Title: Backhaul 101
1 Backhaul 101
Introduction to the proposed regulated backhaul
services
December 3rd 2007
2Content
- What is Backhaul?
- Generic Concepts
- Access Seekers Nearest Available Point of
Interconnection (NAPOI) - Isolated NAPOIs and Virtual Designated Point of
interconnection (VDPOIs) - Elected Points of Interconnection (EPOIs)
- Regulated UCLL backhaul
- Regulated UBA backhaul
- The role of commercial backhaul
- Glossary
- Questions
- Appendix A Information on UBS/Basic UBA
- Appendix B Aggregation
3What is Backhaul?
- A formal definition of "backhaul" is "the
process of transmitting information to a central
point from which it can be distributed over a
network". - Backhaul services usually carry traffic on a
"point-to-point" basis, without making complex
switching decisions about where to send the
traffic. - Backhaul allows Access Seekers to connect
customers in places where they do not own their
own networks.
4What is Backhaul?
- The backhaul service connects an exchange-based
tail or service to another handover point. - A handover point is the boundary between one
service and another, or between a service and a
Handover Link. - A Handover Link is a cable that connects the
Handover Point to the Service Provider equipment
(which may be co-located or at a different site) - Regulated backhaul will be ethernet only.
Slide 4
5Why is it necessary?
- To understand the role of backhaul, consider a
phone call. It starts at one telephone, travels
to an exchange, travels on a trunk to another
exchange, and ends at another telephone. Since
it's expensive to run millions of wires between
telephone exchanges, the telecommunications
industry has developed a host of technologies
which allow one transmission system to carry many
calls (known as trunking). The telephone
exchange becomes a collection point, which
aggregates tens, hundreds, or thousands of calls
onto a single transmission link between
exchanges.The same need exists for data
networks like the Internet. Customer traffic is
aggregated close to the users, so that the
transmission system can carry a large number of
requests on a small number of links.If an
Access Seeker doesn't own a trunk network then it
needs to find some way of moving around traffic
from a large number of customers. An ISP may have
all its switches in Auckland, with subscribers
all over New Zealand. To connect a customer in
Greymouth the ISP needs to pay another
telecommunications carrier to collect the
customer traffic in Greymouth, carry it to
Auckland, and deliver it to the ISP's data
centre. This is an example of a backhaul service.
Slide 5
6What is bandwidth?
- In telecommunications, "bandwidth" measures how
much information a network can carry. And because
most modern telecommunications services are based
on digital networks, digital measures of
bandwidth have become the most common and most
familiar way to express the capacity of all kinds
of network links.Bandwidth is expressed in
multiples of bits per second. A standard
telephone is allocated 64 Kbps (kilobits, or
thousands of bits) per second of communications
bandwidth. Backhaul networks, which carry the
traffic of huge numbers of customers, are
measured in millions of bits per second (megabits
per second, or Mbps), up to billions of bits per
second (gigabits per second, or Gbps).
Slide 6
7Generic concepts - NAPOI
- Access Seekers Nearest Available Point of
Interconnection. - The NAPOI are defined as 29 geographic points
around New Zealand that have been chosen to
optimise network efficiency. Currently 16 of
these sites are operational and 13 additional
sites are still awaiting EAS deployment. - 16 have already been deployed Auckland Central,
Glenfield, Henderson, Mt Albert, Torbay, Remuera,
Papakura, Papatoetoe, Hamilton, Wellington,
Naenae, Porirua, Christchurch, Riccarton,
Dunedin, Howick - 13 are to be built Cromwell, Greymouth,
Invercargill, Kerikeri, Levin, Napier, Nelson,
New Plymouth ,Palmerston North, Rotorua,
Tauranga, Timaru, Whangarei - These points were discussed and agreed at the
TCF.
