Title: Jian Zhang
1InterDomain-QOSM The NSIS QoS Model for
Inter-domain Signaling to Enable End-to-End QoS
Provisioning Over Heterogeneous Network Domains
2Outline
- The Problems of the Current Solution in NSIS for
End-to-End QoS Provisioning Over Heterogeneous
Network Domains - The Overview of the NSIS InterDomain-QOSM
- The Operation Model of the InterDomain-QOSM
- Basic Features of InterDomain-QOSM
- Additional QSPEC Parameters for the
InterDomain-QOSM - Illustrations of Inter-domain Signalling
Interactions with the InterDomain-QOSM - Open Issues
- Conclusions
3The Problems of the Current Solution in NSIS for
End-to-End QoS Provisioning Over Heterogeneous
Network Domains
- Problem1 The End-to-End QoS Provisioning Cannot
Be Realized Unless Ingress QNE Can Support ANY
Type of Local NSIS QOSM - Problem2 The End-to-End QoS Provisioning Cannot
Be Realized Unless ALL Domains are NSIS-capable
4Problem1 The End-to-End QoS Provisioning Cannot
Be Realized Unless Ingress QNE Can Support ANY
Type of Local NSIS QOSM
NSIS QOSM1 in the source domain could be ANY type
of local NSIS QOSM, e.g. current and/or future
QOSMs for xDSL, Ethernet, WiFi, UMTS, etc, access
networks. Thus, the Ingress QNEs must be able to
support all of them so that the mapping from the
local NSIS QOSM of the source domain to the local
NSIS QOSM of the transit or sink domains can be
done correctly. This is very hard to satisfy.
5Problem2 The End-to-End QoS Provisioning Cannot
Be Realized Unless ALL Domains are NSIS-capable
Obviously, the end-to-end QoS provisioning via
the current NSIS signaling approach can not be
achieved if there exists any non-NSIS
domain along the path from the sender to
the receiver. This is also very hard to satisfy
in the complex, heterogeneous IP network
environment like Internet.
6The Overview of the NSIS InterDomain-QOSM
- The Distinct Separation Between the Intra-domain
Control Plane and the Inter-domain Control Plane -
- Basic Features of InterDomain-QOSM
- The Operation Model of the InterDomain-QOSM
7The Distinct Separation Between the Intra-domain
Control Plane and the Inter-domain Control Plane
The high-level view of the inter-domain
interactions between two adjacent domains where
the distinct separation between the
intra-domain and inter-domain control planes is
made and a common inter-domain control interface
exists.
8Basic Features of InterDomain-QOSM (1)
- The InterDomain-QOSM assumes the concept of the
distinct separation between the intra-domain
control plane and the inter-domain control plane
at each administrative domain. - The inter-domain control agent is a domain-wide
centralized QNE which is well-known at its
administrative domain and supports the
InterDomain-QOSM so that the inter-domain
interactions between adjacent domains can be
realized in a standardized way. - The SLS parameters and QoS control information
required for the inter-domain QoS interactions
are specified by using/extending the QSPEC
template.
9Basic Features of InterDomain-QOSM (2)
- The InterDomain-QOSM resides on top of the
QoS-NSLP and NTLP, which means that it uses the
messages, objects and procedures defined by the
QoS-NSLP for signaling exchanges with other QNEs
and depends on the NTLP to discover the peer
inter-domain control agents at the adjacent
domains. - The InterDomain-QOSM makes no assumptions about
the implementation mechanisms of intra-domain
control agent. That is to say that the
intra-domain control agent might be centralized
or distributed, NSIS based or non-NSIS based. - The InterDomain-QOSM makes no assumption about
the method that the underlying NTLP might use to
discover the peer inter-domain control agents at
adjacent domains.
10Basic Features of InterDomain-QOSM (3)
- The egress QNE (for a NSIS domain) need to send
its IP interface to which the signaled stream is
assigned to the inter-domain control agent so
that the RESPONSE message can be sent back to the
egress QNE. - The egress QNE (for a NSIS domain) or the
intra-domain control agent (for a non-NSIS
domain) need to discover the IP interface of the
ingress node from which the signaled stream will
be admitted into its adjacent downstream domain
and send this interface to the inter-domain
control agent at its domain although the
InterDomain-QOSM makes no assumptions about the
discovery method.
