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14 October 2015 Internet2: Accelerating the Development of Tomorrow’s Internet Heather Boyles Director, International Relations Internet2

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Presentation on theme: "14 October 2015 Internet2: Accelerating the Development of Tomorrow’s Internet Heather Boyles Director, International Relations Internet2"— Presentation transcript:

1 14 October 2015 Internet2: Accelerating the Development of Tomorrow’s Internet Heather Boyles Director, International Relations Internet2 heather@internet2.edu 20 February 2003 Hong Kong

2 2 Internet2 Mission and Goals Develop and deploy advanced network applications and technologies, accelerating the creation of tomorrow’s Internet. Enable new generation of applications Create leading edge R&E network capability Transfer technology and experience to the global production Internet

3 3 University Leadership 200 university members with commitments from their Presidents/Chancellors/Rectors 60+ corporate members Over 40 Affiliate Members –Government Research Agencies Internet2/U.S. Government: separate but interdependent Internet2 International Partner Program

4 4 Internet2 Universities 202 University Members, January 2003

5 5 Internet2 – JUCC partnership Internet2 – JUCC Partnership (via Memorandum of Understanding) In place since August 2000 Abilene – HARNET Peering Agreement in place since August 2000 Connectivity in place since September 2002 Internet2 – JUCC/HARNET users collaborations Let this launch event provide a basis for starting new work together!

6 6 International Partnerships Ensure global interoperability of the next generation of Internet technologies and applications Enable global collaboration in research and education providing/promoting the development of an advanced networking environment internationally Build effective partnerships with organizations similar goals/objectives similar constituencies Mechanism: Memoranda of Understanding

7 7 Internet2 International Partners Asia-Pacific AAIREP (Australia) APAN (Asia-Pacific) APAN-KR (Korea) APRU (Asia-Pacific) CERNET, CSTNET, NSFCNET (China) JAIRC (Japan) JUCC (Hong Kong) NECTEC / UNINET (Thailand) SingAREN (Singapore) TAnet2 (Taiwan) Americas CANARIE (Canada) CEDIA (Ecuador) CUDI (Mexico) CRNET2 (Costa Rica) REUNA (Chile) RETINA (Argentina) RNP2 (Brazil) SENACYT (Panama) Europe-Middle East ARNES (Slovenia) BELNET (Belgium) CARNET (Croatia) CESnet (Czech Republic) DANTE (Europe) DFN-Verein (Germany) GIP RENATER (France) GRNET (Greece) HEAnet (Ireland) HUNGARNET (Hungary) INFN-GARR (Italy) Israel-IUCC (Israel) NORDUnet (Nordic Countries) POL-34 (Poland) RCCN (Portugal) RedIRIS (Spain) RESTENA (Luxembourg) SANET (Slovakia) Stichting SURF (Netherlands) SWITCH (Switzerland) TERENA (Europe) JISC, UKERNA (United Kingdom)

8 8 Internet2 Areas of Work Advanced Applications Middleware Network Engineering End to End Performance Advanced Network Infrastructure Partnerships and Outreach

9 9 How Internet2 works Universities commit: Engineering lead: connect university to rest of Internet2 community, deploy new technologies Applications lead: support apps development on campus Middleware architect: work with I2MI to implement middleware infrastructure Working groups: Of expert/interested individuals within community Chaired by volunteer (sometimes by staff) Staff support Projects/Initiatives: Where collective resources needed E.g. Commons Initiative, End to End Performance Initiative

10 Applications and Engineering Applications Engineering Motivate Enables

11 11 Internet2 Backbone Networks GigaPoP One Internet2 Network Architecture GigaPoP Two GigaPoP (n) GigaPoP Three

12 12 Internet2 Network Architecture Internet2 Backbone Network(s) GigaPoP One Regional Network University C Commercial Internet Connections University B University A

13 13 Abilene Network Core Map, January 2003

14 14 Internet2 Backbone Network(s) Have had two backbones in the past: vBNS (NSF supported, run by MCIWorldcom) Abilene (Internet2 member supported, run by UCAID) Abilene is current backbone network 11 core router nodes Moving to 10Gbps core backbone links Connections to the backbone at 622mbps to 10Gbps Most universities aggregate connections through “gigapops” or regional aggregator networks

15 15 Abilene Network Logical Map

16 16 STAR TAP/Star Light APAN/TransPAC†, CA*net, CERN, CERNET/CSTNET/NSFCNET, NAUKAnet, GEMnet, HARNET, KOREN/KREONET2, NORDUnet, SURFnet, SingAREN, TANET2 NYC GEANT*, HEANET, NORDUnet, SINET, SURFnet Pacific Wave AARNET, APAN/TransPAC†, CA*net, TANET2 SNVA GEMNET, SingAREN, WIDE (v6) L.A. UNINET AMPATH ANSP, REUNA2, RNP2, RETINA (REACCIUN-2) OC12 El Paso (UACJ-UT El Paso) CUDI San Diego (CALREN2) CUDI 09 January 2002 Abilene International Peering (January 2003) ARNES, ACONET, BELNET, CARNET, CERN, CESnet, CYNET, DFN, EENet, GARR, GRNET, HEANET, IUCC, JANET, LATNET, LITNET, NORDUNET, RENATER, RESTENA, SWITCH, HUNGARNET, GARR-B, POL-34, RCST, RedIRIS, SANET, SURFNET † WIDE/JGN, IMnet, CERNet/CSTnet,/NSFCNET, KOREN/KREONET2, SingAREN, TANET2, ThaiSARN Last updated: 17 January 2003

17 17 Advanced Network Services Advance deployment on backbone Incentive to deploy in gigapops, regional, campus networks Accompany with hands-on training for campus engineers Native IPv6 Native multicast Measurement tools and architectures

18 18 End to End Performance Initiative To enable the researchers, faculty, students and staff who use high performance networks to obtain optimal performance from the current infrastructure on a consistent basis. Raw Connectivity Applications Performance

19 19 E2E Performance Initiative Work Understand applications and their performance requirements Technical Advisory Group Provide best practices/experience for network operators Collecting Performance Stories Help the application user troubleshoot problems Measurement Architecture Document H.323 Beacon Reflector Development Bring all of this together for the end user Performance Analysis Station and GUI for End-User Solution

20 20 Middleware Advanced Physical Network Infrastructure } Applications Advanced Network Services (Distributed Network Middleware) Authentication, Identification, Authorization, Directories, Security

21 21 Internet2 Middleware Initiative Focus on core middleware as infrastructure Issues: Interoperability Implementation on campuses Integrate with and support applications (upper) middleware, e.g. Grid

22 22 Shibboleth Facilitates inter-institutional sharing of web resources subject to access controls Examples: Students enrolled in a course across multiple universities accessing class materials and Learning Mgmt Systems Research workgroups sharing controlled resources (the original web) Users register only at their “home” or “origin” institution The release of the beta code is due in August and a production code release scheduled for October

23 23 Summary Internet2 focused on: Working together to advance the development and use of networking infrastructure, technologies and applications AND Putting in place the community-wide, interoperable infrastructure (at network, middleware, advanced services levels) to support development and use for research, teaching, learning

24 24 Research and Development Commercialization Partnerships Privatization Internet Development Spiral Today’s Internet Internet2 Source: Ivan Moura Campos

25 25 www.internet2.edu


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