Slide 7
8Generic concepts iNAPOI and VDPOI
- For Access Seekers with UCLL or EUBA in the new
NAPOI areas, where no competitive infrastructure
exists within 5 kilometres of the relevant NAPOI,
eg Kerikeri or Cromwell (known as an isolated
NAPOI or iNAPOI), then a virtual designated point
of interconnect (VDPOI) will be assigned, if
requested. For example, Dunedin may be the VDPOI
for the Cromwell NAPOI. - The network investment manager determines the
VDPOI for each iNAPOI. The VDPOI is the
geographically closest NAPOI to the iNAPOI. The
network investment manager will inform product
management to manage the transition from iNAPOI
to NAPOI.
Slide 8
9Generic concepts EPOI (UCLL only)
An Access Seeker may also elect to terminate the
UCLL Backhaul service at an intermediate point
between the First Handover Point and the NAPOI.
These points, for the purposes of this document,
are defined as an Access Seekers elected point
of interconnection (EPOI) and their use as an
EPOI is subject to the following rules
The EPOI must be one of Telecoms UBA First Data
Switch sites that the UCLL Backhaul Service
transits between the First Handover Point and the
NAPOI Once the EPOI is established, the UCLL
Backhaul Service from all local telephone
exchanges served by that EPOI will terminate at
that point instead of the NAPOI and The UCLL
Backhaul Service is not available from the EPOI
to any NAPOI An example would be in Queenstown
where the Access Seeker may have presence in that
location despite it not being a NAPOI
Slide 9
10Regulated UCLL Backhaul
- UCLL/Co-location allow Access Seekers to install
their own access equipment which connects to
Telecoms copper loop. - This equipment can be in the Telecom Exchange
(co-located) or external. - The equipment connects to the handover point
using a Handover Link. - Regulated backhaul will connect the site to the
NAPOI (or VDPOI/EPOI).The Access Seeker can
aggregate their own UCLL traffic onto a single
regulated backhaul. - Commercially they will be able to aggregate
non-UCLL traffic.
Slide 10
11Demarcation Regulated UCLL Backhaul
- The Access Seeker installs their DSLAM in the
local exchange. - They connect to the UCLL Handover Point using a
Handover Link. - Regulated backhaul goes from a relevant frame in
an exchange to the relevant frame at the NAPOI
(or VDPOI/EPOI) - NAPOIs are defined as 29 Tier 0,1 and 2 sites.
- The Access Seeker must either
- (a) handover at the UCLL HoP
- (b) handover at the NAPOI, VDPOI, or EPOI or
- (c) use commercial backhaul to take them to
another agreed POI.
Slide 11
12Regulated EUBA backhaul
- EUBA services on an EAS can be aggregated across
a common backhaul infrastructure to the NAPOI (or
VDPOI). - Each Access Seeker would specify how much
bandwidth they required. - The Access Seeker can effectively specify a
contention ratio. - The traffic priority tagging will specify how
traffic is managed. - It is the responsibility of the Access Seeker to
ensure applications are managed end to end to
ensure this capacity is not flooded. - EUBA traffic from several EAS can be aggregated
at the NAPOI on to a single Handover Link,
subject to bandwidth. Note that this aggregation
could also be contended.
Slide 12
13Demarcation Regulated EUBA Backhaul
- The Enhanced UBA tail includes both the ADSL2
line and the connectivity between the DSLAM and
the Ethernet Aggregation Switch. - Regulated backhaul goes from the trunk side of
the EAS to the NAPOI etc. - NAPOIs are defined as 29 Tier 0,1 and 2 sites.
- The Access Seeker must either
- (a) handover at the EAS HoP
- (b) handover at the NAPOI or VDPOI or
- (c) use commercial backhaul to take them to
another agreed POI.
Slide 13
14Handover Links and connections
- The Handover Link connects Access Seeker
equipment to the physical Handover Point, or OFDF
at the NAPOI etc. - The handover connection is used to connect the
trunk side of the EAS to the Handover Point and
is only required for EUBA tails - A Handover Link is required to connect the
Access Seeker equipment to the backhaul service,
irrespective of whether that is commercial or
regulated backhaul. - UCLL will have a handover link in the unbundled
exchange as well as the NAPOI
Slide 14
15Commercial Backhaul
- Why is it important?
- Commercial backhaul will link the 29 NAPOI with
one another allowing Access Seekers to transport
across metro areas and nationally. - What is the market need?
