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Internet2 and Global Collaborations Heather Boyles Director, International Relations Internet2 heather@internet2.edu 19 February 2003 Hong Kong. Internet2 Mission and Goals. Develop and deploy advanced network applications and technologies, accelerating the creation of tomorrow’s Internet .
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Internet2 and Global CollaborationsHeather BoylesDirector, International RelationsInternet2heather@internet2.edu19 February 2003Hong Kong
Internet2 Mission and Goals • Develop and deploy advanced network applications and technologies, accelerating the creation of tomorrow’s Internet. • Enable new generation of applications • Create leading edge R&E network capability • Transfer technology and experience to the global production Internet
University Leadership • 200 university members with commitments from their Presidents/Chancellors/Rectors • 60+ corporate members • Over 40 Affiliate Members • Government Research Agencies • Internet2/U.S. Government: separate but interdependent • Internet2 International Partner Program
Internet2 – JUCC partnership • Internet2 – JUCC Partnership • (via Memorandum of Understanding) • In place since August 2000 • Abilene – HARNET Peering • Agreement in place since August 2000 • Connectivity in place since September 2002 • Internet2 – JUCC/HARNET users collaborations • Let this launch event provide a basis for starting new work together!
International Partnerships • Ensure global interoperability • of the next generation of Internet technologies and applications • Enable global collaboration • in research and education providing/promoting the development of an advanced networking environment internationally • Build effective partnerships with organizations • similar goals/objectives • similar constituencies • Mechanism: Memoranda of • Understanding
Europe-Middle East ARNES (Slovenia) BELNET (Belgium) CARNET (Croatia) CESnet (Czech Republic) DANTE (Europe) DFN-Verein (Germany) GIP RENATER (France) GRNET (Greece) HEAnet (Ireland) HUNGARNET (Hungary) INFN-GARR (Italy) Israel-IUCC (Israel) NORDUnet (Nordic Countries) POL-34 (Poland) RCCN (Portugal) RedIRIS (Spain) RESTENA (Luxembourg) SANET (Slovakia) Stichting SURF (Netherlands) SWITCH (Switzerland) TERENA (Europe) JISC, UKERNA (United Kingdom) Americas CANARIE (Canada) CEDIA (Ecuador) CUDI (Mexico) CRNET2 (Costa Rica) REUNA (Chile) RETINA (Argentina) RNP2 (Brazil) SENACYT (Panama) Asia-Pacific AAIREP (Australia) APAN (Asia-Pacific) APAN-KR (Korea) APRU (Asia-Pacific) CERNET, CSTNET, NSFCNET (China) JAIRC (Japan) JUCC (Hong Kong) NECTEC / UNINET (Thailand) SingAREN (Singapore) TAnet2 (Taiwan) Internet2 International Partners
Internet2 Areas of Work • Advanced Applications • Middleware • Network Engineering • End to End Performance • Advanced Network Infrastructure • Partnerships and Outreach
How Internet2 works • Universities commit: • Engineering lead: connect university to rest of Internet2 community, deploy new technologies • Applications lead: support apps development on campus • Middleware architect: work with I2MI to implement middleware infrastructure • Working groups: • Of expert/interested individuals within community • Chaired by volunteer (sometimes by staff) • Staff support • Projects/Initiatives: • Where collective resources needed • E.g. Commons Initiative, End to End Performance Initiative
Internet2 staff • Primarily facilitate, coordinate work of Internet2 members • E.g. Ted’s applications team • Support working groups • Posting working group notes (see the www.internet2.edu website) • Support meetings of the community • “Joint Techs” – network engineers • Hands-on training workshops – IPv6 and multicast deployment, Internet2 Commons site Coordinator Training
Applications and Engineering Applications Motivate Enables Engineering
Internet2Backbone Networks Internet2 Network Architecture GigaPoP One GigaPoP Two GigaPoP (n) GigaPoP Three
University A Internet2 Backbone Network(s) GigaPoP One Regional Network Commercial Internet Connections University C University B Internet2 Network Architecture
Internet2 Backbone Network(s) • Have had two backbones in the past: • vBNS (NSF supported, run by MCIWorldcom) • Abilene (Internet2 member supported, run by UCAID) • Abilene is current backbone network • 11 core router nodes • Moving to 10Gbps core backbone links • Connections to the backbone at 622mbps to 10Gbps • Most universities aggregate connections through “gigapops” or regional aggregator networks
09 January 2002 Last updated: 17 January 2003 Abilene International Peering (January 2003) Pacific Wave AARNET, APAN/TransPAC†, CA*net, TANET2 STAR TAP/Star Light APAN/TransPAC†, CA*net, CERN, CERNET/CSTNET/NSFCNET, NAUKAnet, GEMnet, HARNET, KOREN/KREONET2, NORDUnet, SURFnet, SingAREN, TANET2 NYC GEANT*, HEANET, NORDUnet, SINET, SURFnet SNVA GEMNET, SingAREN, WIDE(v6) L.A. UNINET OC12 AMPATH ANSP, REUNA2, RNP2, RETINA (REACCIUN-2) San Diego (CALREN2) CUDI El Paso (UACJ-UT El Paso) CUDI • ARNES, ACONET, BELNET, CARNET, CERN, CESnet, CYNET, DFN, EENet, GARR, GRNET, HEANET, IUCC, JANET, LATNET, LITNET, NORDUNET, RENATER, RESTENA, SWITCH, HUNGARNET, GARR-B, POL-34, RCST, RedIRIS, SANET, SURFNET • † WIDE/JGN, IMnet, CERNet/CSTnet,/NSFCNET, KOREN/KREONET2, SingAREN, TANET2, ThaiSARN
