1 / 26

BOREAS-Net: Broadband Optical Research Network

BOREAS-Net is a consortium connecting research networks and commercial internet services, with access sites in Kansas City and Chicago.

iras
Download Presentation

BOREAS-Net: Broadband Optical Research 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. BOREAS-Net : Broadband Optical Research, Education and Sciences Network David Farmer Joint Techs February 12, 2007

  2. National RON Map

  3. What is BOREAS-Net? • Boreas is the Greek god of the north wind • BOREAS-Net stands for: Broadband Optical Research Education And Science Network (yes, the acronym was reverse-engineered!) • A consortium formed to build a RON • See web page at http://www.boreas.net

  4. What is BOREAS-Net? • Connects members to the national research nets in Chicago and Kansas City • Connects to other RONs especially in Chicago with CIC OmniPoP and StarLight • Also connects to more affordable and diverse commercial Internet services

  5. Who belongs to BOREAS-Net? • The founding members of BOREAS-Net are: • Iowa State University • University of Iowa • University of Minnesota • University of Wisconsin – Madison

  6. BOREAS-Net Design

  7. Access Sites

  8. Access Sites • Kansas City – Colo in I2 Suite at Level3 • Same facility as NLR • Chicago – Colo in StarLight and in I2 Suite at Level3 (900 N Kinsbury, AKA 600 W Chicago) • NLR is at 111 N Canal (facility was space and power limited) • CIC has dark fiber between sites

  9. Access Sites • Two Access Nodes on each participating Campus • Diverse fiber paths to campus and diverse Nodes on campus • Extra Access Nodes • Eau Claire, Milwaukee, St. Paul

  10. Multihaul Network • A single network collapsing traditional Access, Metro, Regional, and Long-haul requirements and technologies • Hay!!! That’s us… • http://lw.pennnet.com/articles/article_display.cfm?article_id=256523

  11. Transport Services • 10G Ethernet Wave Transport • 10G SONET Wave Transport • 1G & 2 X 1G Ethernet Sub-Wave Transport • SONET Sub-Wave Transport (by special request only)

  12. Creating BOREAS-Net • CIOs agreed in principle on Nov. 1, 2004 to create a RON • A technical team was tasked with issuing an RFP for dark fiber • Fiber RFP was issued June 17, 2005 • CIOs agreed to an MOU on Dec. 19, 2005, formally creating BOREAS-Net

  13. Buying Fiber • Wisconsin and Minnesota already owned fiber along the I94 corridor • BOREAS-Net purchased 455 miles of fiber from Wiltel(Level3) on Dec 21, 2005 • BOREAS-Net purchased 391 miles of fiber from FiberLink Mar 2, 2006 • Some laterals were also purchased for Ames,IA from McLeod and ICN

  14. Buying Hardware • Optronics RFP released Mar 3, 2006 • Contract with Infinera signed Oct. 9, 2006 • First hardware shipped Dec 4, 2006 • First segment install started Dec 13, 2006 • All segments accepted Jan 24, 2007

  15. Current Status • 1,544 miles of fiber are lit with Infinera DWDM gear • 14 add-drop nodes and 22 amplifiers • Fiscal Agent University of Minnesota • NOC services by WiscNet • Field service contract with Level3

  16. Costs • Capital Costs: $6.3M • Dual nodes on major campuses added about 10% • Annual Operating Costs about $1.0M

  17. Next steps • Get Lab running • Includes; Terminal Node, Add-Drop Node, Three-Way Node, and Amplifier Node • Finish Maintenance Network • Build circuits • Determine procedures for operation

  18. Lessons Learned • Fiber Connectors • Fiber Cleaning • Fiber Testing

  19. Fiber Connectors • Frequently older fiber on campuses has hand-polished connections. Don’t even try using these. Either splice through them (if possible) or at least splice on new UPC pigtails.

  20. Fiber Cleaning • Be prepared to become obsessive about fiber cleaning. A dirty connection can cut transmitted power in half. That’s more than the design tolerance for most DWDM installations, and even a dB or two can matter a lot in many cases.

  21. Fiber Testing • Hire a professional fiber testing outfit to test your fiber BEFORE you order your hardware. They know more about fiber than you will ever hope to know. They can be an enormous help in finding and eliminating problem spots.

  22. Future Directions • Work with Northern Tier • Maybe eventually all the way to Seattle • Maybe to Winnipeg • Fiber option to Omaha • Maybe some day a ring to Kansas City • Expand foot print within Primary States • Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin

  23. Pat Christian (Project Mgr) Robert Davis Frank DiGravina David Farmer Jay Ford Bill Jensen Paul Lustgraaf Mike McQuiston UW–Madison UIowa UMinn UMinn UIowa UW–Madison IAState IAState Technical Team

  24. Steve Cawley Steve Flaegle John Kingland Ron Kraemer UMinn UIowa IAState UW-Madison BOG – BOREAS Operator Group(the CIOs)

  25. Thank You Questions?

More Related