- There are a different options available
dependant on the Access Seekers requirements.
Some Access Seekers will need national point to
point links and other will want multi-product
(regulated and commercial products), multipoint
backhaul services. - Who will provide commercial services?
- There is currently a number of different
providers offering a range of commercial backhaul
service.
Slide 15
16Additional Questions
- Telecom infers that each local exchange (for UCLL
Backhaul) or first data switch (FDS) (for UBA
Backhaul) is assigned to a particular NAPOI. Can
Telecom please provide a list of which local
exchange or FDS it proposes should be assigned to
each NAPOI. -
- Link
- Telecom interprets the NAPOI as being that which
is nearest to the End User. Will this potentially
require the Access Seeker to either extend their
network to each NAPOI nominated by Telecom or
purchase backhaul commercially? Could this also
require the Access Seeker to interconnect with
multiple NAPOIs in the same centre (i.e.
Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch) in order
to get backhaul traffic from local exchanges in
more than one NAPOI area. - Yes. Multiple NAPOIs in the larger cities
reflect the structure of Telecoms NGN. Telecom
itself connects at each of these NAPOIs on an
equivalence basis so Access Seekers face no
competitive disadvantage from this structure.
The need for multiple NAPOIs is to provide
diversity and load balancing. Eg There is a
maximum number of customers supported by each
NAPOI.
Slide 16
17Additional Questions
- Telecom has reserved the right to designate new
NAPOIs, and perhaps withdraw existing NAPOIs,
from time to time. Under what circumstances would
this re-designation occur? - The NAPOIs align with the Tier 0,1 and 2 nodes
in our network architecture. The location of
these nodes is driven by the population density
i.e. we limit the maximum number of end customers
served by a single node, and network transport
links design and reliability issues primarily
driven by geographic factors e.g. if an area is
geographically isolated we may put more equipment
in the region for service reliability reasons.
Changes will be driven by things like population
changes e.g. if the population in a region grows
sufficiently we may need to create a new Tier 2
node, and we might conceivably remove a Tier 2
node if sufficient diverse links became available
to a geographically isolated area. - For UBA Backhaul, the FDSs and the NAPOIs are
co-located (except for the Upper Hutt FDS). As
Telecom interprets the NAPOI as being that which
is nearest to the End User, would there be any
need for UBA Backhaul apart from the Upper Hutt
FDS? - In the future yes the number of FDS will
expand as the Telecom network is deployed. - See link
Slide 17
18Additional Questions
- Why has Telecom chosen NAPOI locations which are
different to the existing POIs for UBS, Basic UBA
and voice interconnection? Can Telecom please
provide a list of the POI locations for UBS,
Basic UBA and voice interconnection. - The NGN is a fundamentally different and new
network compared to the PSTN. Therefore there is
no particular reason why PSTN POIs should map to
NGN NAPOIs. UBS and BUBA are ATM services, the
NAPOIs are Ethernet-related services. So again
there is a different network with different
nodes. However overtime as Telecom moves from
PSTN to VOIP based services and migrates from ATM
to Ethernet these points will be consolidated. - POI list
- Can Telecom please describe the purpose of the
NAPOI variants, namely VDPOI, iNAPOI and EPOI. - Covered in earlier slides
- EPOIs only exist for UCLL Backhaul and must be at
one of Telecom's UBA FDSs. However, the FDSs and
the NAPOIs are co-located (except for the Upper
Hutt FDS), so what purpose do the EPOIs currently
serve? - None currently but as with question 4 the need
will become more apparent has the new network is
deployed.
