campus focused workshop on advanced networking

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Campus Focused Workshop on Advanced Networking Paul Love Chair, Topology Working Group Campus Workshop Houston 10-11 April 2002

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Campus Focused Workshop on Advanced Networking. Paul Love Chair, Topology Working Group Campus Workshop Houston 10-11 April 2002. Outline. Internet2 Engineering Objectives Hopes for & Threats to End-to-End Performance A few words on Abilene. Engineering Objectives of Internet2. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Campus Focused Workshop on Advanced Networking

Campus Focused Workshop on Advanced NetworkingCampus Focused Workshop on Advanced Networking

Paul Love

Chair, Topology Working Group

Campus Workshop

Houston

10-11 April 2002

Paul Love

Chair, Topology Working Group

Campus Workshop

Houston

10-11 April 2002

Page 2: Campus Focused Workshop on Advanced Networking

10 April 2002 2

Outline

Internet2 Engineering Objectives

Hopes for & Threats to End-to-End Performance

A few words on Abilene

Page 3: Campus Focused Workshop on Advanced Networking

10 April 2002 3

Engineering Objectives of Internet2

Provide our members with superlative networking

• Performance• Functionality• Understanding

Make superlative networking strategic to research & education

Page 4: Campus Focused Workshop on Advanced Networking

10 April 2002 4

End-to-End: Challenge, Aspirations & Threats

Support services of advanced networks E2E(eyeball2eyeball)

Performance• Current target: 80Mb/s across the country• Multiplies where possible

Functions• Multicast• IPv6• Quality of Service• Measurement• Security

Page 5: Campus Focused Workshop on Advanced Networking

10 April 2002 5

What are our Aspirations?

Switched 100BaseT + well-provisioned Internet2 networking @ 80 Mb/s (for now)

• But user expectations and experiences vary widely

• Don’t take the easy way out• Boost expectations & experiences - raise the bar

Raise the bar again – work hard to stay out there

Page 6: Campus Focused Workshop on Advanced Networking

10 April 2002 6

Threats

Distance BW = C x packet-size / ( delay x sqrt(packet-loss ))

(Mathis, Semke, Mahdavi, and Ott, CCR, July 1997)

Fiber: dirty connections, bad light/connectors

Switches: full/half duplex & 10/100 mismatches, head of line blocking

Routing: Asymmetric, increased distance

Provisioning: a “straw” somewhere

Host: OS & TCP stack, H/W, Apps

Page 7: Campus Focused Workshop on Advanced Networking

10 April 2002 7

Abilene: Current Core

Page 8: Campus Focused Workshop on Advanced Networking

10 April 2002 8

Abilene Network Map

Page 9: Campus Focused Workshop on Advanced Networking

Sacramento

Los Angeles

Washington

Abilene International PeeringSTAR TAP/Star LightAPAN/TransPAC, Ca*net3, CERN, CERnet, FASTnet, GEMnet, IUCC, KOREN/KREONET2, NORDUnet, RNP2, SURFnet, SingAREN, TAnet2

NYCMBELNET, CA*net3,

GEANT*,HEANET,

JANET, NORDUnet

Pacific WaveAARNET, APAN/TransPAC, CA*net3, TANET2

SNVAGEMNET, SINET, SingAREN, WIDE

LOSAUNINET

AMPATHREUNA, RNP2

RETINA (ANSP)

OC3-OC12

El Paso (UACJ-UT El Paso)CUDI

San Diego (CALREN2)CUDI

* ARNES, CARNET, CESnet, DFN, GRNET, RENATER, RESTENA, SWITCH, HUNGARNET, GARR-B, POL-34, RCCN, RedIRIS

09 January 2002

Page 10: Campus Focused Workshop on Advanced Networking

10 April 2002 10

Abilene: 10Gb/s Upgrade

Page 11: Campus Focused Workshop on Advanced Networking

10 April 2002 11

Raw HDTV/IP testing

Packetized raw HDTV (1.5 Gbps) • ISIe, Tektronix, & UW project/DARPA support

Connectivity and testing support• P/NW & MAX Gigapops, Abilene and DARPA Supernet, Level(3)

SC2001 public demo• November, 2001• SEA -> DEN via L(3)

OC-48c SONET

Page 12: Campus Focused Workshop on Advanced Networking

10 April 2002 12

Raw HDTV/IP Demo

DARPA PIs Meeting: SEA->DC area 1/6/02• 18 hrs of continuous, single-stream raw HD/IP• UDP jumbo frames: 4444 B packet size• Application level measurement

– 3 billion packets transmitted– 0 packets lost, 15 resequencing episodes

• e2e network performance – Loss: <8x10 -10 (90% confidence level)– Reordering: 5x10 –9

• Transcontinental 1-Gbps TCP (std 1.5 kB MTU) requires loss at the level of 3x10 –8 or lower

Page 13: Campus Focused Workshop on Advanced Networking

10 April 2002 13

Where things are at Present

Infrastructure of large capacity• Besides the HDTV/IP demos we have examples of 240Mb/s flows

• But flows aren’t predictable – even 40Mb/s• People don’t know what they should expect

Page 14: Campus Focused Workshop on Advanced Networking

10 April 2002 14

Why Care?

Faculty needs keep advancing:• Effective access to remote facility: quickly move large datasets. PPDG: 400 Mb/s to CERN by 2003

• Interactive access: video or control or VoIPVery low loss/jitter

We (in several senses) need to deliver

Low aspirations are dangerous to us, to our goals

Page 15: Campus Focused Workshop on Advanced Networking

10 April 2002 16

Baseline BW Requirements for the US-CERN Transatlantic Link

0

2000

4000

6000

8000

10000

Link Bandwidth (Mbps)

Bandwidth (Mbps) 310 622 1250 2500 5000 10000

FY2001 FY2002 FY2003 FY2004 FY2005 FY2006

With thanks to Harvey B Newman, CIT

Page 16: Campus Focused Workshop on Advanced Networking

www.internet2.edu