gastón cutignola · 2016. 5. 20. · senior solution engineer latin america telco systems...
TRANSCRIPT
Seminar Series Sponsor Event Sponsor
Gastón CutignolaSenior Solution Engineer Latin America
Telco Systems
Capturing the Wholesale Ethernet Interconnect Market with CE 2.0 Services
25 min
2
Presentation Agenda
• Review of MEF CE 2.0 Retail and Wholesale services
• Status of Wholesale/Interconnect Environments– Moving up the curve
• Work to Standardize, Streamline and Automate Service Implementations– Full range of standardized wholesale services
– Increasing availability of standards-oriented wholesale Operators
– Reference interconnect solutions using MEF specifications
– Multi-Operator orchestration and Service Lifecycles
3
MEF Carrier Ethernet 2.0
• Current Generation of MEF Services
• Carrier Ethernet delivers 3 powerful features:– Standardized Multi- Class of Service
– Interconnected CENs
– Manageability
• Globally adopted connectivity service framework
• Foundation for agile, assured and orchestrated connectivity services
4
CE 2.0 Attributes
CE 2.0 Multi-CoS• Industry’s first standardized Multi-CoS
application & distance-oriented Performance Objectives for Next Gen SLAs
• Enables new level of network efficiency, responsiveness for enterprises & MBH
CE 2.0 Interconnect• Integrates autonomous, CE networks, as a single
regional/global network
• Wholesale Service simplifies lowers costs, adds revenue
CE 2.0 Service Management• Automated management brings scalability
• 3 Recent/New Specs for SOAM, FM/PM
• New Metrics
UNI
EVC1
CoS 410 Mbps CIR for VoIP
CoS 2
20Mbps CIR for VPN data traffic
68Mbps for Internet AccessEVC2
CoS 62 Mbps CIR for control
CE 2.0 Class of Service Extensions
UNI
Retail Provider’s CE Network
UNI
Cloud
ENNI
WholesaleAccess Network
CE Exchange
ENNI
5
CE 2.0 Retail Services Types
E-Line
• Ethernet Private Lines (EPL)
• Ethernet Virtual Private Lines (EVPL)
• Ethernet Internet Access
E-LAN
• Multipoint L2 VPNs
• Transparent LAN Service
• Multicast Networks
• EP-LAN, EVP-LAN
E-Tree
• Rooted Multi-Point L2 VPNs
• Traffic Segregation
• EP-Tree, EVP-Tree
UNI
Point-to-Point EVC
UNI
Rooted Multi-point EVC
UNI
UNI
UNI
Multi-point to Multi-point EVC
UNI
UNIUNI UNI
MEF E-Access and E-Transit
The Wholesale Ethernet Game-Changer
7
What is an MEF E-Access Service?• Retail Service Provider buys E-Access services to reach off-net customer locations
• Wholesale Access Provider sells E-Access services to provide access to locations on its network
• ENNI is point of interconnection between Retail and Wholesale providers
End-to-End Carrier Ethernet Service
E-Access Service
CE
UNI
CE
ENNIUNIEnd User
Subscriber Headquarters
End User Subscriber Branch Site
Carrier Ethernet Network Carrier Ethernet Network
ON-NET CUSTOMER LOCATIONS
OFF-NET CUSTOMER LOCATIONS
Retail Service Provider – The Buyer(Has relationship with end-customer)
Wholesale Access Service Provider – The Seller(Provides Access to remote customer location)
8
MEF 51 E-Access Services (OVC Services)
E-Access Services: based on Operator Virtual Connection (OVC) between User Network Interface (UNIs) and External Network Network Interface (ENNIs)
Key Characteristics of Access E-Line• Point-to-Point, UNI-ENNI• Flexible OVC End Point Map at UNI• Multi-CoS capable• Service OAM• Enhanced Access EPL/Access EVPL
Key Characteristics of Access E-LAN• Multipoint-to-Multipoint, UNI-ENNI
- Supports >1 UNI and/or >1 ENNI
• Flexible OVC End Point Map at UNI• Multi-CoS capable• Service OAM
Access E-Line Service
UNI_1
UNI_2
ENNI_AB
CEN A
CE-VLAN IDs 3, 4, 5
ENNI_AC
CE-VLAN ID 34
Full Map: All CE-VLAN IDs map to the Blue OVC End Point
S-VLAN ID 1011
S-VLAN ID 253
S-VLAN ID 267
Access E-LAN Service
CEN A
Access E-LAN
UNI_1
UNI_N
ENNI_1
ENNI_N
OVC End Point Map @ UNI: 1, >1 or all CE-VLAN IDs
OVC End Point Map @ UNI: 1, >1 or all CE-VLAN IDs
S-VLAN ID 115
S-VLAN ID 3398
9
New CE 2.0 E-Transit Services
• Key Characteristics of an E-Transit Service:
• Connects two or more CENs together using an Operator Virtual Connection (OVC)
• External Network Network Interfaces (ENNIs) at the CEN boundaries
• Point-to-Point or Multipoint-to-Multipoint OVCs provide the connectivity
• Can support all EVC-based services (i.e., ‘Private’ and ‘Virtual Private’)
• Multi-CoS capable
• Service OAM support
CE
UNI
CE
ENNIUNI
End User Subscriber
Headquarters
End User Subscriber Branch Site
Carrier Ethernet Network(CEN)
CENENNI
E-Access ServiceE-Transit Service
