Next-Generation IP Networking



Similar documents
Preside. Increasing deregulation in the telecommunications

Alteon Switched Firewall

Alcatel-Lucent 1665 Data Multiplexer (DMX) for Service Providers

OPTICAL TRANSPORT NETWORKS

Succession Solutions. Voice over IP enabled Meridian

The Keys for Campus Networking: Integration, Integration, and Integration

The Evolution of Ethernet

The Metro Ethernet Forum

Ethernet Services Overview

MPLS/IP VPN Services Market Update, United States

10 Gigabit Ethernet: Scaling across LAN, MAN, WAN

The Metro Ethernet Network

Dynamic Verizon Ethernet Solutions for the Extended Manufacturing Enterprise

PairGain and the New Access Network

Wideband: Delivering the Connected Life

Primary Data Center. Remote Data Center Plans (COOP), Business Continuity (BC), Disaster Recovery (DR), and data

Succession VoIP Services

White Paper Solarflare High-Performance Computing (HPC) Applications

Carrier-class Ethernet: A Services Definition

Internet Dagarna 2000

Server Consolidation and Remote Disaster Recovery: The Path to Lower TCO and Higher Reliability

Overview of Requirements and Applications for 40 Gigabit and 100 Gigabit Ethernet

MITEL. NetSolutions. Flat Rate MPLS VPN

Data Center Market Trends

A Business Case for Scaling the Next-Generation Network with the Cisco ASR 9000 System: Now with Converged Services. Key Takeaways.

The New Age MAN The Architectures and Services

The Case for Managed Infrastructure Services

Pseudo-Wires: The Full-Service Alternative to TDM Access WHITE PAPER

Performance Management for Next- Generation Networks

Business Case for BTI Intelligent Cloud Connect for Content, Co-lo and Network Providers

Introduction to

Fiber to the Home. Definition. Overview. Topics

Solution Overview. Nortel Networks. Succession. Communication Server for Enterprise 1000

CARRIER MPLS VPN September 2014

Introduction. Background

Evaluating Carrier-Class Ethernet Services

NORTEL DELIVERS SERVICE ASSURANCE APPLICATIONS FOR YOUR TRIPLE PLAY NETWORK >THIS IS

SIP trunking: The what, how and why

Building a Bigger Pipe: Inverse Multiplexing for Transparent Ethernet Bridging over Bonded T1/E1s

Juniper Networks Universal Edge: Scaling for the New Network

Guidebook to MEF Certification

Converged TDM and IP- Based Broadband Solutions White Paper. OnSite OS-10 Multi-Service over SDH Provisioning

Executive Summary. Internet Traffic and Capacity

Auspex Support for Cisco Fast EtherChannel TM

Business Case for the Brocade Carrier Ethernet IP Solution in a Metro Network

Fujitsu Gigabit Ethernet VOD Solutions

Connect & Go with WDM PON Ea 1100 WDM PON

Fibre Channel Overview of the Technology. Early History and Fibre Channel Standards Development

The term Virtual Private Networks comes with a simple three-letter acronym VPN

A compelling Multiservice IP Backbone use case

WAN. Introduction. Services used by WAN. Circuit Switched Services. Architecture of Switch Services

Understanding PBB-TE for Carrier Ethernet

Alcatel-Lucent 1850 TSS Product Family. Seamlessly migrate from SDH/SONET to packet

YOUR CANADIAN CONNECTION

Chapter 9. Internet. Copyright 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Inc 10-1

Best Practices: The Key Things You Need to Know Now About Secure Networking Layer 1 (SONET), Layer 2 (ATM), and Layer 3 (IP) Encryption Technologies

Enterprise Broadband Access:

Gigabit to the edge. HP ProCurve Networking Solutions

CISCO METRO ETHERNET SERVICES AND SUPPORT

ROGERS DELIVERS THE SPEED, POWER AND RELIABILITY OF FIBRE RIGHT TO YOU.