International Transit Network • In partnership with Canada’s CA*net, STAR TAP/StarLight • Provide transit over Abilene (CA*net, STAR TAP/StarLight exchange point) • Between non-US networks
Networks reachable via Abilene – by country Europe-Middle East Asia-Pacific Americas Argentina (RETINA) Brazil (RNP2/ANSP) Canada (CA*net4) Chile (REUNA) Mexico (CUDI) United States (Abilene, vBNS) Austria (ACOnet) Belgium (BELnet) Croatia (CARnet) Czech Rep. (CESnet) Cyprus (Cynet) Denmark (UNI-C) Estonia (ESnet) Finland (FUnet) France (RENATER) Germany (G-Win) Greece (GRnet) Hungary (HUNGARnet) Iceland (ISnet) Ireland (HEANET) Israel (IUCC) Italy (GARR) Latvia (LATNET) Lithuania (LITNET) Luxembourg (RESTENA) Netherlands (SURFnet) Norway (UNINETT) Poland (PCSS) Portugal (FCCN) Romania (RNC) Slovakia (SANET) Slovenia (ARNES) Spain (RedIris) Sweden (SUNET) Switzerland (SWITCH) United Kingdom (JANET) *CERN Australia (AARNET) China (CERNET, CSTNET, NSFCNET) Hong Kong (HARNET) Japan (SINET, WIDE, IMNET, JGN) Korea (KOREN, KREONET2) Singapore (SingAREN) Taiwan (TANET2) Thailand (UNINET, ThaiSARN) More information about reachable networks at www.internet2.edu/abilene/peernetworks.html Also, see www.startap.net
APANhttp://www.apan.net • APAN organization brings together national research and education networks of Asia-Pacific • Network interconnection • Technology Collaboration • Applications/Science Interest Groups
APAN area collaborations • PRAGMA – Pacific Rim Applications and Grid Middleware Assemply • Sharing expertise, tools in grid development • Sharing resources, infrastructure • IPv6 development and deployment • Significant focus of CERNET and WIDE (Japan) • Internet2 Model Hands-on IPv6 workshop for campus/network engineers at next APAN meeting – also at AIT, Bangkok • Natural Resource Science Community • Sharing satellite data, images across APAN networks
Americas- highlights • Remote instruments • Telescopes in Chile • Cosmic ray observatory (P. Auger) in Argentina • eVLBI – ALMA (Atacama Large Millimeter Array) • Earth-observation, environmental, biotechnology
Americas highlights • CLARA • Comunidad Latino Americana de Redes Avanzadas • Chile, Argentina, Brazil leading interconnections • Connectivity to North America, Europe • AMPATH: Florida International University • Potential to connect 10 countries at 45mbps each • Peering through Miami (collocated with SFGP) • Some U.S. National Science Foundation funding
Europehighlights • TERENA (Trans European Research and Education Network Association) • Membership association of National Research Networks (NRNs) • No network, but technology and applications working groups • GEANT • Pan-European network (connects together National Research Networks) • Operated by DANTE
Europehighlights • Middleware Development • TERENA working groups • Closely tracking Internet2 middleware activities • More European-funded research • DataGrid • vLBI experiments • IPv6 focus • 6Net testbed
GEANThttp://www.dante.org.uk • 31 countries connecting • 10gbps core backbone • Connectors at up to 2.5gbps • Connectivity to North America, APAN (TEIN through Korea) • Outreach to SE Europe (Balkans), Med. (+N. Africa), S. America (@LIS-CAESAR)
Africahighlights • No dedicated R&E network connectivity from African continent • European Commission funding connections from northern Africa to GEANT
EUMEDCONNECT • Algeria, Cyprus, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Malta, Morocco, the Palestinian authority, Syria, Tunisia, and Turkey • Egypt: Egyptian Universities Network (EUN) http://www.frcu.eun.eg/ • Morocco: Maroc Wide Area Network (MARWAN) http://www.marwan.ac.ma/
Other university networks, research links • South Africa: Tertiary Education Network (TENET) http://www.tenet.ac.za/ • National Institutes of Health MIMcom project • Satellite connectivity to malaria research sites in Ghana, Kenya, Tanzania • http://www.nlm.nih.gov/mimcom/locations.html
Global Terabit Research Network (GTRN)http://www.gtrn.net/ • Cooperatively, cohesively managed intercontinental infrastructure • Focus on end to end performance on global basis for global science • Initial partners: • Europe NREN Consortium/DANTE • Internet2 • CANARIE (Canada)
How can you engage? • Have a collaborator, scientific facility, resource you need to reach in another country? • Learn about the path connectivity may take • Arena.internet2.edu or international.internet2.edu • Let your campus and inter-campus network people know • What kind of network services do you need? What kinds of applications would you like to utilize?
Engage, continued • Want to learn how others are deploying advanced network services? • Join APAN working group • Attend (in person or virtually) an Internet2 “Joint Techs” meeting; hands-on workshop; TERENA meeting • Almost all Internet2 meetings (although not hands-on workshops) are webcast; so are most APAN and TERENA meetings