Title: Fy 08 NETWORK PLANNING TASK FORCE
1Fy 08 NETWORK PLANNING TASK FORCE
- First Strategy Discussion
10.1.07
2NPTF Meetings FY 08
- 130-300pm in 337A Conference Room, 3rd floor
of 3401 Walnut Street - Process
- Intake and Current Status Review July 16
- Agenda Setting Discussion - September 17
- Strategy Discussions - October 1
- Security Strategy Discussions - October 15
- Strategy Discussions - October 29
- Prioritization - November 5
- FY09 Rate Setting November 19
3Proposed NPTF Meetings FY 09
- February 18-Operational review
- April 21- Planning discussions
- June 2- Security strategy session
- July 21-Strategy discussions
- August 4- Strategy discussions
- September 15- Preliminary rates/security
- October 6- Strategy discussion
- November 3- FY10 Rate setting
4Todays Agenda
- Strategy Discussions
- Next Generation PennNet
- UPS for network electronics
- Integrated Communications
- Intrusion-Detection
5Next Generation PennNet-Gig Connectivity
Building Redundancy
- Goals
- Gig enabled closet electronics
- Gig to every building
- Redundant Gig connectivity
- Current Status
- Approximately 60 of switches 10/100/1000 enabled
- By the end of FY 08, most switches will be
10/100/1000Mbps - 62 buildings with Gig Ethernet
6Strategic Approach NGP
- Diversify the PennNet Routing Core
- Move out of College Hall (Largest Single Point of
Failure) - Construct 5 Network Aggregation Points (NAPs)
- Redundant High Speed Connectivity between NAP
locations - Highly Available Core Network Infrastructure
- Relocate Campus Building Uplinks to Local NAP
- Provide High Speed Uplinks to Buildings (where
infrastructure can support this now, single-mode
fiber/conduit build outs sometimes necessary) - Provide Redundancy Uplinks to Campus Buildings
- Five Connectivity Models
- Based on Building Criticality (University
Business) - Number of User Connections
- Infrastructure Availability
7Diversify PennNet Routing Core
- Five NAP locations completed and in operation
- NAP locations have redundant and diverse 10 gig
feeds. - NAPs connect local buildings that have fiber and
pathway. - 62 buildings have gigabit Ethernet service
- College Hall node room will house a core router
for next two years (until all NAP to building
feeds are in place) - Will reduce catastrophic disaster recovery time
from 2 weeks to under 2 hours. - Will provide infrastructure foundation for next
generation data, voice and video services. - Eastern NAP feasibility study pending
construction timeline.
8(No Transcript)
9Building Connectivity Models 1 2(Dual Feeds to
separate NAPs, each with either diverse or
overlapping pathways)
10Building Connectivity Model 3 (Each Building has
1 uplink to a separate NAP and one link to each
other.)
11Building Connectivity Model 4 (Building has 1
uplink to each Building Entrance Router in the
local area.)
12Building Connectivity Model 5 (Building has 1
uplink to a Building Entrance Router.)
13Building Connectivity Model 5a (Building has 1
uplink to a Building Entrance Router with dual
feeds.)
14Gig Connected Buildings (Single Feed)
15Gig Connected Buildings (Single Feed)
16Gig Connected Buildings (Dual Feed)
17Gig Connected Buildings (Dual Feed)
18Dual Connected Buildings (100/Gig or 100)
19Upgrade Schedule
- http//www.upenn.edu/computing/pennnet/maintschedu
le.html
20Redundancy (UPS)
- As we move towards data, voice and video IP-based
systems and services that all rely on electrical
power, how much protection should we do and can
we afford? - We have back up generators and UPS in the 5 NAPs.
So theoretically they should not go down. - Building power is not 99.999 from
Peco/Facilities. - While we do not have solid historical data, we
began recording data on power outages beginning
in March 2007. - Since March 21,2007 the campus has had 52 hours
of outage due to power loss in 36 buildings. (Not
including a 64 hour outage to Nursing LIFE) - Generally, outages are either very short (blip)
or 1 hours.
21Redundancy (UPS)
- It costs about 2700 per location to install UPS
(assuming the UPS has 25 minutes of battery time
and no other wiring closet work need to be done).
- Cost of 1100.00 per 15 minutes additional
battery time - Rough ongoing costs would be approximately
900/yr per location. - NT manages over 600 wiring closets on campus
- Annual cost would be about 540K
22Redundancy (UPS)
- Alternatively, we could just do UPS on the
building routers. - There are only 100 of these locations.
