Title: Global Highperformance Networking and TransPAC2
1Global High-performance Networking and TransPAC2
James Williams Indiana University TransPAC2
Principal Investigator williams_at_indiana.edu
2Topics To Be Discussed
- TransPAC2 overview
- TransPAC2 architecture and engineering goals
- TransPAC2 service goals
- 2005 plan
- Coordination opportunities
- Asian politics
3The TransPAC2 Project
- Follow-on to the TransPAC project
- Funded by the US National Science Foundation
(SCI-0441096) - US partners are Indiana University and Internet2
- Asian partner is APAN
- About 1M/year in funding for 5 years
- Encourages scientific collaboration between
researchers in Asia and the US
4TransPAC2 Architectural Goals
- Continue high-performance connectivity across the
Pacific Ocean OC-192 connection between US and
Tokyo - Enhance connectivity by assisting in the
development of an intra-Asia backbone Tokyo-Hong
Kong-Singapore or beyond
5TransPAC2 Architecture
6TransPAC2 Engineering Topology
- TransPAC2 OC-192 connects APAN Tokyo XP with
TransPAC2 router in Los Angeles - LA TransPAC2 router maintains BGP peering with
North American RE Networks - Connectivity in US via Pacific Wave Ethernet
Exchange Point - Pacific Wave nodes in LA and Seattle
interconnected via 10GigE lambda on National
LambdaRail facility - Tokyo-Hong Kong connectivity via OC-48 circuit
- Cisco 15454 SONET switches multiplex two GigE
circuits to provide connectivity to both Hong
Kong Exchange Points - Hong Kong-Singapore link details to be worked out
7TransPAC2 Engineering Topology Diagram
8North America-Asia Circuit Priorities
- Three major production circuits between North
America and Asia (not including AU) - TransPAC2 (LA and Seattle)
- JGN2 (Chicago)
- NII/SINET (New York)
- All three circuits will back each other up
- Primary circuit TransPAC2
- Secondary circuit NII/SINET
- Tertiary circuit JGN2
- BGP routes will be localprefd according to the
above scheme on all networks
9TransPAC2 Service Goals
- Provide production networking to facilitate
research cooperation between the US and Asia - Cooperation with Internet2 HOPI project
- US-Asian cooperation on lightpath technologies
will be crucial in future development - Initial assets will allow for MPLS and
GMPLS-like experimentation, with future
equipment possibly supporting layer 2 and
layer 1 services - Security coordination
- Measurement coordination
- AAI development
10HOPI and TransPAC2
- The Internet2 HOPI project will attempt to
provide both routed and circuit-based
functionality - Over the next year, the HOPI Design Team will
test and evaluate vendor equipment in an effort
to define the capabilities and implications of a
hybrid network - The initial focus will be on lightpath creation
- In 2005, a HOPI testbed will be created to answer
some core questions - What defines a deterministic path through a
layer3 network? - latency and jitter guarantees? bandwidth
protection? - What does the network need to do to provide a
lightpath - MPLS and QoS and STS/STM and ???
- What flavor of MPLS? (L2VPN or L3VPN or stitched
LSPs?) - How dynamic do lightpaths need to be?
- How will the lightpaths be created?
- GMPLS? UCLP? Human?
- How will lightpaths cross administrative
boundaries? - Indiana University has been involved with the
HOPI project from its inception - TransPAC2 will work with Internet2 to develop
mutual goals and similar resources - Lightpath support will be important to future
network growth, though a shared and production
packet-based service offering will likely always
service the majority of users - Lightpath-based experimentation will only be
undertaken if it will pose no significant risk to
the production nature of the TransPAC2 service
offering.
