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Dynamic Circuit Services Control Plane Overview

Dynamic Circuit Services Control Plane Overview. April 24, 2007 Internet2 Member Meeting Arlington, Virginia. Tom Lehman University of Southern California Information Sciences Institute (USC/ISI) Chris Tracy University of Maryland Mid-Atlantic Crossroads (MAX). Outline.

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Dynamic Circuit Services Control Plane Overview

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  1. Dynamic Circuit Services Control Plane Overview April 24, 2007Internet2 Member MeetingArlington, Virginia Tom Lehman University of Southern California Information Sciences Institute (USC/ISI) Chris Tracy University of Maryland Mid-Atlantic Crossroads (MAX)

  2. Outline • Internet 2 Dynamic Circuit Services Architecture • Control Plane Overview • Control Plane Messaging Example • I2 DCS Demonstration

  3. I2 DCS Control Plane Objectives • Multi-Service, Multi-Domain, Multi-Layer, Multi-Vendor Provisioning • Basic capability is the provision of a “circuit” in above environment • In addition, need control plane features for: • AAA • Scheduling • Easy APIs which combine multiple individual control plane actions into an application specific configuration (i.e., application specific topologies)

  4. Multi-Domain Control PlaneThe (near-term) big picture • Multi-Domain Provisioning • Interdomain ENNI (Web Service and OIF/GMPLS) • Multi-domain, multi-stage path computation process • AAA • Scheduling GEANT TDM Internet2 Network RON RON Dynamic Ethernet Dynamic Ethernet TDM Domain Controller ESNet Ctrl Element Ethernet Data Plane SONET Switch Control Plane Adjacency IP Network (MPLS, L2VPN) LSP Router

  5. Internet2 Dynamic Circuit Services (DCS) I2 DCS: Ciena CoreDirector I2 HOPI: Force10 E600 10 Gigabit Ethernet 10 Gigabit Ethernet 10 Gigabit Ethernet OC192 SONET/SDH 1 Gigabit Ethernet or SONET/SDH 1 Gigabit Ethernet

  6. Force10 E600 HOPI Ethernet Switch Ciena Core Director SONET Switch Raptor ER-1010 Ethernet Switch DCS Demonstration Actual Topology • HOPI Network Partitioned to mimic RONS connected to edge of Internet2 DCS • Provisioning across subset of currently deployed Ciena CoreDirectors HOPI East Internet2 DCS NEWY WASH CHIC HOPI Central CHIC NEWY CLEV Internet2 Office DRAGON MCLN Ann Arbor PITT PHIL ARLG WASH

  7. Client “Service” ViewIntraDomain Service Request Source Address Destination Address Bandwidth (50 Mbps increments) VLAN TAG (None | Any | Number) User Identification (certificate) Schedule Dynamically Provisioned Dedicated Resource Path (“Circuit”) Domain Controller b 1 csa 2 CSA can run on the client or in a separate machine (proxy mode) csa a Client B Ethernet Mapped SONET or SONET Circuits VLSR Client A Domain Controller Switch Fabric Internet2 DCS • Items 1,2 represent service request/approval • Items a,b represent service instantiation (signaling)

  8. What is the Internet2 DCS Service? • Physical Connection: • 1 or 10 Gigabit Ethernet • OC192 SONET • Circuit Service: • Point to Point Ethernet (VLAN) Framed SONET Circuit • Point to Point SONET Circuit • Bandwidth provisioning available in 50 Mbps increments • How do Clients Request? • Client must specify [VLAN ID|ANY ID|Untagged], SRC Address, DST Address, Bandwidth • Request mechanism options are GMPLS Peer Mode, GMPLS UNI Mode, Web Services, phone call, email • Application Specific Topology is an XML request for one or more individual circuits • What is the definition of a Client? • Anyone who connects to an ethernet or SONET port on an Ciena Core Director; could be RONS, GIgaPops, other wide area networks, end systems

  9. InterDomain • From a client perspective, an InterDomain provisioning is no different than IntraDomain • However, additional work for Domain Controllers Domain Controller Domain Controller Domain Controller CSA CSA RON Dynamic Infrastructure Ethernet VLAN RON Dynamic Infrastructure Ethernet VLAN Internet2 DCS Ethernet Mapped SONET

  10. Need more work on AAA, Scheduling AAA AAA AAA A A A A 3 3 1 2 5 Provisioning Flow Domain Controller Domain Controller Domain Controller GUI AST Flexible Edge Mappings (port(s), tag, untag) XML 4 NARB VLSR RON Dynamic Infrastructure Ethernet VLAN RON Dynamic Infrastructure Ethernet VLAN Internet2 DCS Ethernet Mapped SONET 1. Service Request 2. Path Computation Request 3. Recursive Per Domain Path Computation/Scheduling Processing 4. Path Computation/Scheduling Response (loose hop route object returned) 5. Service Instantiation (Signaling) (includes loose hop expansion at domain boundaries) A. Abstracted topology exchange

  11. VLSR(Virtual Label Switching Router) • GMPLS Proxy • (OSPF-TE, RSVP-TE) • Local control channel • CLI,TL1, SNMP, others • Used primarily for ethernet switches CLI Interface One NARB per Domain • Provisioning requests via CLI, XML, or ASTB

  12. VLSR uni-subnet LSR downstream LSR upstream Integration Core Director Domain into the End-to-End Signaling signaling flow uni, tl1 uni, tl1 data flow Ciena Region CD_a CD_z subnet signaling flow • Signaling is performed in contiguous mode. • Single RSVP signaling session (main session) for end-to-end circuit. • Subnet path is created via a separate RSVP-UNI session (subnet session), similar to using SNMP/CLI to create VLAN on an Ethernet switch. • The simplest case: one VLSR covers the whole UNI subnet. • VLSR is both the source and destination UNI clients. • This VLSR is control-plane ‘home VLSR’ for both CD_a and CD_z. • UNI client is implemented as embedded module using KOM-RSVP API.

