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QoS Service Level Agreement (SLA) for Tactical/Deployed Scenario

QoS Service Level Agreement (SLA) for Tactical/Deployed Scenario. Deborah Goldsmith MITRE Corporation (619)758-7829 deborah@mitre.org. Outline. Problem Statement General Requirements Scenario Description Tactical /Deployed SLA Data Classification and Marking Issues Questions.

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QoS Service Level Agreement (SLA) for Tactical/Deployed Scenario

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  1. QoS Service Level Agreement (SLA)for Tactical/Deployed Scenario Deborah Goldsmith MITRE Corporation (619)758-7829 deborah@mitre.org

  2. Outline • Problem Statement • General Requirements • Scenario Description • Tactical /Deployed SLA • Data Classification and Marking • Issues • Questions

  3. Problem Statement • Meet QoS Service Level Agreements (SLA’s) for the Tactical/Deployed platform across the End-to-End Circuit

  4. General Requirements* • Applications will converge to a common infrastructure (most likely Layer 3 IP) • Voice • Video • Datagram • Control/Management • Applications MUST work end-to-end across wide diversity of LANs, MANs, WANs • System MUST allow user to indicate mission-based priority and support priority handling to resolve end-to-end bottlenecks • System MUST meet stringent IA requirements *DISA, 5-29-02

  5. CAMP/POST/STATION WIDE AREA NETWORK TACTICAL/DEPLOYED Scenario Description:The End-to-End Circuit* FIXED TACTICAL END-TO-END DISN • Solution must apply to ALL elements of the Defense Information Systems Network (C/P/S, WAN, TACTICAL) • F-F, F-T, T-T • Multiple domains • Traffic in the WAN traverses many network domains that may be considered analogous to external carrier networks with their own QoS/SLA’s *DISA, 5-29-02

  6. Scenario Description:The Tactical/Deployed Segment • Tactical \deployed communications use multiple RF gateways • RF gateways represent bottlenecks due to bandwidth constraints

  7. LOS VPN VPN enclave enclave enclave Scenario Description:The Tactical Platform & the RF Gateway SLA WAN GW LAN WAN GW LAN RF GW LAN

  8. Tactical/Deployed SLA • Minimum bandwidth guarantees for specified data types or sources • B/W, latency, jitter guarantees for VoIP and packet VTC • Latency guarantees for tactical messages • No starvation for Best Effort (BE) (aggregate)

  9. Data Classification and Marking

  10. Application Flow Categories* Each category has QoS Performance Metrics *DISA, 5-29-02

  11. Marking RFC’s

  12. Sample DSCP Marking by Application Categories • Marking by priority and latency requirements

  13. Issues • Mobility • Ad-hoc Networks • Link outage and degradation

  14. Questions • Can DiffServ (DSCP’s) be the basis of a near-term implementation plan to implement end-to-end QoS for the tactical/deployed scenario? • Bandwidth Reservation for some applications • B/W, Latency and Jitter guarantees for VOIP, VTC • Latency guarantees for tactical messages • Priority and precedence • No starvation for Best effort • What are the end-to-end QoS mechanisms to implement a long-term implementation plan? • Dynamic QoS based on policy • Admission control • QoS-aware applications signaling the network • Reroute with QoS on link failure /degradation • Mobility • Performance monitoring and control YesNo

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