Title: Secured Seamless Convergence across Heterogeneous Access Network
1Secured Seamless Convergence across Heterogeneous
Access Network
Authors Ashutosh Dutta, Subir Das, David
Famolari Telcordia Technologies, New Jersey,
USA Yoshihiro Ohba, Kenichi Taniuchi, Victor
Fajardo, Toshikazu Kodama Toshiba
America Research Inc, New Jersey Henning
Schulzrinne, Columbia University, New
York Presenter Ashutosh Dutta Email
adutta_at_research.telcordia.com Prepared for World
Telecommunication Congress 2006, Budapest, Hungary
2Outline
- Motivation
- Related Work
- Scope and Goal of IEEE 802.21
- IEEE 802.21 Components
- MPA Overview
- MPA assisted IEEE 802.21 handover
- Implementation Results
- Intra-technology, Inter-domain
- Inter-technology, Interdomain
- Conclusion
3Mobile Wireless Internet A Scenario
Domain1
Internet
Domain2
PSTN gateway
WAN
802.11a/b/g
WAN
UMTS/ CDMA
IPv6 Network
Bluetooth
802.11 a/b/g
LAN
PSTN
Hotspot
LAN
PAN
CH
Roaming User
UMTS/CDMA Network
Ad Hoc Network
4Motivation
- Secured seamless convergence requires that
jitter, delay and packet loss are limited for
real-time applications without compromising the
security - 150 ms end-to-end delay and 3 packet loss for
interactive traffic such as VoIP - Handoff delays exist at several layers
- Layer 2 (handoff between AP), Layer 3 (IP
address acquisition, configuration) and Media
Redirection, Authentication - The challenge is even greater when moving between
heterogeneous domains - Access characteristics is different (802.11,
CDMA) - QoS requirement is different
- Configuration mechanism of network identifiers
are different (DHCP vs. PPP) - Mobility requirement are also different (802.11,
GPRS) - IEEE 802.21 proposes a standardized mechanism to
reduce the handoff-delay and packet loss in a
heterogeneous access network - MPA provides a proactive handover scheme across
heterogeneous access network - A combination of IEEE 802.21 and MPA can be a
good candidate to provide secured seamless
convergence
5Handover Taxonomy Supporting Seamless Convergence
802.11 (provider X) to CDMA (provider Y)
802.11 (provider X) to CDMA (provider X)
Inter-tech Inter-domain
Inter-tech Intra-domain
Inter-subnet
Intra-tech Inter-domain
Intra-tech Intra-domain
802.11b (provider X) to 802.11n (provider X)
802.11b (provider X) to 802.11n (provider Y)
Intra-tech Intra-domain
Intra-subnet
Inter-tech Intra-domain
802.11 (provider X) to CDMA (provider X)
6Effect of handoff delay on audio (Non-Optimized)
7Mobility Optimization - Related Work
- Cellular IP, HAWAII - Micro Mobility
- MIP-Regional Registration, Mobile-IP low latency,
IDMP - HMIPv6, FMIPv6 (IPv6)
- Yokota et al - Link Layer Assisted handoff
- Shin et al, Velayos et al - Layer 2 delay
reduction - Gwon et al, - Tunneling between FAs, Enhanced
Forwarding PAR -
- SIP-Fast Handoff - Application layer mobility
optimization - DHCP Rapid-Commit, Optimized DAD - Faster IP
address acquisition
8Inter-domain Handoff Delay Analysis (example)
Media Redirection
Application Layer Delay
Binding Update
AAA Profile
Local Authentication
L3 Delay
- Reduce the handoff delay
- Reduce the packet Loss
ARP Update
Duplicate Address Detection
Address Acquisition
L2 Delay
L2 security
Association
L 2 Scanning
Operation
9IEEE 802.21 Overview
- IEEE 802.21 (Media Independent Handover) WG is to
- develop a specification that facilitate handover
optimization - between heterogeneous media by providing
- Link layer intelligence and
- Network information to upper layers
- WG has been approved in March 2004
- We have started participating actively from
Nov. 2004
10Goal of IEEE 802.21
- The goal of IEEE 802.21 is to facilitate
mobility management protocols such that following
handover requirements are fulfilled - Service Continuity
- Minimize the data loss and break time without
user intervention - Application Class