  13. Internet2 DCS RON Central RON East DRAGON Ann Arbor DCS Demonstration Logical Topology TDM Switch Ethernet Switch End System

  14. Internet2 DCS RON Central RON East DRAGON Ann Arbor Dedicated Layer 2 NetworkSite to Site • Dynamically set up Site to Site dedicated layer 2 networks • End Sites attachment is flexible: • One Port (untagged or tagged) • Multiple Ports (untagged or tagged)

  15. Internet2 DCS RON Central RON East DRAGON Ann Arbor Dedicated Layer 2 NetworkSystem to System Service Connections • Dynamically set up dedicated layer 2 host to host connection • End System termination point is flexible: • One “circuit” (untagged or tagged) • Multiple “circuits” (tagged) • reflected as multiple virtual interfaces on the end system

  16. Internet2 DCS RON Central RON East DRAGON Ann Arbor Application Specific Topology Example • Application specific topologies refer to the: • automatic set up of multiple provisioned paths and • coordinated end system application control • The above example show three systems connecting to a single “server/processing node” as might be required for: • data repository access • content distribution infrastructure • data streaming to a centralized processing center

  17. Demo • Ciena Core Director • “NodeManager” • Graphical User Interface • Monitoring and Control Timeslot Map Network Utilization Monitor

  18. Force10 E600 HOPI Ethernet Switch Ciena Core Director SONET Switch Raptor ER-1010 Ethernet Switch DCS Demonstration Actual Topology • HOPI Network Partitioned to mimic RONS connected to edge of Internet2 DCS • Provisioning across subset of currently deployed Ciena CoreDirectors HOPI East Internet2 DCS NEWY WASH CHIC HOPI Central CHIC NEWY CLEV Internet2 Office DRAGON MCLN Ann Arbor PITT PHIL ARLG WASH

  19. Internet2 DCS RON Central RON East DRAGON Ann Arbor Dedicated Layer 2 NetworkSite to Site • Dynamically set up Site to Site dedicated layer 2 networks • End Sites attachment is flexible: • One Port (untagged or tagged) • Multiple Ports (untagged or tagged)

  20. Site to Site Provision RequestDRAGON ARLG to Ann Arbor

  21. Thank You

  22. extras

  23. DRAGON Control PlaneKey Components • Network Aware Resource Broker – NARB • Intradomain listener, Path Computation, Interdomain Routing • Virtual Label Swapping Router – VLSR • Open source protocols running on PC act as GMPLS network element (OSPF-TE, RSVP-TE) • Control PCs participate in protocol exchanges and provisions covered switch according to protocol events (PATH setup, PATH tear down, state query, etc) • Client System Agent – CSA • End system or client software for signaling into network (UNI or peer mode) • Application Specific Topology Builder – ASTB • User Interface and processing which build topologies on behalf of users • Topologies are a user specific configuration of multiple LSPs

  24. Key Control Plane Features(for Connection Control) • Routing • distribution of "data" between networks. The data that needs to be distributed includes reachability information, resource usages, etc • Path computation • the processing of information received via routing data to determining how to provision an end-to-end path. This is typically a Constrained Shortest Path First (CSPF) type algorithm for the GMPLS control planes. Web services based exchanges might employ a modified version of this technique or something entirely different. • Signaling • the exchange of messages to instantiate specific provisioning requests based upon the above routing and path computation functions. This is typically a RVSP-TE exchange for the GMPLS control planes. Web services based exchanges might employ a modified version of this technique or something entirely different.

  25. Key Control Plane Key Capabilities • Domain Summarization • Ability to generate abstract representations of your domain for making available to others • The type and amount of information (constraints) needed to be included in this abstraction requires discussion. • Ability to quickly update this representation based on provisioning actions and other changes • Multi-layer “Techniques” • Stitching: some network elements will need to map one layer into others, i.e., multi-layer adaptation • In this context the layers are: PSC, L2SC, TDM, LSC, FSC • Hierarchical techniques. Provision a circuit at one layer, then treat it as a resource at another layer. (i.e., Forward Adjacency concept) • Multi-Layer, Multi-Domain Path Computation Algorithms • Algorithms which allow processing on network graphs with multiple constraints • Coordination between per domain Path Computation Elements

  26. Inter-Domain Topology Summarization Full Topology Semi-topo (edge nodes only) Maximum Summarization • User defined summarization level maintains privacy • Summarization impacts optimal path computation but allows the domain to choose (and reserve) an internal path

  27. Interdomain Path Computation A Hierarchical Architecture • NARB summarizes individual domain topology and advertise it globally using link-state routing protocol, generating an abstract topology. • RCE computes partial paths by combining the abstract global topology and detailed local topology. • NARB’s assemble the partial paths into a full path by speaking to one another across domains.

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