Title: Internet2
1www.internet2.edu
2Internet2 an Overview
- Heather Boyles
- Director, International Relations
- heather_at_internet2.edu
- Ana Preston
- Program Manager, International Relations
- Apreston_at_internet2.edu
3Outline
- Background why and who?
- Focus areas and activities what?
- International partnerships how?
- Your questions..
4Success of the Internet
Millions of People
SourceNua Internet Surveys
5History
- ARPAnet origins
- 1987 -- NSFnet
- Privatization in 1995
- 1996
- Telecomm Act
- The WWW explodes
- Federal Next Generation Internet Initiative
- NSF provides grant funding to universities for
network infrastructure - Internet2 founded
- 1999
- Abilene in production
6Todays Internet Doesnt
- Provide reliable end-to-end performance
- Encourage cooperation on new capabilities
- Allow testing of new technologies
- Support development of revolutionary
applications
7Internet2 Mission and Goals
- Develop and deploy advanced network applications
and technologies, accelerating the creation of
tomorrows Internet. - Enable new generation of applications
- Create leading edge RE network capability
- Transfer technology and experience to the global
production Internet
8Internet Development Spiral
Commercialization
Privatization
Todays Internet
Internet2
Research and
Development
Partnerships
Source Ivan Moura Campos
9Internet2 Universities190 Universities as of
January 2002
10Internet2 Corporate Partners
11Additional Membership
- Over 70 Internet2 Corporate Members
- Over 40 Affiliate Members
- Government Research Agencies
- National Institutes of Health
- National Science Foundation
- NASA
- NOAA
- USGS (Earth Resources Observations Systems)
12Organization
- Member Liaisons
- Executive
- Engineering
- Applications
- Middleware
- UCAID not-for-profit corporation
- Staff of 80
- Large number leased from universities
- Facilitate, coordinate, provide collective
infrastructure where required
13Leadership
- University presidents/chancellors are the voting
representatives - Strong board
- Advisory councils with board seats
- Applications Strategy
- Network Planning and Policy
- Network Research Liaison
- Industry Liaison Council
14Why University Leadership?
- The Internet came from the academic community
- Stanford -- the Internet protocols
- NSFNet -- the scaled-up Internet
- CERN -- the WWW protocols
- University of Illinois -- the Web browser
- Universities research and education mission
require an advanced Internet and have
demonstrated they can develop it
15Internet2 Partnerships
- Internet2 universities are recreating the
partnerships that fostered the Internet in its
infancy - Industry
- Government
- International
16Internet2/U.S. Government Separate but
Interdependent
- U.S. Next Generation Internet
- Led by U.S. government agencies
- Focused on agency needs
- Internet2
- Led by higher education
- Focused on research and education needs
- Interdependent
- Government agency funding to research,
connections, applications development - Science and engineering funded projects
increasingly dependent on persistent,
high-performance infrastructure provided by
Internet2
17Internet2 Goals
- Enable new generation of applications
- Re-create leading edge RE network capability
- Transfer technology and experience to the global
production Internet
18Internet2 Focus Areas
- Advanced Applications
- Middleware
- Engineering
- Advanced Network Infrastructure
- Partnerships
19How Internet2 works
- Universities commit
- Engineering lead connect university to rest of
Internet2 community, deploy new technologies - Applications lead support apps development on
campus - Middleware architect work with I2MI to implement
middleware infrastructure - Working groups
- Of expert/interested individuals within community
- Chaired by volunteer (sometimes by staff)
- Staff support
20How Internet2 works, contd
- Projects, e.g. Abilene
- Executive team and Project team
- Qwest, Cicso, Nortel
- Indiana University supplies NOC
- Projects, e.g. Shibboleth
- IBM providing coding
- Designed by MACE (volunteers from community)
- Supported by Staff
- Internet2 Staff
- Primarily facilitate, coordinate, flywheel
- 80
21Internet2 Focus Areas
- Advanced Applications
- Middleware
- Engineering
- Advanced Network Infrastructure
- Partnerships
22Different Disciplines/Contexts
- Sciences
- Arts
- Humanities
- Health care
- Business/Law
- Administration
- Library
- Classroom
- Clinic
- Office
- Laboratory
- Dorm room
23Application Attributes
- Interactive collaboration
- Real-time access to remote resources
24Remote Scanning Electron Microscope
- The University of Michigan
25Philips XL30
26(No Transcript)
27Real-Time Tele-Operation of Remote
EquipmentNorth Carolina State
Universityhttp//CARL.ce.ncsu.edu/
28Tele-vator
- Excavation backhoe operated remotely over
Internet2 - Used in hazardous rescue situations
- Sophisticated two-way feedback using stereovision
29Space Physics and Aeronomy Research Collaboratory
30(No Transcript)
31(No Transcript)
32Attributes, cont.