- Support applications of different tolerance
characteristics - QoS
- Specify means of obtaining QoS information of the
neighboring networks - Network Discovery and Selection
- Network information could include information
such as link type, link identifier, link
availability, link quality - Selection of appropriate network based on
required QoS, cost, user preference - Security
- Specify means of security information to be made
available to the upper layers - Power Management
- Real-time link status, efficient scanning provide
proper battery power management
11 Scope of IEEE 802.21
- The current scope includes a Media Independent
Handover Function (MIHF) consisting of three
basic services and corresponding SAPs and
primitives - Media Independent Event Service (MIES)
- Media Independent Command Service (MICS), and
- Media Independent Information Service (MIIS)
- Support for multiple access technologies (e.g.,
802.3, 802.11, 802.16, and Cellular (3GPP and
3GPP2)) - Support for both network and device initiated
handovers
12 MIHF and Its Interactions with Lower and Upper
Layers
13Media-independent Pre-Authentication (MPA)
Overview
- MPA is
- a mobile-assisted higher-layer authentication,
authorization and handover scheme that is
performed a-priori to establishing L2
connectivity to a network where mobile may move
in near future - MPA provides a secure and seamless mobility
optimization that works for - Inter-subnet handoff
- Inter-domain handoff
- Inter-technology handoff
- Use of multiple interfaces
- MPA works with any mobility management protocol
- MPA drafts are currently being discussed in
MOBOPTS working group within IRTF
14Functional Components of MPA
- Pre-authentication/authorization
- Used for establishing a security association (SA)
between the mobile and a network to which the
mobile may move - Pre-configuration
- Used for obtaining parameters (e.g., an IP
address) from the network to which the mobile may
move - The SA created in (1) are used to perform secured
configuration procedure - Secured Proactive Handover (PH)
- Used for sending/receiving IP packets from the
current network using the pre-configured
parameters of the new network
15MPA-assisted Seamless Handoff (a
deploymentscenario)
16Protocol flow for MPA assisted 802.21 handover
17Prototype Demonstration Scenario (Case I, Case II)
18Sample Results Information Service of 802.21
19Comparison - Intra-Technology, Inter-domain
Handover (Case- I)
Audio output comparison
Delay and packet loss statistic
20Comparison - Inter-Technology, Inter-domain
handover (Case II)
Non-optimized inter-technology, inter-domain MIP
as Mobility binding
MPA and 802.21 assisted inter-technology,
inter-domain handoff with SIP and MIP
Non-optimized inter-technology, inter-domain SIP
as Mobility binding
21Conclusion
- IEEE 802.21s Media Independent Handover
Function (MIHF) will - provide the necessary knobs to optimize the
higher layer mobility - management protocols
- Media independent Pre-authentication framework
(MPA) provides - pre-authentication, pre-configuration and
proactive handover and enhance - IEEE 802.21 operation
- Combining MIHF with handover policy and control
can optimize the - handover and offer a better experience to end
users - We demonstrated the proof-of-concept with an
early version of - 802.21-based prototype using AIS, Event Service
and MPA framework - to support secured seamless convergence across
heterogeneous networks
22References
- 1 IEEE P802.21/D00.05 Draft IEEE Standard for
LAN/MAN Media Independent Handover Services
January, 2006. - 2 A. Dutta (Ed.) et al., A framework of
Media-Independent Pre-Authentication,
draft-ohba-mobopts-mpa-framework-01, IRTF MOBOPTS
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2004 - 13 M. Buddhikot et al, Design and
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