11Security
- An important issue that needs IRNC-wide attention
- Need for central data collection, contact list
and incident coordination - Need for international incident response
- URL http//www.ren-isac.net/
12TransPAC2 Measurement
- The TransPAC2 measurement effort will provide
valuable data and tools to network engineers and
researchers in order to debug network problems
and improve application performance - TransPAC2 will deploy an Asian Observatory
framework in Asia, modeled after the US-based
Abilene Observatory. - This framework will help determine performance
characteristics of the complete network path by
aggregating information about the segments that
make up the network path
13TransPAC2 Measurement (cont.)
- The Asian Observatory system consists of PCs at
key locations along the network backbone
collecting and analysing measurement data - This work makes use of existing tools such as the
bwctl and owamp codes developed by the Internet2
piPEs project. - Other tools from the Abilene NOC, APAN NOC JP,
and NLANR will be deployed on this hardware as
well - Data collection and analysis will conform to the
guidelines developed by Matt Zekauskas and Matt
Mathis for the IRNC project , the GGF, and other
policy makers in the measurement community
142005 Measurement Goals
- Measurement machines will be deployed in the
TransPAC2 US co-location space to collect data
(some resources already located in Tokyo) - Full code implementation of existing measurement
and analysis tools - Schedule persistent tests between APAN/TransPAC2
and Abilene Observatory nodes - Make measurement data available to the network
and research communities - Foster collaboration between the APAN
measurement community and other global network
measurement projects such as the IRNC initiative
15Authentication and Authorization Infrastructure
- TransPAC goal to promote development of national
AAI in APAN countries - Why?
- In support of
- Access to lightpath/HOPI-like services
- Access to performance measurement/monitoring
tools and services - Authenticated sharing of network security
information - Inter-institutional collaboration broadly Grid,
authenticated video-conferencing, etc.
16AAI(2)
- How?
- Leverage NSF NMI program
- Leverage Internet2 and other countries emerging
national AAI efforts - Cotswolds group Cookbook
- PRAGMA collaboration
17Supporting Production Science
- High-performance bandwidth across the Pacific
OC-192 combined with development of an
inter-Asia backbone provide necessary
infrastructure for e-science - Typical (everyday, non-heroic) applications
include e-VLBI data transfers, HEP data transfers
between Japan and the US, grid computing research
and standard everyday science activities
18Supporting Production Science (cont.)
- Physics www.riken.go.jp and www.kek.jp
- Nanotechnology www.nims.go.jp
- Grid computing www.pragma-grid.net
- Earth science www.ees.hokudai.ac.jp
- PRAGMA www.pragma-grid.org
19TransPAC2 Current Status
- TransPAC2 has received NSF funding (SCI-0441096)
- James Williams, Indiana UniversityPrincipal
Investigator - Douglas Van Houweling, Internet2Co-PI
- APAN network owners committed to the TransPAC2
effort - Purchase of OC-192c services complete
- OC-48 between Tokyo and Hong Kong in place
- Purchase of US end equipment to be located in Los
Angeles is complete - We expect the OC-192 to be active 5/1/2005
202005 Plans
- Operationalize OC-192 May 1
- Establish link to Singapore Oct 1
- Web site May 1
- Coordinating Committee May 1
- Measurement mentioned previously
- Security being discussed
- HOPI ongoing
- AII ongoing
21Coordination Opportunities
- Sharing of bandwidth across the Pacific (10Gbp is
plenty for all) - Linking AU and Hawaii into Asia in a cost
effective manner - Clarifying the Hong Kong route exchange issue and
general HK connectivity - Exchange Point pricing
22Interesting Networking Observations
- The bandwidth problem between the US and Asia
has been solved! gt60Gbps available as of 4/1/05 - The access problem within Asia continues
- Tien2 Project is one effort to address this
problem - The north-south problem within Asia continues
Now we have to address the network service
infrastructure and scientific collaboration
problem.
23Interesting Asian Political Issues
- Politics and economics are now allowing more
networking cooperation among Asian countries - Regulated telecommunications environments
- Desire to connect directly to the US
- Uncomfortable nature of sharing
- Within country disputes
24James Williams TransPAC2 Principal
Investigator williams_at_indiana.edu