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Universal Inbox: Personal Mobility and Service Mobility in an Integrated Network

Friends & family calls. Calls during business hours. Office Phone. Cell Phone. E-mail access via phone. Home Phone. Calls in the evening. E-Mail. Important e-mail headers. Anonymous Calls. Pager. Voice Mail.

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Universal Inbox: Personal Mobility and Service Mobility in an Integrated Network

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  1. Friends & family calls Calls during business hours Office Phone Cell Phone E-mail access via phone Home Phone Calls in the evening E-Mail Important e-mail headers Anonymous Calls Pager Voice Mail Universal Inbox: Personal Mobility and Service Mobility in an Integrated Network Bhaskaran Raman ICEBERG, EECS, U.C.Berkeley

  2. Design Decisions / Lessons Learned Monday 21 August 2000 10:15 - 10:35 Top-level design decisions Rationale for IP-based approach Why an infrastructure based approach? Leveraging cluster-computing environments: Ninja vSpace 10:35 - 12:00 Design of the ICEBERG components and capabilities Signaling protocol for flexible multi-party communication Service creation model Clearing House for resource reservation 13:00 - 15:00 Design of the ICEBERG components and capabilities Automatic Path Creation service Naming service Preference Registry and Preference Manager Personal Activity Coordinator Universal Inbox for personal mobility and service mobility

  3. Outline • Aug 21, 2000, Monday • “Universal Inbox” set of capabilities • Goals and how they are achieved in ICEBERG • Extensibility and Scalability properties illustrated • Aug 22, 2000, Tuesday • Details of redirection mechanism • Example of extension to the Universal Inbox • Access to the Jukebox Service • APIs for extension • Programmer’s perspective • Service provider’s perspective • Details of scaling measurements

  4. Motivating Scenario

  5. Problem Statement • Requirement • Service integration and personalization • Goals • Any-to-any capability • Extensibility: ease of adding new end-points • Scalability: global scale operation • Personal mobility and Service mobility Communication devices Communication services

  6. Universal Inbox: What is it? Speech-to-Text Speech-to-Voice Attached-Email Call-to-Pager/Email Notification Email-to-Speech All compositions of the above! Universal Inbox Policy-based Location-based Activity-based Universal Inbox: Metaphor for personalized, integrated communication User sees unified, conceptual inbox of incoming communication One of the first applications to drive the design of ICEBERG

  7. Design Principles • Separation of functionality • Separation  independent and reusable components • Reuse  easy extensibility • Shared network services  Economy of scale • Network and device independence • Needed for extensibility to new devices • Push control towards callee • In current communication networks, caller has control • Callee needs to have control for flexible handling of incoming communication

  8. Use of ICEBERG Components • Infrastructure components for network integration • Components in the Internet: open model, can leverage proxy and cluster architectures (Ninja) • Identification and separation of components • Name Mapping Service (NMS) • Automatic Path Creation service (APC) • Preference Registry (PR) • ICEBERG Access Points (IAP) to proxy for communication end-points • Advantages of core infrastructure components • Reusable pieces; Extensibility is easier: just add to the piece that requires extension

  9. Use of ICEBERG Components (Continued) • Automatic Path Creation (APC) service • Generic any-to-any data transformation • Provides data-type independence • Preference registry • Mechanism for ubiquitous redirection • Achieves the “control to callee” design principle • Naming service • Mapping between different device identities • Provides device name independence • ICEBERG Access Points (IAPs) • Provide network independence

  10. Naming Service 510-642-8248 UID: hohltb@cs.berkeley.edu 2 1 Preference Registry 3 hohltb: Prefers Desktop Automatic Path Creation Service MediaManager Mail Access Service Barbara’s Desktop Bhaskar’s Cell-Phone Illustrating Extensibility

  11. 2 1 3 MediaManager Mail Access Service Bhaskar’s PSTN Phone Naming Service 800-MEDIA-MGR UID: mediamgr@cs.berkeley.edu Barbara’s Desktop Preference Registry mediamgr: Cluster locn. Bhaskar’s Cell-Phone Automatic Path Creation Service

  12. 2 3 MediaManager Mail Access Service Bhaskar’s PSTN Phone Naming Service 510-642-8248 UID: hohltb@cs.berkeley.edu Barbara’s Desktop Preference Registry hohltb: Prefers Desktop Bhaskar’s Cell-Phone 1 Automatic Path Creation Service