Analysis of the U.S. Dedicated Internet Access Services Market, 2012 Back On Track with Robust Recovery

Carrier Ethernet: New Game Plan for Media Converters

How To Get A Metro Ethernet Connection For Healthcare Providers

WAN and VPN Solutions:

Efficient evolution to all-ip

Versalar Switch Router Market Opportunity and Product Overview

Your Wide Area Network Just Got a Whole Lot Wider.

convergence: preparing the enterprise network

Supporting Municipal Business Models with Cisco Outdoor Wireless Solutions

How To Use An At9924 For A Long Distance Connection On A Powerline On A Ppltd Network (Powerline) On A Superfast Network (Networking) On An At 9924 (Powerplt) On The P

Evolving Your Network with Metro Ethernet and MPLS VPNs

The Key Benefits of OTN Networks

An Introduction to Resilient Packet Ring Technology

RPR Business Case Study Deploying RPR in a SONET/SDH Environment

APPLICATION NOTE. Benefits of MPLS in the Enterprise Network

Broadband ASAP. System 7.1A Core Software. Bridging the Digital Divide. Product Guide

Since 1998, AT&T invested more than $35 billion to support customer needs in data, Internet protocol (IP), local and global services.

Best Effort gets Better with MPLS. Superior network flexibility and resiliency at a lower cost with support for voice, video and future applications

November Defining the Value of MPLS VPNs

Flexible SDN Transport Networks With Optical Circuit Switching

WHITEPAPER. VPLS for Any-to-Any Ethernet Connectivity: When Simplicity & Control Matter

MITEL IP Communications Platform

SummitStack in the Data Center

ADSL or Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line. Backbone. Bandwidth. Bit. Bits Per Second or bps

How To Build A Network For Storage Area Network (San)

Solutions Focus: IPTV

How To Send Video At 8Mbps On A Network (Mpv) At A Faster Speed (Mpb) At Lower Cost (Mpg) At Higher Speed (Mpl) At Faster Speed On A Computer (Mpf) At The

of Network Access ASC Broadband Services Access Platform The New Edge Advanced Switching Communications

Transcription:

Position Paper Next-Generation IP Networking Ethernet emerges as an ideal choice for global networking Ethernet is breaking new ground as a key technology for service providers and carriers in wide area networking. With the emergence of 10-Gigabit Ethernet, it's time to reconsider the role of Ethernet. Long considered a LAN/enterprise technology, it's poised to be the reliable, cost-effective, and speedy workhorse of global service provider packet networks. Now Nortel Networks offers a complete portfolio of carrier-grade technologies that bring Ethernet into the service provider market for transparent LAN interconnection service and Internet access.

To keep pace with demand, worldwide IP broadband access capacity has to grow by 50 terabits per second in the next six years a cumulative average growth rate of nearly 100 percent per year. Explosive Internet growth has placed unprecedented demands on the global network. For corporations, the World Wide Web has created new opportunities to increase productivity and expand market presence, while at the same time driving intense competitive pressures. Similarly, in the consumer market, web usage continues to explode as users increasingly realize the benefits of the information available to them for personal, educational, or entertainment purposes. The number of non-pc devices, such as television set-top boxes, IP-enabled telephones, and personal digital assistants that will be connected to the Web is expected to exceed 89 million by 2001, according to Renaissance Worldwide, Inc. research. The networking of these and other intelligent devices in the home will further change the way consumers use technology (and hence bandwidth). To meet demand coming from these diverse areas, worldwide IP broadband access capacity is forecast to grow by 50 terabits per second during the next six years; a cumulative average growth rate of close to 100 percent, according to John Matthews of Ovum. This network growth requirement will affect all parts of the network: access, metropolitan area network (MAN), and backbone. This surging demand for bandwidth will impact all parts of the network, from backbone to MAN to access layers. While dense wave division multiplexing (DWDM) is exploding the capacity available in the backbone or long haul portion of the network, and Gigabit Ethernet is the choice for the enterprise, low bandwidth connections still dominate the metropolitan and access/collector networks between the two. Metro networks (and subsequently access networks) will also have to be upgraded as part of the solution to eliminate the bandwidth bottleneck. The market is ready. Many consumers have reached the limits of their tolerance with dial-up 56K modems and are starting to move to 1-Mbps services. Many more businesses are upgrading their LANs to Fast and Gigabit Ethernet and looking to extend these at native speeds into the MAN and WAN. The challenge facing network service providers now is how to meet this demand for bandwidth in a cost-effective way, while ensuring scalability, reliability, and ease of provisioning new services. Innovative service providers are implementing IP-based networks using Ethernet over an optical transport network. To meet these networking challenges requires a new type of network architecture one that permits transport of traffic in its native format with highspeed access, a high degree of scalability, and the potential for easy capacity upgrades as required. Innovative service providers are implementing IP-based networks using Ethernet over an optical (SONET/SDH or DWDM) transport network as the answer to these requirements. IP is the undisputed champion of the Layer 3 desktop and application worlds, while Ethernet is gaining mindshare as a Layer 2 infrastructure due to its ability to transport traffic at high speeds, its widespread use in the enterprise, and ongoing decreases in costs. 2