Slide 18
19Additional Questions
- When no Access Seeker or third party has existing
network infrastructure capable of offering a
backhaul service for the UCLL/UBA Service within
5 kilometres of a particular NAPOI and has no
plans to build such infrastructure, then the
geographically closest NAPOI will be defined as a
VDPOI. Can Telecom please explain how it was
determined that 5km was the appropriate distance? - The VDPOI definition relates to national
backhaul rather than the regulated regional
backhaul this is an important distinction to
bear in mind as the competition tests are
different. For national backhaul the issue is
whether there is a national backbone connection
sufficiently close to the NAPOI to enable a
reasonable connection so that it is possible to
compete in the market for connecting NAPOIs
together in relation to each NAPOI. For
regulated backhaul the issue is whether there is
a fibre network in the area able to be used to
provide the exchange to NAPOI (UCLL) or FDS to
NAPOI (UBA) connection. The 5 km is an
historical number which was used in relation to
how far from a POI an interconnect link would be
run for the standard charge. Beyond the 5 km an
additional charge was made for the extra costs
Telecom would be incurring by providing long
distance interconnect links. It had seemed that
this was a reasonable proxy for extending out
from a NAPOI.
Slide 19
20Additional Questions
- Can Telecom please explain how the indicative
list of exchange groupings in Appendix 5 of the
STPs is intended to be used? - This list is to help Access Seekers map
exchanges/FDS to NAPOIs. - Why has Telecom proposed two speed options for
UCLL Backhaul and four speed options for UBA
Backhaul? Why arent the four speed options
available for both backhaul options? Can Telecom
please explain how the speeds were determined? - Unlike UBA backhaul, UCLL backhaul does not pass
through any aggregation device therefore the
speeds can only be constrained by the Network
Interface Device (eg media converters) and there
is only a limited bandwidth available on these
devices. - Speed steps were determined through consultation
with the TCF which took into consideration the
minimum number of customers required for UCLL and
EUBA. - Why has Telecom proposed a point to point service
for UCLL Backhaul and an aggregated service for
UBA Backhaul? - EUBA passes through an Ethernet aggregation
switch therefore makes EUBA aggregation
possible . UCLL backhaul doesn't pass through
an aggregation switch therefore it cannot easily
aggregate the UCLL services, however, Access
Seekers can insert their own aggregation devices.
Slide 20
21Additional Questions
- Why has Telecom proposed 20 distance steps for
the monthly rental price, when there are five
steps (S plus A to D) for the Telecom commercial
backhaul product? - The cost of backhaul is a function of distance,
geography, capacity and technology. When drafting
the STP we were aware that some incumbents
overseas have adopted a fixed cost plus a per
metre/km cost approach. Whilst this is the
closest approximation to underlying cost, the
advice we received was that it would have been
impractical from a billing perspective.
Accordingly, we selected as small a number of
distance groupings as possible that would be a
fairly accurate proxy of underlying cost but be
able to be implemented from a billing
perspective. Plus the number of groupings did
result in a fair spread across all the potential
backhaul permutations. Greater granularity in
price will more optimally enable the pricing
structure of the service to more accurately
reflect the underlying cost structure of this
service. As such, the greater the number of price
points, the more efficient signals pricing will
provide to Access Seekers leading to more optimal
allocations of resources. - Whilst the Commission has noted that our
commercial backhaul product has 5 bands, we do
not consider this relevant as the pricing is not
cost plus but value maximising. Whilst cost is an
important factor when setting pricing under a
value maximising construct, there are other
factors to consider including capacity,
competition and business objectives. This
service is more analogous to the UPC service
which the Commission benchmarked with 11 cost
steps.
Slide 21
22Additional Questions
- Why has Telecom not proposed a price for the 100
Mbps capacity handover connection? - It was an error.
- Which parties took part in the TCF working party
on the backhaul services? - Kenneth Barnett (CallPlus)
- Sebastien Pham (ihug/Vodafone)
- Craig Young (TelstraClear)
- Mike Moran (Telecom)
- Chris Dyhrberg (Telecom)
- Alan Mitford-Taylor (Telecom)
- Jeremy Hall (Telecom)
- Steven Bond-Smith (Orcon)
- Gary Hooker (Telecom Retail)
- Paul Clarkin (WorldxChange)
- Tex Edwards (NZ Comms) (occasional attendance)
Slide 22
23Glossary
Slide 23
24Glossary
Slide 24
25Questions?
