CarrierEthernetServicesTrends - MEF · 1! Carrier!Ethernet2.0!and!LSO! Abel%Tong%...
Transcript of CarrierEthernetServicesTrends - MEF · 1! Carrier!Ethernet2.0!and!LSO! Abel%Tong%...
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Carrier Ethernet 2.0 and LSO
Abel Tong Co-‐Chair Mul7-‐Domain Orchestra7on WG, MEF
Director of Solu7ons Marke7ng Cyan
Carrier Ethernet Services Trends
Host Sponsor Co-‐Sponsor
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Agenda • CE 2.0 Services – E-‐Transit and wholesale services
• Carrier Ethernet Trends – 100G, the 3rd Network, LSO
• CE Deployments – Prac7cal deployments of a more agile CE
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CE 2.0 Retail Services Types
E-‐Line • Ethernet Private Lines (EPL) • Ethernet Virtual Private Lines (EVPL) • Ethernet Internet Access
UNI
Point-‐to-‐Point EVC
UNI
E-‐Tree • Rooted MulB-‐Point L2 VPNs • Traffic SegregaBon • EP-‐Tree, EVP-‐Tree
Rooted MulB-‐point EVC
UNI
UNI
UNI
E-‐LAN • MulBpoint L2 VPNs • Transparent LAN Service • MulBcast Networks • EP-‐LAN, EVP-‐LAN
MulB-‐point to MulB-‐point EVC
UNI
UNI UNI UNI
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CE 2.0 AQributes
CE 2.0 Service Management Automated management Brings Scalability 3 Recent/New Specs for SOAM, FM/PM New Metrics
UNI
EVC1 CoS 4 10 Mbps CIR for VoIP
CoS 2 20Mbps CIR for VPN data traffic
68Mbps for Internet Access EVC2
CoS 6 2 Mbps CIR for control
New CE 2.0 Class of Service Extensions
Industry’s First Standardized MulB-‐CoS Applica7on & Distance-‐Oriented Performance Objec7ves for Next Gen SLAs Enables New Level of Network Efficiency, Responsiveness for Enterprises & MBH
CE 2.0 MulB-‐CoS
UNI
Retail Provider’s CE Network
UNI
Cloud
ENNI
Wholesale Access Network
CE Exchange ENNI
Integrates autonomous, CE networks, as a single regional/global network New Wholesale Service simplifies lowers costs, adds revenue
CE 2.0 Interconnect
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CE 2.0 Enabled Services and ApplicaBons
CE 2.0 for Mobile Backhaul OpBmizing the Backhaul • Mul7ple Classes of Service • Blueprint for Synchroniza7on, • Resiliency, Migra7on to 4G
Cloud Provider(s)
Ethernet Cloud Carrier
Enterprise Cloud Consumers
Carrier Ethernet as Cloud Carrier
Retail and Wholesale Business Services • Finance, Medical, Retail, Government, Media, Manufacturing, Legal • Internet, DR, Site-‐to-‐Site Access, XaaS, VoIP • L2 VPNs, SANs, CRM • E-‐Line, E-‐LAN, E-‐Tree, E-‐Access • Local, NaBonal, Regional, Global
Service Provider 1
CE
UNI
End User Subscriber Headquarters
UNI
CE
ENNI
Service Provider 2
End User Subscriber
Branch Site
UNI
Hosted Applications Internet
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What is an MEF E-‐Access Service? • Retail Service Provider buys E-‐Access services to reach off-‐net customer
loca7ons • Wholesale Access Provider sells E-‐Access services to provide access to loca7ons
on its network • ENNI is point of interconnec7on between Retail and Wholesale providers
End-‐to-‐End Carrier Ethernet Service
E-‐Access Service
CE
UNI
CE
ENNI UNI End User
Subscriber Headquarters
End User Subscriber Branch Site
Carrier Ethernet Network Carrier Ethernet Network
ON-‐NET CUSTOMER LOCATIONS
OFF-‐NET CUSTOMER LOCATIONS
Retail Service Provider – The Buyer (Has relaBonship with end-‐customer)
Wholesale Access Service Provider – The Seller (Provides Access to remote customer locaBon)
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CE 2.0 E-‐Access Services • Carrier Ethernet 2.0 E-‐Access (MEF 33) enables retail service providers to interconnect
quickly & deliver CE services to any loca7on on a wholesale access provider’s network; it replaces long, costly non-‐standard, case-‐by-‐case engineering, discovery, nego7a7ons, and tes7ng between par7es.
• The MEF Services Cer7fica7on Registry has up-‐to-‐date informa7on on companies that have received cer7fica7on.