The new 10-Gigabit Ethernet technology provides a promising new option for WAN transport at the payload capacity of an OC-192 line. Ethernet has traditionally been regarded as a local area network (LAN) transport technology. However, new 10-Gigabit Ethernet technology promises to meet new capacity demands and extend Ethernet capabilities from a LAN only transport technology to a workhorse for the entire global network with applications in metropolitan area networks, points of presence, and wide area networks. At a 9.58-Gbps data rate, Ethernet becomes an immediate and significant option in the WAN, eliminating protocol conversion, enabling multivendor interoperability, end-to-end compatibility, and seamless integration of the LAN, WAN, and MAN. (The 9.58-Gbps rate is the actual payload capacity rate of an OC-192 line, with the traditional optical standards coding overhead subtracted.) Ethernet offers ubiquity, economy, simplicity, and scalability. It s the de facto standard for desktop LANs. There are a variety of reasons for Ethernet to be the technology of choice for an end-to-end network solution. The vast majority of business PCs today are connected to Ethernet LANs, making Ethernet one of the most ubiquitous, well-understood, and least expensive technologies in the world. Skilled resources with Ethernet experience are more readily available than those with ATM experience. By 2003, Ethernet-based technologies will account for more than 97 percent of the world s network connection shipments, according to International Data Corporation (IDC) research. A May 1999 study from Business Communications Research (BCR) showed that 75 percent of respondents plan on installing switched Fast Ethernet as their standard desktop LAN within three years. Users want to be able to connect LANs at native speeds rather than having to perform service adaptation, and they want to take advantage of those high speeds throughout the network. An Ethernet connection to a home or business could operate at 10 Mbps and be upgraded easily to Fast Ethernet at 100 Mbps or even Gigabit Ethernet when required. Furthermore, Ethernet-based networking costs are decreasing rapidly. By mid-year 2000, copper-based Gigabit Ethernet network interface card prices are expected to drop below $400, according to IDC research. These price reductions will come from economies of scale, cost reductions due to data over copper capability, higher port densities, and increasing competition. 3

Key benefits of an end-to-end Optical Ethernet solution are: Reliability The proven robustness of Ethernet in the LAN, combined with well-known fiber-optic transport in the MAN and WAN, will provide a reliable platform for connections in the LAN, MAN, and WAN. Scalability As traffic and bandwidth have grown, the Ethernet standard has evolved to higher speeds while maintaining compatibility with existing network infrastructure. 10-Gigabit Ethernet will continue this trend. Investment Protection At the 9.58-Gbps implementation rate, 10-Gigabit Ethernet is a plug-andplay solution that interworks with existing carrier optical networks, protecting a carrier s investment in existing infrastructure while adding additional capability at a low implementation cost. Operating Cost Reduction While in operation, Ethernet offers the lowest cost-per-mbps of all competing data transport technologies (according to Dell Oro Group, 1997). In addition, the relative cost of adopting Ethernet technology, considering its maturity and installed base, is low. It also permits the corporation to leverage the massive human capital associated with accumulated training and deployment of Ethernet technology. Interoperability Ethernet solutions take advantage of a well-defined, common set of standards that ensures multivendor equipment interoperability in the LAN, MAN, and WAN, and promotes end-to-end network compatibility. As traditional network boundaries become blurred, the ideal choice is a unified solution that operates at all scales. As the boundaries of local, metropolitan, and wide area networks continue to blur, network unification requires segments connecting to each other more easily, at lower cost, and with fewer network operational and management requirements. In this environment, solutions that can function at high performance, high efficiency, and high reliability at all scales such as the Nortel Networks end-to-end Optical Ethernet solution have the potential to play dominant roles in the growth of the global network. 10-Gigabit Ethernet offers a backbone counterpart to the LAN and MAN Ethernet technologies already available. The complete and integrated product portfolio from Nortel Networks, combined with the company s leadership in developing 10-Gigabit Ethernet, enables a common link-layer protocol for the entire network. The marriage of high-speed optical networks and the common Ethernet denominator means that many of the bottlenecks associated with current network topologies will be a thing of the past. 4

