • Failed resource identification to support diverse restoration • Signaling to coordinate traffic roll between working and protection paths

  17. OIF Worldwide Interoperability Model OIF IAs, Industry Standards Operational Experience Vendor Equipment OIF Worldwide Interoperability Demonstrations Technology Maturity Carrier Lab Resources Lessons Learned Global SCN

  18. Thank You Please visit the OIF booth for more information and a live demonstration (booth 102)

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