(E-Line)
End-to-End Carrier Ethernet Service
CEN
10
MEF 51 E-Transit Services (OVC Services)E-Transit Services: based on Operator Virtual Connection (OVC) between External Network Network Interface (ENNIs)
Key Characteristics of Transit E-Line• Point-to-Point, ENNI-ENNI• Flexible OVC End Point Map• Preservation of CE-VLAN Tag• Multi-CoS capable• Service OAM
Key Characteristics of Transit E-LAN• Multipoint-to-Multipoint, ENNIs• Preservation of CE-VLAN Tag• Multi-CoS capable• Service OAM
Transit E-Line Service
ENNI_AC
ENNI_AB1
CEN A S-VLAN ID 923
S-VLAN ID 51
ENNI_AB2
S-VLAN IDs 101-150
S-VLAN IDs 101-150Operator B’s CEN is to the left of this ENNI
Operator B’s CEN is to the right of this ENNI
Operator C’s CEN is to the right of this ENNI Transit E-LAN Service
ENNI_ACENNI_AB
CEN A
S-VLAN ID 984
S-VLAN ID 253
Transit E-LAN
S-VLAN ID 2033
Hairpin switching
Work of the MEF - Wholesale
12
Moving Up The Curve
Adaptive
DynamicAPI driven
Automation
10GE UNI
Standardized Ethernet Services
Layer 2 / 3 VPNs
Multiple Access Options
Low Latency
100GE UNI
Multi-CoS
SLAs Standardized Services
Faster Service Turn Up
E-Access
100G Transport
Real-Time PM
Programmable Cloud-Centric ModelFixed Connectivity Model
2004 2015 Future
Scal
able
, Dyn
amic
, Cu
sto
miz
ed, U
biq
uit
ou
s
Coordinated
13
Network as a Service - Single Domain
• Some service providers offer ….
– Fast service fulfillment
– Rich service feature sets
• But moving up the curve is…
– Costly and slow to add new features
– Limited to single domain
OSS/BSS/Orchestration
Fulfillment, Control,Performance, Assurance,
Usage, Analytics, Security, Policy
Retail Service Provider(Single Domain)
UserService Endpoint
UserService Endpoint
End-to-End Network as a Service
14
Adaptive
DynamicAPI driven
Automation
10GE UNI
Standardized Ethernet Services
Layer 2 / 3 VPNs
Multiple Access Options
Low Latency
100GE UNI
Multi-CoS
SLAs Standardized Services
Faster Service Turn Up
E-Access
100G Transport
Real-Time PM
Programmable Cloud-Centric ModelFixed Connectivity Model
2004 2015 Future
Scal
able
, Dyn
amic
, Cu
sto
miz
ed, U
biq
uit
ou
s
Coordinated
Single Domain Service Provider
1
Single Domain Service Provider
2
Single Domain Service Provider
3
Moving Up The Curve – Single Domain
15
Network as a Service – Multi Domain
• Manual processes between Operators dominate
• Limited feature sets
• Even slower to add new service features
• Exponential complexity for 3 or more Operators
End-to-End Network as a Service
Operator 1
Retail Service Provider(Multi-Operator)
Operator 2
UserService Endpoint
UserService Endpoint
OSS/BSS/Orchestration
Fulfillment, Control,Performance, Assurance,
Usage, Analytics, Security, Policy
OSS/BSS/Orchestration
Fulfillment, Control,Performance, Assurance,Usage, Analytics, Security, Policy
16
Adaptive
DynamicAPI driven
Automation
10GE UNI
Standardized Ethernet Services
Layer 2 / 3 VPNs
Multiple Access Options
Low Latency
100GE UNI
Multi-CoS
SLAs Standardized Services
Faster Service Turn Up
E-Access
100G Transport
Real-Time PM
Programmable Cloud-Centric ModelFixed Connectivity Model
2004 2015 Future
Scal
able
, Dyn
amic
, Cu
sto
miz
ed, U
biq
uit
ou
s
Coordinated
Moving Up The Curve - Multi-Domain
Multi Domain Service Provider
3
Operator 3A
Operator 3B
Multi Domain Service Provider
1
Operator 1A
Operator 1B Multi Domain Service Provider
2
Operator 2A
Operator 2B
17
Work Of The MEF
STANDARDIZED ARCHITECTURE
• UNIs and ENNIs
• EVCs and OVCs
Service Architecture
Carrier Ethernet Network
End-to-End Carrier Ethernet Service
Carrier Ethernet Network
ConnectivityServices
• E-Line, E-LAN, E-Tree, E-Access, E-Transit
• Information Model & OAM
STANDARDIZED & CERTIFIED SERVICES
E-Transit
E-AccessE-Line E-Tree
E-LAN
STANDARDIZED LIFECYCLE FRAMEWORKS
LifecycleFrameworks
• Product Catalogue
• Service Ordering
• Configuration & Setup
• Performance Reporting
MEF
Ce
rtif
ied
Pro
fess
ion
al
STANDARDIZED AGILE, ASSURED, ORCHESTRATED SERVICES
LifecycleService
Orchestration
• Third Network Services
• APIs NFV SDN Existing WAN
Lifecycle Service Orchestration (LSO)
Network Infrastructure
18
MEF Services Interconnect Program
• A new program is launched to enable smaller access providers to:– Join the growing global community
of standardized CE 2.0 Service Providers
– Cost-effectively become MEF E-Access certified
– Leverage the extensive wholesale work of the MEF to competitive advantage
19
One Answer to Hundred Questions...