10-Gigabit Ethernet over optical fiber enables new levels of scalability and high-bandwidth applications in the LAN, low-cost, revenue-generating applications in the metropolitan area network, more efficient operation in meshed topologies, higher-capacity points of presence, and economical long haul transport. These characteristics bring with them a fundamentally more affordable network topology based upon seamless LAN/MAN/WAN integration. Service providers who adopt Ethernetbased network architectures will set the standard for price/performance (bandwidth cost/bit reduction), scalability, and ease and speed of provisioning new services, with which everyone else will have to compete. Nortel Networks offers key components of the end-to-end Optical Ethernet infrastructure. Nortel Networks has a full portfolio of carrier-grade technologies to support Ethernet in all network arenas: access, central office or PoP (point of presence), and backbone. interwan Packet Transport to integrate Ethernet switching across the complete OPTera and TransportNode product lines Accelar Routing Switches for Ethernet aggregation Versalar Switch Router 25000 and OPTera Packet Core for high-speed Ethernet connection Preside service-enabling software portfolio for end-to-end network management Baystack and Etherloop for extended Ethernet access Shasta subscriber services for outsourced IP services Summary According to a report in Networking Europe, December 1999, the market for 10-Gigabit Ethernet service will grow from $71 million in 2001 to $1.8 billion in 2003. By choosing end-to-end Optical Ethernet networking from Nortel Networks, service providers can significantly streamline their networks, gain their shares of this growing market, while reducing capital expenditures by more than 30 percent. A key component of this dramatic cost savings is replacing traditional SONET and ATM layers with native Ethernet transport from end to end. IP packets are transported through SONET-framed Gigabit Ethernet directly over fiber. The ubiquity and scalability of Ethernet the de facto desktop LAN standard, scaling from 1 Mbps to 10 Gbps enables seamless integration of residential, enterprise, and service provider markets, and seamless convergence of voice and data networks. 5

In the United States: In Canada: In Europe: In Asia: In Australia: Nortel Networks Nortel Networks Nortel Networks Nortel Networks Singapore Pte Ltd Nortel Networks Australia Pty Limited 35 Davis Drive 8200 Dixie Road Maidenhead Office Park 151 Lorong Chuan #02-01 380 St. Kilda Road Research Triangle Park, Suite 100 Westacott Way New Tech Park, 5th/6th Floor North Carolina 27709 Brampton, Ontario L6T 5P6 Maidenhead Berkshire SL6 3QH Singapore 556741 Melbourne, Victoria USA Canada UK Tel: 65 287-2877 Australia 3004 Tel: +44 1628 43 2000 Tel: 613 9206 4646 Fax: +44 1628 437 666 For more information, contact your Nortel Networks representative, or call 1-800-4-NORTEL or 1-800-466-7835 from anywhere in North America. http://www.nortelnetworks.com Accelar, Versalar, OPTera, Preside, Baystack, and Shasta are trademarks of Nortel Networks. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Copyright (C) 2000 Nortel Networks Corporation. All rights reserved. Information in this document is subject to change without notice. Nortel Networks Corporation assumes no responsibility for any errors that may appear in this document. 56062.22/05-00