11The Operation Model of the InterDomain-QOSM (1)
12The Operation Model of the InterDomain-QOSM (2)
- By utilizing the operation model of the
InterDomain-QOSM to enable end-to-end QoS
provisioning over multiple, heterogeneous network
domains, the edge QNEs in NSIS domains need to
support only its local NSIS QOSM and the
InterDomain-QOSM. - By utilizing the InterDomain-QOSM for the
inter-domain signaling, the inter-domain
signaling interactions can be realized in a
standardized way no matter how the intra-domain
control plane is implemented (centralized or
distributed, NSIS based or non-NSIS based).
13Additional QSPEC Parameters for the
InterDomain-QOSM
- Egress ID Parameter
- Ingress ID Parameter
- Absolute Time Specification Parameter
- Relative Time Specification Parameter
14Egress ID Parameter
ltEgress IDgt parameter is added to the QSPEC
Control Information of the InterDomain-QOSM,
which describes the IP interfaces of the egress
node to which the signaled traffic stream is
assigned.
15Ingress ID Parameter
ltIngress IDgt parameter is added to the QSPEC
Control Information of the InterDomain-QOSM,
which describes the IP interfaces of the ingress
node to which the signaled traffic stream is
assigned.
16Absolute Time Specification Parameter
ltAbsolute Time Specificationgt defines a time
period over which a SLS will be available or
requested by specifying its starting and ending
time points.
17Relative Time Specification Parameter
ltAbsolute Time Specificationgt defines a time
period over which a SLS will be available or
requested by specifying only the length of the
time period.
18Illustrations of Inter-domain Signalling
Interactions with the InterDomain-QOSM
- Y.1541-QOSM (source domain)--- RMD-QOSM(transit
domain) ---- Y.1541-QOSM (sink domain) - Non-NSIS (source domain) --- RMD-QOSM (transit
domain) --- Y.1541-QOSM (sink domain) - Non-NSIS (source domain) --- Non-NSIS (transit
domain) --- Non-NSIS (sink domain)
19Y.1541-QOSM (source domain)--- RMD-QOSM(transit
domain) ---- Y.1541-QOSM (sink domain)
20Non-NSIS (source domain) --- RMD-QOSM (transit
domain) --- Y.1541-QOSM (sink domain)
21Non-NSIS (source domain) --- Non-NSIS (transit
domain) --- Non-NSIS (sink domain)
22Open Issues
- For the case that the non-NSIS domain exists, we
currently assume that a domain-wide centralized
intra-domain control agent resides together with
the inter-domain control agent and they interact
with each other via a set of standardized APIs
(the definitions of the APIs also need further
discussions). - The discovery of the IP interface of the ingress
node from which the signaled stream will be
admitted into its adjacent downstream domain
could be moved to the inter-domain control agent. - More QSPEC parameters may be needed for the
InterDomain-QOSM. - The support of the automatic inter-domain
adjustment in the scenario of mobile end
customers.
23Conclusions (1)
- The InterDomain-QOSM assumes the concept of
distinct separation between the intra-domain and
inter-domain control agents at each
administrative domain. - The InterDomain-QOSM allows the QoS negotiation
and setup of inter-domain traffic streams in a
standardized and dynamic way, hiding the
heterogeneity of intra-domain control mechanisms
in use in a chain of heterogeneous network
domains.
24Conclusions (2)
- By utilizing the operation model of the
InterDomain-QOSM, the edge QNEs in NSIS domains
need to support only its local NSIS QOSM and the
InterDomain-QOSM for the end-to-end QoS
provisioning over multiple, heterogeneous network
domains. - By utilizing the InterDomain-QOSM for the
inter-domain signaling, the inter-domain
signaling interactions can be realized in a
standardized way no matter how the intra-domain
control plane is implemented (centralized or
distributed, NSIS based or non-NSIS based).