- Large-scale, multi-site computation and data
mining - Shared virtual reality
- Any combination of the above
33Grid Projects
34What is the Grid?
- Global resources available to communities of
researchers - The protocols, services, and applications that
enable new forms of collaboration
35Grid Resources
Instruments
Libraries
Workstations
People
Data sets
36Examples
- Network for Earthquake Engineering Simulation
- Collaboration environment for earthquake
researchers (e.g., structural engineers,
geotechnical and tsunami scientists)
- Grid Physics Network
- Petabyte scale environment for data-intensive
applications (Large Hadron Collider, Sloan
Digital Sky Survey, Laser Interferometer
Gravitational Wave Observatory)
37Grid Projects
- NEESGrid
- www.neesgrid.org
- GriPhyN
- www.griphyn.org
- S/W infrastructure
- www.gridforum.org
- Research Sensornets
- Networked nanotechnology
38High Fidelity Digital Video/Audio
Teaching Music
University of Oklahoma
39Video Futures
- Tele-immersive Office of the Future
Source University of North Carolina
40The Internet2 Commons
- An effort to encourage and support large-scale,
distributed collaboration for the research and
education community - Enabling one-to-one, one-to-group, and
group-to-group collaboration - Supporting personal communications, meetings,
conferences, and teaching and learning - For Internet2 members and their international
counterparts
41Data Sharing
Instant Messaging
Voice/IP
Electronic Notebooks
Peer to Peer
Collaboratories
Others
H.323
VRVS
Videoconferencing Technologies
AG
MPEG2
Others
42Internet2 Commons Work
- Initial focus on H.323
- Set of MCU equipment available to members
- Training and certifying Commons Coordinators on
campus - Working with VIDE on numbering/directory schema
- Next move
- Additional collaborative technologies (e.g. T.120)
43Internet2 Focus Areas
- Advanced Applications
- Middleware
- Engineering
- Advanced Network Infrastructure
- Partnerships
44Middleware
Applications
Authentication, Identification, Authorization,
Directories, Security
Advanced Network Services (Distributed Network
Middleware)
Advanced Physical Network Infrastructure
45Middleware
46Internet2 Middleware Initiative
- Focus on core middleware as infrastructure
- Interoperability
- 190 universities will never buy the same software
- Getting stuff implemented
- Best practices
- Integrate across applications
- Discourage islands of middleware infrastructure
- E.g. core middleware just for this particular
grid project - Enable community to share resources
- Grid, remote instruments, shared classes
47I2MI core middleware activities
- Identifiers
- Early Adopters - survey/docs about how campuses
are assigning and relating identifiers - Authentication
- WebISO (Web Initial Sign-on) share expertise,
code - Directories
- DoDHE Dir. of Directories for HE
inter-institutional directory searching, using
eduPerson and LDAP Recipe - eduPerson an LDAP object class that includes
widely-used person attributes in higher education - LDAP Recipe promote common design
- Authorization
- Certificates and PKI
- Internet2 PKI Labs
48Internet2 Focus Areas
- Advanced Applications
- Middleware
- Engineering
- Advanced Network Infrastructure
- Partnerships
49Engineering
- Scalable IP Multicast
- http//www.internet2.edu/multicast/
- IPv6
- Quality of Service
- End to end at IP layer
- Network Security
- Measurement
- End to End Performance
50Native Multicast
51Native Multicast
52Internet2 Focus Areas
- Advanced Applications
- Middleware
- Engineering
- Advanced Network Infrastructure
- Partnerships
53Internet2 Network Infrastructure
- Backbones operate at 2.4 Gbps (OC48) capacity
today, upgrade to 10Gbps in progress - GigaPoPs provide regional high-performance
aggregation points - Local campus networks provide 100 Mbps to the
desktop
54Download of The Matrix DVD(Comparison of the
Internet2 Land Speed Record)
55Network Architecture
56Typical Internet2 University Network Connection
University Campus
University Campus
155 Mbps 2.4 Gbps
Department
155 Mbps 2.4 Gbps
100 Mbps
Regional Network622 Mbps-2.4 Gbps
Lab or Classroom
155 Mbps 2.4 Gbps
University Campus
57Internet2 GigaPoPs28 as of October 2001
58Internet2 Backbone Networks
- vBNS NSF project in cooperative agreement with
MCI (now Worldcom) - Funding ended April 2001
- Program extended to April 2003, but no NSF
funding - Abilene UCAID project with support of Qwest,
Cisco, Nortel, Indiana University - Renewed Qwest support through 2006
- Future backbones?
