Title: TDC 363 Local Area Networks
1TDC 363 Local Area Networks
- Metropolitan Area Networks (MAN)
2MAN Definition
- Not a precise definition available
- Somewhere between a LAN and a WAN with some
features of each - Serves a geographic area larger than a LAN, such
as a city or metropolitan region
3Definition Continued
- MANs can interconnect various sites for one
company, or interconnect many companies - MANs transfer data at LAN speeds (and higher) but
often use more complicated protocols
4MAN Application Areas
- Interconnection and consolidation of corporate
data centers - Transparent extension of the LAN by
interconnecting distributed corporate locations - Support of SAN (storage area networks)
- Server-less offices
5MAN Application Areas
- Real-time transaction backups
- High-speed disaster recovery
- Interconnection between corporate data center and
ISP - Government, business, medicine and education
high-speed interconnections
6SANs
- Latest evolution of mass data storage for large
corporations and institutions - Normally data storage is attached to the LAN via
a server - But with a SAN high-volume disk arrays and tape
storage occupy a network separate, but connected
to, a LAN
7MAN Features
- Why use a MAN?
- Very high speeds (Gbps possible)
- Self-healing networks
- Bandwidth on demand
- MANs cover distances that LANs cannot
- But MANs often provide a lower level of
complexity than many WANs
8MAN Topologies
- Point-to-point
- Characterized by very high speeds (10 to 40 Gbps)
- Often DWDM over fiber
- Redundancy is provided at the card level -
parallel fiber links with redundant equipment at
the endpoints
9MAN Topologies
- Ring
- Most common architecture
- Can span tens of kilometers
- Data rates range from 622 Mbps to 10 Gbps per
channel - SONET rings a typical example
- Multiple rings with very fast failover provide
stability
10MAN Topologies
- Mesh
- The future of MANs?
- A natural extension of point-to-point MANs
- Can also connect to established rings
- High speeds, long distances, good redundancy
11Support Technologies
- SONET/SDH
- ATM
- Gigabit Ethernet
- IP
- Fibre Channel
- FDDI
12Support Technology - SONET
- Currently most MANs are supported by SONET rings
- SONET is the fundamental transmission technology
for both TDM-based circuit switched networks, and
most overlay data networks - Unfortunately, SONET has a number of shortcomings
13Support Technology - SONET
- SONET disadvantages
- Still fairly expensive
- Problems adapting data services to the
voice-designed and voice-optimized hierarchy - Inflexible multiplexing hierarchy (SONET
increments in terms of DS-0s / DS-1s) - SONET cannot be provisioned dynamically
14Support Technology - ATM
- Favored by many service providers because it can
support different protocols and different traffic
types into a common protocol format for
transmission over SONET - Unfortunately, ATM is complex, costly, and
provides an extra layer of complexity
15Support Technology - Gigabit Ethernet
- A very interesting newcomer to MAN technology
- A very common and well-understood technology
- Can scale from 10 Mbps, 100 Mbps, 1000 Mbps, to
10 Gbps easily - Low cost
- No need for ATM or SONET
16Support Technology - IP
- Almost entire data world uses IP
- Also well known, widely adopted, reasonably
flexible, relatively simple - IP is a layer 3 protocol, so question is IP over
ATM over SONET? IP over SONET? IP over Ethernet?
17Support Technology - Fibre Channel
- Predominant data link technology used in SANs
- Economical replacement for SCSI
- Interfaces available at 100 MBps with 200 MBps
soon and 400 MBps testing - Does not have a short distance limitation like
SCSI - Found in point-to-point, mesh, and arbitrated
loops
18Support Technology - FDDI
- Basically a legacy technology
- Being replaced by Gigabit Ethernet or ATM
- Can be transparently transported over the optical
layer using DWDM
19SONET vs. Gigabit Ethernet
- Lets examine the two more interesting support
technologies - Why more interesting?
- SONET is the ruler
- Gigabit Ethernet is trying to dethrone that ruler
20SONET vs. Gigabit Ethernet
- Ethernet is 10 times less expensive than current
SONET technology - Ethernet is a simple and widely understood
technology - Ethernet is the best technology for carrying IP
traffic - IP and Ethernet have matured together
21SONET vs. Gigabit Ethernet
- Optical Ethernet can support links in the network
range from 3 to 6 miles using single mode 1310
nm wavelength and up to 43.4 miles for 1550 nm
wavelength - Optical Ethernet can segregate traffic of
different users and deliver the particular
service level each user purchases
22SONET vs. Gigabit Ethernet
- Traffic segregation is accomplished by using the
IEEE 802.1pQ VLAN standard - With this standard, each users frame is marked
with a VLAN tag as it enters the network - This tag keeps each users traffic separate as it
crosses the network
23SONET vs. Gigabit Ethernet
- Optical Ethernet can also deliver guaranteed
levels of latency, jitter, and bandwidth - To provide these levels of latency and jitter,
IETF created the Differentiated Services
(Diff-Serv) project - Diff-Serv - as each frame enters a network,
information from the frame is used to assign it
to a particular class of service
24SONET vs. Gigabit Ethernet
- User contracts also specify bandwidths, which
network operators guarantee by limiting the
aggregate of guarantees to network capacity
(similar to frame relay and ATM)
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26SONET vs. Gigabit Ethernet
- One of the big advantages of Gigabit Ethernet
over SONET is the levels of complexity - SONET has multiple layers - the router network
running over the ATM network running over the
SONET network running over a collection of
point-to-point DWDM links
27SONET vs. Gigabit Ethernet
28SONET vs. Gigabit Ethernet
- Gigabit Ethernet, however, does not have all the
levels, making the technology much simpler and
much less expensive
29SONET vs. Gigabit Ethernet
30Yipesthats fast!
- 15 months old (as of Fall 2000)
- Up and running in 20 cities
- A disruptive approach to networking
- The first fully managed, all-IP regional optical
networks using Gigabit Ethernet for linking
businesses to eadch other and to the Internet
31Yipesthats fast!
- Fully scalable bandwidth-on-demand from 1 Mbps up
to 1 Gbps in 1 Mbps increments - Busting the regional bandwidth bottleneck between
corporate LANs and cross-country fiber networks
to drive a new generation of bandwidth-intensive
applications - Unprecedented levels of customer control via the
Yipes Care Service Portal
32Yipes - Typical Regional Network
- Diversely sourced dark fiber
- Concatenated local access loops
- Less than 10 ms latency regional ring
- Multiple peering arrangements
- Several WAN connections
- 24x7 redundant monitoring
33Yipes - Extending the LANExperience
- Fiber to business locations
- Familiar computing environment
- Granular bandwidth increments - 1 Mbps to 1 Gbps
in 1 Mbps increments - Scalability on demand - no forklift upgrade -
upgrade with a phone call, and soon with via a
Web site
34Yipes - QoS
- Traffic engineering
- know bandwidth at access points and in metro
network for all customers - no over subscribing
- IEEE standard (802.1pQ) for VLANs
- identify customer packets with different tags
- prioritize packets
35Yipes - QoS
- Hardware
- equipment has separate queues and can prioritize
frames - Can prioritize at IP layer
- Based on IETFs Diff-Serv
36Yipes - Security, Survivability and Reliability
- Security
- Layer 2 switching using VLAN tags based on IEEE
802.1q/p - Survivability
- Dual fiber entrance to customer premises
- Failover
- 2-3 seconds for layer 3 routing
- 30 - 40 seconds for layer 2 bridging/switching (5
seconds in future) - Reliability
- 99.99 migrating to 99.999 by mid 2001
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