Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byChaz Menser Modified over 10 years ago
1
John Silvester University of Southern California APAN 33, Chiang Mai, Thailand Feb 14, 2012
2
University of Southern California and University of Washington develop local peering exchanges for their communities (remnants of the NSF regionals) due to proximity to major carrier hotels Emergence of the next generation of REN’s (National and Regional) – purchased services vBNS -> (Abilene) Internet2 Calren (CENIC), PNWGP, …
3
.com collapse (c 2000) made acquisition of dark fiber leases possible CENIC and PNWGP acquire West Coast leases for dark fiber and light to provide multiple waves (CISCO equipment) Concept of Pacific Wave emerges – distributed exchange on the West Coast of the US to expand reach of the Seattle and Los Angeles peering exchanges using low cost waves
5
Greatly increased no-cost peering opportunities significantly reducing commodity costs for the participants Concept grew to a larger set of participants over time and eventually led to the national commodity peering partnership with Internet2 Growth in importance of peering with R&E networks domestically and internationally Science goes global
6
Provided a uniform West facing (trans-Pacific) interface for International Peering ◦ Cost reduction ◦ Facilitating interconnects ◦ Independence from landing points (later added alternate fiber path to improve resiliency) Number of connections and bandwidth increases (to 10G) led to addition of additional 10G PW backbone wave
8
Growth of regionals, trans-border connections and desire to direct connect to other partners results in a flattening of the network (moving away from the hierarchical structure) Challenges the business models of the NREN’s
9
Availability of dark fiber led to the development of new networks with the ability to provision lambdas, circuits, lightpaths, capacitated virtual circuits Fast take up by “big science” eventually maturing (?) into NREN architectures and service models providing static and dynamic “lightpaths” (of various flavours)
10
Most exchanges are slow to provision the new services as they wait for agreement on what tools should be used for inter-domain lightpaths; and the fact that most International circuits do not support lightpaths Exchanges mostly only support static lightpaths requiring manual interventions But this is changing and SDN reinforces this shift 2012 may be the year of Dynamically reconfigurable Inter-domain Lightpath deployment on a global scale. WIP (work in progress) at PW - see Thursday presentation for more details
11
Bandwidth upgrades ◦ Internet2 => 100G ◦ 40G in other NREN backbones and some International links ◦ Trans-Pacific 40G coming real soon now! Provides the scaling needed for CVC’s to be economically feasible Network research (GENI, SDN, …) needs (and can help provide) these capabilities
12
CENIC/PNWGP and Internet2 partner to provision 100G on the US West Coast (win- win) Allows for upgrades of the PW core to 100G (and even multiple 100G as necessary) Plans afoot for dynamic lightpaths through PW Rethinking of Gigapop as Exchange Point in the Internet2 network, with Internet2 becoming a provider of LP’s through the network
13
One expectation of a GOLE is that it be non- blocking between participants. This is hard (or expensive) for a distributed GOLE to provide Presents an interesting challenge for PW ◦ Split into 3 GOLES ◦ Continue to provide transparent (free) POP interconnect (in a non-blocking way) ◦ or
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.