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ECS5365 Lecture 4 Overview of B-ISDN
Philip Branch Centre for Telecommunications and Information Engineering (CTIE) Monash University
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References Stallings, W., “ISDN and Broadband ISDN with Frame Relay and ATM”, 3rd Edition, Prentice-Hall, 1995 dePrycker, M., “Asynchronous Transfer Mode: Solution for Broadband ISDN”, 3rd Edition, Prentice-Hall, 1995 Partridge, C., “Gigabit Networking”, Addison-Wesley, 1994
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Outline Need for Broadband ISDN B-ISDN applications B-ISDN solution
B-ISDN layers Physical layer B-ISDN/ ATM Standards Bodies
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What is Broadband-ISDN?
A Full Services Network (FSN) Multiple services / one network Integrates video, voice, data Telco term more than Private network term
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Need for B-ISDN Limitations of N-ISDN Statistical multiplexing
Scalable bandwidth New applications Video Applications LAN-LAN connectivity networks Quality of service
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Quality of service Different requirements for data, voice and video
low delay and delay variation tolerant of loss Data tolerant of delay and delay variation intolerant of loss
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Scalable bandwidth New applications bursty
Need bandwidth available on demand Very fine units of bandwidth
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Statistical multiplexing
Based on the Central Limit Theorem Multiplex n independent and identically distributed random time varying signals Mean of aggregate increases proportionally to n Standard deviation of aggregate increases proportionally to sqrt(n) variation of aggregate signal decreases proportionally as n increases
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B-ISDN Driver Technologies
Optic Fibre (Photonics) High performance PCs Digital Signal Processing Chips Sophisticated software
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B-ISDN Services Distributive Interactive Broadcast Multicast Messaging
Conversational Retrieval
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Examples of Distributive Services
Broadcast Broadcast Television Multicast Near video-on-demand
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Examples of Interactive Services
Messaging video mail Retrieval video-on-demand Conversational video-conferencing
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BISDN Design Decisions
Cell Switching No feedback control later changed Sophisticated Quality of Service guarantees
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Cell Switching Connection oriented packet switching
Small uniform size packets 48 byte payload, 5 byte header compromise between 64 and 32 bytes Advantage of cells simple switch architectures scalable bandwidth
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Connection Oriented Connection established end to end before transmission of data ‘Virtual Circuit’ and Virtual Circuit Indicator Lower delays during transmission Connections can be blocked Control over quality of service
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Packet Switching Information segmented for transmission and reassembled at destination Information in packets Each packet has a tag indicating destination Packets from multiple calls statistically multiplexed Can be delays caused by switch buffering
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Asynchronous Transfer Mode
Fast packet switching technology Cell relay Small, fixed size packets (cells) Segmentation and Reassembly Connection Oriented Virtual Circuit Indicator Application Adaptation Layer protocols
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No feedback control Bandwidth time product Congestion events transient
large number of bits in transit Congestion events transient Feedback control useless
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Quality of Service Defined in terms of Need to know
Cell loss rate Delay Delay variation Need to know Bit rates Burstiness QoS used in connection admission control
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ATM’s Mixed Success Quality of service a great success
Statistical multiplexing less successful Data sources are not identically, independently distributed Video has a periodic, rather than a random time varying nature Data packets over cells easily causes congestion collapse single cell loss causes whole packet to be discarded Feedback control introduced in ABR
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ATM Networks ATM Switches ATM to the desktop Physical media
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Broadband ISDN Protocol Reference Model
Higher Layers ATM Adaptation Layer ATM Layer Physical Layer
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Higher Layers Application layer Examples Packets for IP network
Frames for HDLC network Voice stream for telephony MPEG transport stream for video
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ATM Adaptation Layer Maps higher layer to ATM cells
AAL for different applications Segments and reassembles cells for ATM Much more next lecture
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ATM Layer Cell relay switching technology 53 Octets (bytes) cells
5 byte header 48 byte payload Much more in later lectures
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Physical Layer ATM Transmission Media
Originally only and 622 Mbps analogous to Basic and Primary Rate Interface New sublayers at different transmission rates
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Transmission Rates Plesiochronous Digital Hierarchy (PDH)
SynchronousOptical NETwork (SONET) Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH) ATM to the desktop
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PDH E1 - 2 Mbps E2 - 8 Mbps E Mbps E Mbps
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Synchronous Optical Network (SONET)
STS-3 (OC-3) Mbps STS-12 (OC-12) 622 Mbps STS-48 (OC-48) 2.4 Gbit/s
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Synchronous Digital Hierarchy
STM Mbps STM Mbps STM Gbit/s
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Desktop ATM TAXI - 100 Mbps OC3 - 155 Mbps
FDDI based. Superseded OC Mbps Multimode fibre connection STS-3 over UTP Category Mbps UTP Category 5 25 Mbps UTP Based on Token Ring interface
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B-ISDN Standards Bodies
ITU - International Telecommunications Union ATM Forum IETF - Internet Engineering Taskforce
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ITU Groups SG9 - Television and sound transmission
SG11 - signalling and switching SG13 - general network aspects SG15 - transmission systems and equipment
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ITU Recommendations I.413 B-ISDN User Network Interface
I.432 B-ISDN UNI Physical Layers I.361 B-ISDN ATM Layer Specification I.363 B-ISDN ATM AAL Specification I.371 Traffic and Congestion Control in B-ISDN
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ATM Forum Specifications
LAN Emulation (LANE) Traffic management v4.0 Private Network to Network Interface (PNNI) v.1 Physical Layers User to Network Interface (UNI) v 3.1 UNI Signalling v 4.0 Multi-Protocol Over ATM (MPOA)
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IETF RFCs RFC1483 “Multiprotocol Encapsulation over ATM Adaptation Layer 5” RFC1577 “Classical IP and ARP over ATM”
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Summary Need for Broadband ISDN B-ISDN applications B-ISDN solution
B-ISDN layers Physical layer B-ISDN/ ATM Standards Bodies
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Reading for next week Stallings Chapter 15 “ATM Protocols”
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Review Questions Why is connection admission control in B-ISDN more difficult than in N-ISDN? Is ATM a layer 2 (data link) or layer 3 (network) protocol? Why not overcome the time propagation delay problem by installing switches with large buffers? Suppose we have a video sequence whose mean bandwidth is 1 Mbps and standard deviation is 0.5 Mbps. Assuming independence between the streams, what will be the mean and standard deviation of an aggregate stream consisting of 10 such sequences? 100? 1000?
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