- Without UPS, a short electrical blink causes them
to reboot, forcing a 5-10 minute outage. - This would mean for that duration, there would be
no services that require the network including
phones. - Annual cost 90k
- Are you interested in this? Is it worth spending
this much to protect against 25 minutes of
outage?
23Integrated Communications (IC)
- IC involves integrating several communications
applications toward improved productivity for
staff, faculty and students - PennNet Phone and Voicemail
- Instant messaging
- Desktop video
- Linking these applications together, and to
University information (online directory,
calendars, etc) puts more control in the hands of
our user community - It also allows user communication preferences to
be taken into account.
24PennNet Phone
- Goals
- To convert 25,000 analog voice customers to
Integrated Communications (VoIP, Voicemail, etc.)
over the converged IP network with added
functionality and lower costs in 5 years or less. - Status
- We currently have about 1400 PennNet Phone users.
- Redundant servers and gateways
- Full service monitoring 24x7
- New feature releases about twice a year
- New phone equipment being rolled out by early
2008.
25PennNet Phone
- Issues
- We have had some long-term problems with the PRIs
from Verizon and the Cisco gateways that have
caused known problems with transferring some
calls, some caller ID, etc. - Next steps
- We believe we have the PRI problems resolved.
- We tested the new gateway code yesterday.
- The new code release comes out in late October.
- If all goes well, we could have improved call
transfers in production in November.
26Instant Messaging
- Goals
- Users at Penn report that they are using Instant
Messaging (AIM, Yahoo Messenger, Skype and Google
Talk) today for business purposes. - Our goal was to provide them with an alternative
that - Provides improved privacy and security
- Is able to make use of Penn identity information
- Can be integrated with other Penn communications
elements
27Instant Messaging
- Status
- The same open standard, open source technology
used by Google Talk, "jabber" (based on the XMPP
protocol family) is being deployed and used in a
pilot mode at Penn today - It provides controlled data path (need not leave
campus when two on campus users chat) - It provides identity assurance (uses Penn's
authentication system, and Penn's naming scheme) - It has so far proven to be low cost to operate
and highly reliable. - Next steps
- Pilot to a larger audience over the next 3-4
months - Full rollout at no cost to current PennNet phone
and email customers by end of FY08.
28Voice mail
- Goals
- Roll out version 1.0 of new voicemail in early
2008 (possible late January). - Key reasons for change
- Todays Octel Voicemail system is old and
expensive to support (vendor EOL/EOS) - It does not have good disaster recovery
capabilities - In a failure, we could be out for at least 12
hours - Message recovery would be incomplete.
- The new system can recover rapidly with very
complete data - The new system is designed for the new PennNet
Phone service to be used throughout Penn in the
next few years - A migration by all users to the new voice mail
system now brings us back to "one voice mail
community"
29Voice mail Differences
- There will be differences in features and
functionality - In some cases, the new voice mail system will be
less feature rich - But it will allow PennNet Phone users some very
advanced online access to messages and features - Web access to settings
- Both telephone and email access to messages
30Voice mail Timing
- New voicemail is in production use now for 1400
PennNet Phone users - New voicemail is in pilot now for 100 campus
users of traditional phones - For most traditional phone users, rollout is
being targeted for early 2008 (possibly late
January) - For advanced voicemail applications, migration
will take place in late spring or early summer
CY2008 - eg., Menus, Transfer Mailboxes, Listen-only
mailboxes
31Desktop Video
- Goals
- Easy, low cost desktop video conferencing for
when audio or IM is insufficient - Status
- No work being done towards a Penn service. But
desktop client tools are maturing. - Issues
- Maturity, complexity, cost
- Next steps
- Wait a little longer
32Intrusion Detection (Perimeter PennNet Core)
- We deployed Arbor Networks peakflow in 2005
- A network management tool that provides some ID
functionality for PennNet perimeter and core. - We use it for a wide range of analysis, including
attack signatures, but also traffic
characterization and ISP peering analysis. - We are able to share info across institutions so
that we can recognize an attack before it reaches
Penn. - Upgrades are mostly software which is covered by
our current contract.
33Intrusion Detection(Local level/subnet)
- Host-based intrusion detection is available today
for every major operating system - ISC is committed to having a strategy for local
intrusion detection systems, as well as
recommendations and product offerings before
network-based IDS becomes required in any
security policy. - It is likely that this would be in FY09.
- We are currently looking at a few products
- Tipping point (meeting with them tomorrow)
- Arbor - Peakflow x
- Snort-widely deployed open source IDS
- Bro-open source IDS developed at LBNL by Dr. Vern
Paxson, a noted TCP/IP researcher. - A local IDS could be deployed alongside, and
access mirrored traffic from, a building
entrance device.