“Ethernet Bitstream”
Service Provider
“Ethernet Leased Line”
“IP Bitstream”“VULA”
Operator
“Ethernet Service”
20
One Answer to Hundred Questions...
E-AccessService Provider
Operator
21
Service Certification
Equipment Certification
Professional Certification
• 3,953+ MEF-CECPs• 399 Companies• 76 countries
• 276 CE 2.0 Network Devices• 42 Equipment Manufacturers
• E-Line, E-LAN, E-Tree, • E-Access, E-Transit• 144 Certified Services• 56 Service Providers, 21 Countries
MEF Certifications for WholesaleReview
22
Standardized Interconnection….
EIP ARCHITECTURE
• Facility
• ENNI Build and Attributes
Service Architecture
ConnectivityServices
• E-Access, E-Transit
• Information Model & OAM
WHOLESALE SERVICES
E-Transit
E-Access
STANDARDIZED LIFECYCLE FRAMEWORKS (BUSINESS PROCESS)
LifecycleFrameworks
• Service Lifecycle
• Manual Processes
• APIs
MEF
Rap
id P
roto
typ
ing
STANDARDIZED AGILE, ASSURED, ORCHESTRATED SERVICES
LifecycleService
Orchestration
• Third Network Services
• APIsNFV SDN Existing WAN
Lifecycle Service Orchestration (LSO)
Network Infrastructure
Carrier Ethernet Network
End-to-End Carrier Ethernet Service
Carrier Ethernet Network
E-Transit
E-Access
Service Provider Access Provider
23
Ethernet Interconnect Points (EIP) Project• Launched in November 2014, EIPs will be used to interconnect CE Networks, not just at the
ENNI level. EIP is a mode of operation.
• Implementation Guidelines (currently in Letter Ballot) will cover from the physical ENNI to the LSO, including Service Operations Lifecycle and Product Lifecycle management.
• Migration from 100,000s of TDM “meet me” points to standardized Carrier Ethernet interconnects.
MEF 26.1 ENNI Port Interface Specification
MEF 33 Defines an “Access” Service” Using MEF 26.1
ENNI: External Network to Network InterfaceUNI: User to Network Interface
24
Service Lifecycle Process Model (MEF 50)
Product Lifecycle Service Operations Lifecycle
Market Analysis & Product Strategy
Product Design
Service & Resource Design
Product Launch
Marketing Fulfillment Response
Sales Proposal & Feasibility
Customer Order
Service Configuration &
Activation
Fault Management
Quality Management
Revenue Management
Service Termination
Serviceability
Fulfillment
Operation
MEF 50 leverages the TM Forum’s Business Process Framework, also referred to as the enhanced Telecom Operations Map (eTOM).
25
Multi-Operator Service Orchestration
Service Provider Business Applications
SDN
Fulfillment, Control,Performance, Assurance,
Usage, Analytics, Security, Policy
NFVExisting
WAN SDNNFVExisting
WAN
Self-serviceWeb Portal
Network Infrastructure Network Infrastructure
Operator 1 Operator n
26
Service Lifecycle Process Model (MEF 50)
Product Catalogue* Service Ordering*
Service Activation*
Performance Reporting (MEF 52)
LSO and Lifecycle Frameworks
LSO CapabilitiesFulfillment | Performance | Control | Assurance
Usage | Analytics | Security | Policy
* Future MEF Framework Specification
27
MEF Wholesale Action Plan
• Start with CE 2.0 Certification
• Adopt MEF 50 Service Lifecycle Process
• Get Workforce MEF-CECP Certified
• Prepare for Automation and LSO– Transition of OSS/BSS to support LSO
Seminar Series Sponsor Event Sponsor
Gastón CutignolaSenior Solution Engineer Latin America
Telco Systems
Capturing the Wholesale Ethernet Interconnect Market with CE 2.0 Services