Key Characteris-cs of Access EPL • ENNI to UNI point-‐to-‐point connec7vity • Dedicated customer UNI
Key Characteris-cs of Access EVPL • ENNI to UNI point-‐to-‐point connec7vity • Mul7ple virtual connec7ons at customer UNI
CE 2.0 Access EVPL Service
Off-‐net customer locaBon
ENNI UNI
Access EVPL
Off-‐net customer locaBon
UNI
Off-‐net customer locaBon
Retail Service Provider
Retail Service Provider
Wholesale Access Provider Wholesale Access Provider
CE 2.0 Access EPL Service
ENNI UNI
Off-‐net customer locaBon
UNI
Access EPL
Retail Service Provider
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New E-‐Transit Services • Key Characteris-cs of an E-‐Transit Service • Connects two or more CENs together using an Operator Virtual
ConnecBon (OVC) • External Network Network Interfaces (ENNIs) at the CEN boundaries • Point-‐to-‐Point or MulBpoint-‐to-‐MulBpoint OVCs provide the
connecBvity • Can support all EVC-‐based services (i.e., ‘Private’ and ‘Virtual Private’) • MulB-‐CoS capable • Service OAM support
ENNI ENNI ENNI
Transit E-‐Line Service Transit E-‐LAN Service
ENNI ENNI
2 E-‐Transit Services Defined P2P OVC MP2MP OVC
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100G TransformaBon in the Metro
• 10G is sBll number one in volume shipments • 40G appears to have peaked • 100G is where the providers are now concentraBng
Source: 100G Metro Transforma4on, Lightwave, May 2014
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On-‐Demand IaaS
Enterprise to Data Center • Carrier Ethernet connecBvity up
to 10GE • Dynamically connect to
on-‐demand compute and storage
Benefits to Service Provider • New value added IaaS offering • 100GE gives headroom for new
service creaBon, and to aggregate and staBsBcally mux mulBple subrate services
Customer Premise
Customer Premise
Customer Premise
Data Center
100GE
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The Third Network
• Agile – Delivery of new, dynamic, on-‐demand services
• Assured – Delivery of performance and security guarantees
• Orchestrated – Delivery of automated service across service providers
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The Third Network on Domain 2.0
Source: Pari Bajpay, VP Service Design and Development, AT&T, NFV World Congress, May 2015
Assured
Orchestrated Agile
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LSO and Work of the MEF
STANDARDIZED ARCHITECTURE
• UNIs and ENNIs • EVCs and OVCs
Service Architecture
Carrier Ethernet Network
End-‐to-‐End Carrier Ethernet Service
Carrier Ethernet Network
ConnecBvity Services
• E-‐Line, E-‐LAN, E-‐Tree, E-‐Access, E-‐Transit
• Informa7on Model & OAM
STANDARDIZED & CERTIFIED SERVICES
E-‐Transit
E-‐Access E-‐Line E-‐Tree
E-‐LAN
STANDARDIZED LIFECYCLE FRAMEWORKS
Lifecycle Frameworks
• Product Catalogue • Service Ordering • Configura7on & Setup • Performance Repor7ng
MEF CerBfi
ed Professiona
l
STANDARDIZED AGILE, ASSURED, ORCHESTRATED SERVICES Lifecycle Service
OrchestraBon • Third Network Services
• APIs NFV SDN ExisBng WAN
Lifecycle Service OrchestraBon (LSO)
Network Infrastructure
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Operators Deploying SDN and NFV
Source: Infone4cs Research SDN and NFV Strategies: Global Service Provider Survey, March 2014
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OrchestraBon Brings It All Together
• Cloud – flexibility and scale – Infrastructure and compute for applica7ons and VNFs
• SDN – end-‐to-‐end network control – Automa7on and streamlined opera7ons
• NFV – network funcBonality – Cost-‐effec7ve, flexible network func7onality
• Carrier Ethernet – connecBvity – Connec7vity across the between end-‐points across a
WAN and chaining between VNFs to form a service
STANDARDIZED AGILE, ASSURED, ORCHESTRATED SERVICES Lifecycle Service
OrchestraBon • Third Network Services
• APIs NFV SDN ExisBng WAN
Lifecycle Service OrchestraBon (LSO)
Network Infrastructure
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How would you describe your exisBng OSS/BSS infrastructure?
MEF Is Focused On Addressing OSS/BSS Challenge
60% 55%
51%
44%
16% 16%
2% 0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
Lacking capabili7es to launch new
services in a 7mely, cost-‐effec7ve
manner
Outdated and inefficient, needs to
be updated/overhauled
Too fragmented Too proprietary Modern, efficient, and cost-‐effec7ve
It is largely adequate to meet company requirements; no need to change
Other
Note: Respondents were allowed to select more than one answer to describe their OSS/BSS.
New MEF Survey – Dynamic Third Network Services & the
Role of LSO (Mar 15)
Source: MEF Survey, Dynamic Third Network Services & the Role of LSO (Mar 15)
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Where is LSO going? If you are invesBng in LSO, what best describes your goals for this investment?
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LSO Enriches Legacy OSS/BSS • Allowing service agility and facilitaBng automaBon
• Streamlining operaBons
• Enabling end-‐to-‐end mulB-‐domain control
• Providing an open environment for service orchestraBon
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MEF Ethernet Excellence Awards
• Global Ethernet Conference (GEN14) • Best ApplicaBon categories – Educa7on – Financial – Government
– Healthcare – Media/Sports/Entertainment
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Best ApplicaBon: EducaBon
• Mesa Public Schools – 82 schools – 3,600 classrooms – 20K devices
• Challenge – Infrastructure overhaul to
streamline operaBons and enable learning innovaBon
– Upgrade compute and “untether” teachers from their desktops
– < 120-‐days to deploy
• Cox Business – 3rd largest US MSO Ethernet
provider – 300K business customers – Managed services
• CE TransformaBon – E-‐LAN – 1G access, 10G to
high school, 20G to servers – Simplify with Ethernet over
op7cal saving $1M OpEx annually
– Video conferencing, virtual learning and on-‐line apps
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Best ApplicaBon: Finance
• Customer: Fidessa – Informa7on – Trading tools – Infrastructure
• Challenges – 15-‐year YOY 25% growth – Maintain customer’s trust –
85% world’s premier ins7tu7ons
– Currently carrying $10T transac7ons across their global network
• Carrier: Colt – 22-‐countries – 19,000 buildings – 20 data centers
• CE TransformaBon – Managed Ethernet Private
Network (EPN) – Resource intensive
applica7ons over a high performance and highly reliable CE network
– Scale rapidly and flexibly with absolute confidence