is the internet ready for multimedia? (in production networks) ed perry, hp labs [email protected]...

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Is the Internet ready for multimedia? (in production networks) Ed Perry, HP Labs [email protected] MMNS 2002

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Page 1: Is the Internet ready for multimedia? (in production networks) Ed Perry, HP Labs ed.perry@hp.com MMNS 2002

Is the Internet ready for multimedia?(in production networks)

Ed Perry, HP [email protected]

MMNS 2002

Page 2: Is the Internet ready for multimedia? (in production networks) Ed Perry, HP Labs ed.perry@hp.com MMNS 2002

Where does Multimedia work today?

Examples:

•Hewlett-Packard

•Seoul

•CinemaNow.com

•www.KFOG.com

Page 3: Is the Internet ready for multimedia? (in production networks) Ed Perry, HP Labs ed.perry@hp.com MMNS 2002

What are the characteristicsof working Internet Multimedia?

One or more of the following

•Common administration

– Special purpose “private” internets– Enterprises (even with multiple AS domains)– Some localities

•Engineering for “adequate” or “over” capacity

•Small bandwidth media

– Audio– Small image

•TCP transport

•Download and play

– Broadband to home, to users– Peer-to-Peer & “Sharing”

•Digital Rights Management

Page 4: Is the Internet ready for multimedia? (in production networks) Ed Perry, HP Labs ed.perry@hp.com MMNS 2002

Is the Internet ready for Multimedia?

Yes...

•Depending where you live/work, relative to the source

•Depending on the nature of the content

– bandwidth, digital rights, ...

•If you are willing to use download and playback

•Depending on your willingness to pay for service

“This GOOD ENOUGH” can prevent the development of “BETTER”

Page 5: Is the Internet ready for multimedia? (in production networks) Ed Perry, HP Labs ed.perry@hp.com MMNS 2002

What are the remaining hurdles?

Problems with significant Business / Political challenges

•Business models for service provider interoperation

•Live, large-scale service consumption

• Interplay of

• High bandwidth media

• Broadband to users

• Digital Rights Management

Problems with additional Technical Challenges

•Exploding numbers of content providers and source locations

Management!

Page 6: Is the Internet ready for multimedia? (in production networks) Ed Perry, HP Labs ed.perry@hp.com MMNS 2002

Network Manager Concerns about Multimedia

•Don’t break my existing network services

•Don’t overload my network links and routers

– predict the loading? enforce rate limits?

•Minimize “risky” new software, equipment, configurations

– multicast, RSVP, QoS, etc.

•How do I control multimedia traffic (sources)?

•What are the security risks? Denial-of-service risks?

•How do I isolate / debug performance issues?

•How do I assess service-level objectives?

– in advance of use / need?– during use?

Page 7: Is the Internet ready for multimedia? (in production networks) Ed Perry, HP Labs ed.perry@hp.com MMNS 2002

“Production” Network Manageability (1)

•Multicast service assessment

•Device manageability

– Vendor support for IETF standard multicast MIBs (ipmroute, igmp, pim)

– Extensions for fault isolation, IGMPv3 & PIM-SSM

•Management tools that utilize the device manageability

Page 8: Is the Internet ready for multimedia? (in production networks) Ed Perry, HP Labs ed.perry@hp.com MMNS 2002

Traffic Impact: barely 2% of capacity on selected router interfaces

Page 9: Is the Internet ready for multimedia? (in production networks) Ed Perry, HP Labs ed.perry@hp.com MMNS 2002

“Production” Network Manageability (2)

•Multicast service assessment

•Device manageability

– Vendor support for IETF standard multicast MIBs (ipmroute, igmp, pim)

– Extensions for fault isolation, IGMPv3 & PIM-SSM•Management tools that utilize the device manageability

•Multimedia service assessment

•Synthetic

•Real-user activity

– Possibility of further technical innovation here!

Page 10: Is the Internet ready for multimedia? (in production networks) Ed Perry, HP Labs ed.perry@hp.com MMNS 2002

HP Streaming Media Service Synthetic tests

•150kbps synthetic media stream, via multicast to 24 sites

•Except one site: all < 0.7% loss, < 45mSec delay, < 56mSec jitter

from NetIQ Chariot

Page 11: Is the Internet ready for multimedia? (in production networks) Ed Perry, HP Labs ed.perry@hp.com MMNS 2002

Multimedia Operator Concerns about Networks

•How do I make money?

•How do get a guarantee of service from the network provider?

– How do I estimate load?

•How do I protect digital assets?

•How do I avoid denial-of-service attacks?

•How do I assess my service?

•Synthetic

•Real user activity

– Same possibility of further technical innovation here!

These needs are common to both Network and Multimedia Operators

Page 12: Is the Internet ready for multimedia? (in production networks) Ed Perry, HP Labs ed.perry@hp.com MMNS 2002

Media Service Quality AssessmentCommon Need of both Network and Media Operators

•As near to the human as possible, but without subjectivity issues

•Correlated with MOS, etc.

•Support for synthetic testing as well as real end-user assessment

•Cope with large-scale, simultaneous audiences

•Manage privacy and end-user security

•Resilient to hacking and denial-of-service

•Independent of transport, encoding, distribution network, etc.

•Usable by the network operator, the media service operator, or even the content owner