- Discussions with various national fiber providers
59Internet2 Backbone Networks
Donna Cox,Robert Patterson, NCSA
60Abilene NetworkCore Map, October 2001
61Abilene Network Logical Map
62Internet2 Focus Areas
- Advanced Applications
- Middleware
- Engineering
- Advanced Network Infrastructure
- Partnerships
63Internet2 International Goals
- Ensure global interoperability
- of the next generation of Internet technologies
and applications - Enable global collaboration
- in research and education providing/promoting the
development of an advanced networking environment
internationally
64International Partners
- Build effective partnerships in other countries
- With organizations of similar goals/objectives
and similar constituencies - Mechanism Memoranda of Understanding
65MoU in brief
- Provide/promote interconnectivity between
communities - Collaborate on technology development and
deployment - Facilitate collaboration between members on
applications - Encourage technology transfer
66Internet2 International Partnership
- International Task Force
- Representatives of Internet2 International
Partners - Meets twice per year at Internet2 Member Meetings
- Cross-participation in working groups, mailing
lists, projects
67International MoU Partners
68Abilene International Peering
09 January 2002
STAR TAP/Star Light APAN/TransPAC, Canet3, CERN,
CERnet, FASTnet, GEMnet, IUCC, KOREN/KREONET2,
NORDUnet, RNP2, SURFnet, SingAREN, TAnet2
Pacific Wave AARNET, APAN/TransPAC, CAnet3,
TANET2
NYCM BELNET, CAnet3, GEANT, HEANET, JANET,
NORDUnet
SNVA GEMNET, SINET, SingAREN, WIDE
LOSA UNINET
OC3-OC12
AMPATH ANSP, REUNA, RNP2 RETINA
San Diego (CALREN2) CUDI
El Paso (UACJ-UT El Paso) CUDI
ARNES, CARNET, CESnet, DFN, GRNET, RENATER,
RESTENA, SWITCH, HUNGARNET, GARR-B, POL-34, RCCN,
RedIRIS
69Abilene ITN service
- Transit to vBNS and non-US peers of Abilene
- Example
- Peer with Abilene
- Send/receive traffic to all Abilene participants,
plus - vBNS participants
- All non-US network peers of Abilene (over 25)
70Americas
- Canada, U.S. and Mexico connected at multiple
points - Connections via Miami to Argentina, Brazil, Chile
- Building infrastructure between research and
education communities
71Americas Connectivity(March 2002)
Country Network BW(mbps) Interconnect
Canada CAnet3 1310 S.T., Pacific Wave, NYC
Mexico RED-CUDI 255 Tijuana-San Diego (CALREN2), Juarez/El Paso
Chile REUNA 45 AmPATH
Brazil RNP2 45 AmPATH
Brazil ANSP 45 AmPATH
Argentina RETINA2 45 AmPATH
Puerto Rico To Abilene-U.S. Via South Florida GigaPoP
72CAnethttp//www.canarie.ca
- Currently building CAnet4 network
- Wavelength-based
- Connects provincial networks
Source Bill St. Arnaud, CANARIE
73Mexicohttp//www.cudi.edu.mx
- Connecting 30 members in Mexico at 155mbps
- Connecting to U.S.
- via Tijuana San Diego (with transit from
CALREN2 to Abilene) at 155mbps - 100mbps between Ciudad Juarez and El Paso
- Convenios internacionales with CANARIE,
Internet2/UCAID, CENIC and REUNA
74AmPATHhttp//ampath.fiu.edu
- Florida International University with Global
Crossing as primary partner - Global Crossing provides potential to connect 10
countries at 45mbps each - Service area includes Argentina, Brazil, Chile,
Colombia, Costa Rica, Mexico, Panama, Peru, US
Virgin Islands, Venezuela - An Internet2 international interconnection point
- Facilitates peering with Abilene, other research
and education networks - Open to connections from other carriers
- NAP of the Americas, downtown Miami
75Chilehttp//www.reuna.cl
- Red Universitaria Nacional REUNA
- 10 POPs from Arica to Valdivia
- 155 Mbps ATM/SDH Network
- Centrally operated from Santiago
- REUNA3 Gigabit Backbone Project
Geographical Distribution of REUNA2 POPs
76Brazilhttp//www.rnp.br
- Rede Nacional de Ensino e Pesquisa - RNP
- Connecting 27 Brazilian states at 155 Mbps.
- RNP2 AmPATH via DS-3
77Argentinahttp//www.retina.ar
- Red Teleinformática Académica
- Red RETINA
- Connecting 25 institutions
- Retina2 via AMPATH
78Costa Ricahttp//www.crnet.cr
- National Research Network - CRNet
- Internet2 connectivity possibly through Los
Arcos
79More Internet2 Information
- On the Web
- www.internet2.edu
- Email
- apreston_at_internet2.edu
- heather_at_internet2.edu
80www.internet2.edu