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ASCR/ESnet Network Requirements an Internet2 Perspective

ASCR/ESnet Network Requirements an Internet2 Perspective. 2009 ASCR/ESnet Network Requirements Workshop April 15/16, 2009 Richard Carlson -- Internet2 <rcarlson@internet2.edu>. Basic Premise. Large science projects have become, or are becoming, global collaborations

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ASCR/ESnet Network Requirements an Internet2 Perspective

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  1. ASCR/ESnet Network Requirements an Internet2 Perspective 2009 ASCR/ESnet Network Requirements Workshop April 15/16, 2009 Richard Carlson -- Internet2 <rcarlson@internet2.edu>

  2. Basic Premise • Large science projects have become, or are becoming, global collaborations • Multiple investigators • Multiple physical locations • High-Performance infrastructure required to support scientific investigations and collaborations

  3. Reframing the Science needs Question • Conclusion based request • I need 5 Gbps of bandwidth • Science based request • I need to move 2 TBytes in 1 hour • I will move this amount of data once per day • Users need ways to make effective complaints

  4. Current Network Traffic Flows • DoE-SC major funding source for U.S. scientific research • DoE operates specialized instruments and facilities (labs) • Majority of U.S. users located at Universities and other non-Lab sites

  5. Current Network Architecture • ESnet interconnects DoE Labs and peers with national and international partners • Internet2 interconnect regional/state networks and peers with national and international partners • Regional/State networks connect to University campus networks

  6. Internet2 Background • Member organization formed in 1996 • 30 Regional/State network connectors • 211 Universities • 11 Corporate partners • 44 Affiliate members • 60 International partners

  7. Internet2 Management • Member focused, Member led organization • 18 member Board of Trustees • 4 Advisory Councils • Architecture & Operations • Applications, Middleware, and Services • Research • External Relations • All councils have CIO, Scientific Researcher, Regional Network, Industry, and Appointed representatives

  8. Internet2 Strategic Planning Initiative • 2008 – Community lead initiative to develop new strategic plan • http://www.internet2.edu/strategicplanning/ • 4 major goals, 8 strategic statements, 28 action items • 2009 – Strategic implementation plans begin developed

  9. Internet2 Infrastructure

  10. Nodes

  11. Internet2 Collaboration Model • Direct support to member institutions • Indirect support for most funded member lead research projects • Direct collaboration on specific funded research projects

  12. End-to-End Performance Initiative • perfSONAR • International measurement infrastructure collaboration with ESnet, GEANT, and RNP • Currently being developed and deployed • Measurement tools • OWAMP – One-Way Delay • NDT – Advanced host/network diagnostics • BWCTL – Advanced throughput measurement

  13. Middleware and Security • Shibboleth • Multi-institution single sign-on (SSO) service • Grouper • Groups Management toolkit • COmanage • Identity-oriented requirements of common collaboration tools

  14. Current Control Plane Developments • Intra-domain • Currently on the Ciena platform, to be deployed on the Infinera platform in the future • Have an Installed working configuration on the Cienas • Inter-domain • Working with the DICE (Dante, Internet2, Canarie/LHC, ESnet) group • Working on Topology, Path Computation and Scheduling, Signaling, and Lookup Services (think a circuit based DNS) • Web service based communications • Face-to-face meeting every three months and biweekly calls

  15. Photo by Steven S. Wallace

  16. Conclusions • Internet2 is a “Member focused, Member led” organization • Works closely with DOE, NSF and other Fed agencies to support community • Strong collaborations with partners and peers • Comprehensive set of services to support high-performance scientific collaborations

  17. Supplemental Information

  18. Using the Network • Application’s performance should meet your expectations! • 100 MB/s is reasonable • 1000 MB/s is possible • If they don’t you should complain! • But you need to complain effectively if you want the problem fixed

  19. Web Service based E-NNI Routing Topology Exchange Domain Abstraction Varying levels of dynamic information Resource Scheduling Multi-Domain path computation techniques Resource identification, reservation, confirmation Signaling path setup, service instantiation Host Lookup Service Uses DNS pointers

  20. Dynamic Circuit NetworksWeb Service Control Plane Interfaces IDC WS E-NNI Inter-Domain Controller (IDC) WS E-NNI IDC WS I-NNI IF Management System (I-NNI) WS UNI WS UNI WS I-NNI IF WS I-NNI IF MPLS (I-NNI) GMPLS (I-NNI) SONET/TDM (Dataplane) Router(MPLS)/PSC (Dataplane) Ethernet/L2SC (Dataplane) • Web Services provides a mechanism to deal with heterogeneous control planes • inspired by the standards bodies work on control plane protocols, but not just recreating that work at the web service level

  21. Shared IP Network • Juniper routers at 9 locations • 10 Gbps links interconnect routers • 20 Gbps on multiple links as required • Router proxy allows access to current config’s and statistics • Internet2 Observatory provides detailed utilization information

  22. Network Research Example - Phoebus • Phoebus - TCP data flows • File transfers over long distance segments not requiring congestion control • Lead by Martin Swaney at the University of Delaware

  23. Nodes

  24. Dynamic Circuit Network • 21 Ciena Core Director multiplexor sites • Dedicated circuits between 2 points • site-to-site, cluster-to-cluster, or host-to-host • One end-point may be non-Internet2 site • Bandwidth steps from 51 Mbps to 10 Gbps • Short duration (minutes to weeks) • Long duration (weeks to years)

  25. Nodes

  26. Dynamic Circuit Network • Similar to the IP network model, but using different protocols • Connections are one armed • Physical connection • Control Plane Protocols • Create Circuits in seconds for periods of hours to days • Only through the Ciena equipment at the start, eventually evolving to the full platform

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