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JRA3 - Bandwidth on Demand

JRA3 - Bandwidth on Demand. GGF16 Athens, 14 th February 2006 Afrodite Sevasti GRNET. GN2 project. Multi-Gigabit European Academic Network Project funded under FP6 (Research Infrastructures-Integrated Infrastructure Initiative) 31 partners (NRENs, DANTE, TERENA)

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JRA3 - Bandwidth on Demand

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  1. JRA3 - Bandwidth on Demand GGF16 Athens, 14th February 2006 Afrodite Sevasti GRNET

  2. GN2 project • Multi-Gigabit European Academic Network • Project funded under FP6 (Research Infrastructures-Integrated Infrastructure Initiative) • 31 partners (NRENs, DANTE, TERENA) • Total expected budget: 178.643.730 € • EC contribution requested: 93.000.000 € • Duration: 4 years • Combining in a single contract, several activities essential to reinforce research infrastructures and to provide an integrated service at the European level • Networking activities (including consortium management) • Provision of access to transnational users • Joint Research Activities • Scope • Further develops the successful GN1 project which has created the GEANT pan-European network • Specific emphasis on end-to-end provision of services across multiple interconnected networks • Gaining improved understanding of user needs • Direct support and performance monitoring • Migration from IP services to combination of routing and switching, network control, light-paths

  3. Goals of JRA3 in GN2 project • Joint Research Activity • aim for a proof-of-concept and pilot network service for dedicated capacity provisioning • production service during a subsequent project • Streamline the inter-domain setup of ‘lightpaths’ • shorten the provisioning time • reduce the amount of human intervention • Take into account heterogeneity from the beginning • Specify and document the manual procedures • Automate the process step-by-step focus on inter-domain coordination process • Provide northbound interfaces/APIs to applications-middleware

  4. Service Definition • Point-to-point, connection oriented service • Non-contended capacity • Layer 1, 2 • focus on provisioning of a deterministic non-contended bandwidth pipe between two 1Gigabit Ethernet access ports over multiple domains that employ different technologies • Multi-domain and multi-technology • e.g. SDH with GFP, EoMPLS, native Ethernet • Automated provisioning • Advance reservation (scheduled)

  5. Requirements survey • Deliverable DJ3.2.1: GÉANT2 Bandwidth on Demand (BoD) User and Application Survey • disappointing response rate (6 out of 12) • GRID community most responsive • The questionnaire was organized as follows: • General Issues, description of the application • Control Issues, requirements on BoD system and its interfaces • Network Issues, capacity requirements, service duration, etc. • ReIiability Issues, latency, security, restoration, etc. • Other Issues, accounting, participation in a BoD pilot, etc. • RESULTS: • The need for BoD-like services exists today for a (small) number of different communities/projects/users groups • BoD users/applications should be provided with “standardized” interfaces for resource reservations and service monitoring: • Web services approach looks popular • Ability to schedule reservations seems important • Bandwidth requirements range from 10 Mbps to 10 Gbps • A number of the projects/user groups contacted expressed interest in testing a prototype BoD system

  6. State-of-Art survey • Deliverable DJ3.2.2: Initial Review of Technologies Related to the Provision of Bandwidth-on-Demand (BoD) Services • Mainly covers: • Transmission & switching technologies • Control Plane technologies • BW broker implementations • BMP, CATI, DRAC, DRAGON, ODIN, Operax, SBM, Tequila, UCLP • An update is expected during Y2 including: • recent developements in the OIF, IETF • results of the collaboration with other projects related to JRA3 activities (MUPBED, DRAGON, VIOLA, HOPI ...)

  7. Multi-domain provisioning

  8. Service characteristics • Inter-domain: the end user points may be located in different domains • Capacity: The minimum amount of capacity that can be requested will depend on local domain policies and restrictions imposed by the technology used (e.g. SDH granularity) • Point to point: the BoD service provides Point-to-Point services. Point-to-Multipoint may be realized as a set of point-to-point services • Bi-directional: the service is a bi-directional service • Symmetric capacity • Symmetric paths • Advance reservations • Protection

  9. Inter Domain Manager • A set of automated procedures for the required non-technology specific inter-domain negotiations in order to establish an end-to-end non-contended 1 GE bandwidth pipe • Reservation process • Ensure adequate e2e capacity • Ensure technical feasibility (e.g. a common VLAN id along the e2e path) • Capacity reservation scheduling • Path resilience-restoration

  10. Intra-domain provisioning • Manual intra-domain configurations and provisioning processes for the establishment of the intra-domain segments of the end-to-end path • Intra-domain provisioning design to accommodate • Domains that have a G.ASON/GMPLS CP “out of the box” e.g. Generic MPLS Routing Engine (distributed control plane in their Alcatel 1678 MCC OXC) • Domains operated via NMS • Domains that may decide to adopt proprietary Bandwidth Brokers • Intra-domain modules, implemented in later phases, will comprise the so-called BoD service Domain Manager (DM)

  11. Integration of technologies • Evaluating the implementation implications and testing a number or scenarios

  12. Monitoring • Inter-domain monitoring system must • Troubleshoot in case of failure • Provide concatenated monitoring data of the quality of the end-to-end service • Working together with relevant GN2 project activities (JRA1 and JRA4) • JRA3 will provide technology-specific monitoring data at L1-2 as well as topology data • JRA1 will provide monitoring data management and visualization • Activities: • Design and prototype implementation of the database schema and interface for retrieving and storing monitoring data from the Alcatel NMS (GEANT2 core) • Specification and design of the database schema and application for retrieving and storing monitoring data in EoMPLS and native Ethernet topologies • Integration of the monitoring data extraction and storage components with the JRA3 Network Topology Database • Minimum requirements for monitoring • Initially focus on “availability” <= up/down info, unavailable-seconds • Also: offered capacity, “errors” <= BER, error counter, errored-seconds

  13. Implementation • Following the Web-services paradigm • Each component of the system is implemented as a Web service • Interfaces are defined between IDMs, the IDM and the DM of a domain, the DM and the technology proxy within a domain • Using Java, MySQL • A prototype of the IDM is expected by May 2006

  14. Liaison activities • We are looking at: • DRAGON (http://cnl.gmu.edu/dragon/) • Network Aware Resource Broker (NARB) • Virtual Label Switching Router (VLSR) Implementation • OSCARS-BRUW projects • MUPBED (http://www.ist-mupbed.org), NOBEL (http://www.ist-nobel.org/) • VIOLA (http://www.viola-testbed.de/) • Testbed • ARGON (Allocation and Reservations in Grid-enabled Optical Networks) • HOPI- GLIF • Working on a Common Service Definition for e2e circuit oriented services with DRAGON/GLIF • Joint workshops and meetings

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