26Appendix A UBS/Basic UBA
- UBS/Basic UBA is sold as an L2TP tail from the
end-user premises to the first ATM Data Switch
(USAP) - However the interface specification requires we
insert an L2TP Access Concentrator (LAC) into the
tail. This is done by routing traffic through a
BRAS and into the IP Core. - We then route the L2TP tunnel to the designated
USAP or Point of Interconnect. - Regulated Backhaul, which is between the first
Data Switch and the NAPOIs, is not needed because
the basic tail, with zero backhaul, already is at
the USAP/NAPOI.
Slide 26
27Appendix A UBS comparing how we sell with what
we build
- The above diagram shows how we sell the
service, i.e. Tail commercial backhaul, versus
how we build the service. - Technically the tail includes the LAC, which is
delivered on the same BRAS used by Xtra Retail,
the IP Core and the ATM Node. - The requirement for a LAC means that the traffic
is routed to the actual handover ATM node
directly - This could create an anomaly where the designated
USAP is actually closer to the LAC than the URSA
USAP. However we bill based on where the user is,
not where the BRAS is. - Any backhaul dimensioning is solely done over the
ATM-ATM POI link - Ethernet Backhaul is currently being trialed.
This can be done easily because the interface is
L2TP over IP the IP layer hides the Layer 2
(Ethernet or ATM) technology.
Slide 27
28Appendix A UBS/Basic UBA URSAs and USAP
- Unbundled Regional Service Areas
- The country is divided into geographical areas.
All DSLAMs in those areas belong to that URSA
(see picture). - Unbundled Service Aggregation Point
- Each URSA has a USAP which correlates to the
first data switch.This is the first point
interconnect can occur for UBS Customers.Sometime
s the USAP is not in the URSA, for example
Northlands USAP is located at Airedale st
Exchange.Mayoral Drive has four USAPs (four
different ATM switches) to cover North Auckland,
North Shore, Hobsonville and West Auckland URSAs.
The ISP either uses four handover links at
Mayoral drive or pays commercial backhaul to
combine them into one handover link. - Point of Interconnect
- This is where the service is handed over to the
Service Provider. It must be a USAP.Some
customers have multiple POIs. - Regulated Backhaul
- All UBS POIs coincide with NAPOIs and as such no
regulated options exist. - Commercial Backhaul
- Commercial backhaul is the logical distance
between the first USAP and the actual POI. - As the tail ends within the IP Core, the
physical and logical backhaul constructs are
different.
29Appendix B What is Aggregation?
- Having one physical backhaul circuit per tail is
uneconomic. To make it economic it is necessary
to aggregate multiple services onto the same
backhaul service. - Aggregation allows multiple services to share a
common bandwidth, which is often less than the
sum of the services. The ratio of non-aggregated
bandwidth to aggregated bandwidth is known as the
contention ratio. - Aggregation requires an aggregation function at
each end. There are several options - The Service Provider can aggregate their services
in their equipment at both ends. - Telecom can aggregate traffic at both ends, or at
just one end. - EAS-based services are aggregated by default and
therefore it makes sense to deliver as an
aggregated service. - UCLL is easier to deliver as point-to-point
ethernet, with aggregation as an additional item.
Slide 29
30Appendix B Multi-service Aggregation Issues
Aggregation Functions Sharing Bandwidth
Aggregation allows us to combine service
instances together Contention Contention allows
us to aggregate several services together over a
smaller bandwidth than the sum. VLAN mapping To
ensure uniqueness it may be necessary to
translate VLAN addresses to new ones.Parameter
Mapping It is possible to map other parameters
such as Priority settings, if required.
- Aggregating several services means that you
require a pipe that can carry all of those
services simultaneously. - The services need to be compatible with each
other, e.g. not use overlapping VLAN IDs.VLAN
IDs are particularly an issue as these need to be
unique in the new pipe - Other ethernet characteristics need to be at
least compatible and ideally constrained
equally. - The backhaul or handover (both points of
aggregation) can be smaller than the sum of
bandwidths of the inputs, but if so then the
behaviour of what happens when the pipe is
congested needs to be defined and managed at the
point where the contention occurs. Again this
could constrain some features. - For EAS-based services the EAS can act as an
aggregator, so services could be aggregated on to
the single backhaul service. - For UCLL the traffic would need to pass through
an aggregator device, which does not currently
exist.
Slide 30