  13. Tel. No:s Pager no:s Email-addrs IP-Addrs Extensibility • Name-space • Hierarchical • New name-spaces added by creating a new sub-tree at root • Automatic Path Creation service • Operators can be plugged in • Old operators are reusable • Set of IAPs • New IAPs can be added independent of existing ones • All old IAPs are reachable from the new one IAP IAP IAP IAP

  14. HTML Email GSM audio Speech synthesizer PCM encoder GSM encoder HTML text extractor Plain text PCM audio Leveraging Extensibility in the APC This extensibility translates to ease of end-point addition in the Universal Inbox

  15. Implementation Experience • Extensibility • Universal Inbox set of features extended to lot of device and service end-points • Scalability • Components tested for latency and scaling bottlenecks

  16. Extensions to the Universal Inbox Step-wise addition of eight different devices and services to the system Each step involves addition of an IAP – for the device/network or the service Each step integrates the device/service with ALL existing ones

  17. Extensions to the Universal Inbox

  18. Incremental addition results in incremental addition of functionality and necessary operators of ICEBERG access-point Extensions to the Universal Inbox

  19. Implementation Experience with Extension • Examples of extension: • IAP for Ninja Jukebox • Allow service access from voice-enabled end-points • ~ 700 lines of Java • Also required addition of operators to APC service: MPEG-3 to PCM • IAP for MediaManager • Allow access to the MediaManager service • Similar code-size and effort • No other component had to be touched • Operators for G.723 • Getting codec to work required effort • But, adding to APC was ~ two hours of work ( simple API for adding operators)

  20. Lessons learned: What was easy? • Extension to include a new communication service or device • Build an IAP • Add appropriate operators Effort involved in building a service is independent of the number of networks it is made available on

  21. Scalability Analysis • Shared infrastructure components  scaling and provisioning concerns • Would like to • Answer provisioning questions • Identify scaling bottlenecks • Three shared core components are: • APC • Preference Registry • Naming service

  22. Scalability Analysis: APC • One round of performance optimization • Originally, operators were unix processes and one would run for each path • Now, operators can be shared across paths • Performance for the following operators • Null (copies input to output), • Toast (PCM to GSM), Untoast (GSM to PCM), and • G.723 encoder, decoder • Path creation latency and throughput measured as a function of increasing load • 500MHz Pentium-III 2-way multiprocessor running Linux-2.2 with IBM’s JDK 1.1.8

  23. Path Creation:Latency vs. Load Untoast Operator Toast Operator About 50ms latency for path creation

  24. Path Creation:Throughput vs. Load Untoast Operator About 7.2 path creations/sec at a load of 64 simultaneous paths Toast Operator

  25. Calculation of Scaling • On average • 2.8 calls/hour/user • Average duration of calls (path) is 2.6 minutes • Using these • 571 users can be supported by a two-node APC service • Encouraging since the telephone network uses expensive hardware equipment for these transformations (TRAU at the Inter-Working Function) • About 1/4th of this for G.723 decoder • G.723 encoder: heavy-weight

  26. Scalability Analysis: Preference Registry • Uses cluster-based distributed storage for storing preference profiles • Throughput: 55.3 requests/sec (for dummy user preference profiles) • This means about 71,100 users for a single preference registry • Clearly not a scaling bottleneck

  27. Additions to call-setup latency • Universal Inbox’s redirection mechanisms cause extra delay • Preference registry lookup • About 35ms • Path creation at APC • About 50ms • Such latencies may be high for regular call setup • Need to be brought down in the next round of implementation

  28. Related Work: State-of-the-Art • Commercial services • Concentrate on functionality • No any-to-any capability • Research projects • Mobile People Architecture: Personal Proxies • Telephony Over Packet networkS • UMTS • Issues not addressed: • Infrastructure support for network integration • Extensibility • Scalability • Personal mobility + Service mobility

  29. Further Plans • Extend to PCM end-points • PSTN phones, via H.323 gateway • Build IAP for interfacing • Hypothesis: all existing end-points and services should interoperate without modification (e.g., Jukebox, MediaManager, Two way call with Cell-Phone, VoIP, etc.) • Inside department deployment • Make system more usable • Extend to more services and end-points • Scaling and latency issues • Services on vSpace • Leverage cluster-computing features

  30. Summary • Universal Inbox: metaphor for any-to-any communication and service access • Personal mobility • redirection by preference registry • Service mobility • result of the any-to-any capability • Architecture viable for global operation • IAPs can be developed and deployed by independent service providers • Extensibility • Made easy by the separation and reuse of functionality • Open Questions • Security issues • Billing issues

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