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Network Research and Research Networks Fred Baker Cisco Fellow Session Number Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 1 The questions I was asked • Simon asked me to answer the question: “What types of networks should eScience be using?” That’s a big question, and has many possible answers • I was also asked: “Which wireless is better, 3GPP, WiFi, or WiMax? Which should we deploy?” Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 2 Network Research and Research Networks • Key question before I answer that: • What are we doing? Research Networks: production networks that support science and education Networking Research: potentially substandard networks that test networking concepts Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 3 Research Networks Presentation_ID © © 2003, 2005 Cisco Cisco Systems, Systems, Inc. Inc. All All rights rights reserved. reserved. 4 Educational Networks • Examples of these include the NRENS. Internet2, AARNET, CERNET, SingAREN, TANET/TANET2, TWAREN, etc • Services supported: Educational institutions, including K-12 and University High end science Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 5 Education Example: Greek Public School Network • Built off Greek NREN (GRNET): 7 GRNET nodes 82 GSN distribution routers ~10,000 schools • Each school today has two IPv4 /30 subnets Access network Loopback NAT interior Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 6 GSN Distribution Network Design • One GSN distribution network per GRNET site (7) • One access server per distribution network GRNET Router • BGP Routing Advertises /48 to GRNET, or GRNET static routes to it Default route to GRNET GSN Distribution Network • OSPF Routing Distributes to £ 16 POPs in OSPF Backbone Area or IS-IS L2 Domain GSN-served Schools Distributes to ~200 schools from each POP using OSPF or IS-IS Stub Area Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 7 GSN In-School network • Access connectivity: To GSN Distribution Router Stateful Firewall ADSL or ISDN • Servers External access limited to SMTP/FTP download/WWW Additional POP etc access from lab Additional POP+FTP Upload access from administrative domain Intrusion Management • Labs Administration Servers No external access • Administration Student Lab No external access Separated from student network Intrusion Management Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 8 Big Science Example: Square Kilometer Array • Continental radio telescope Hundreds of correlated radio telescopes ~100 sensors per telescope 20 telescopes in a farm 120 telescope farms O(800 MBPS) data per sensor Data blocks O(340 Mbytes) • One potential design: Software correlator built on distributed supercomputer, located at antenna farms Select interesting data, Correlate components at primary site Correlate sites at central location Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 9 Network Research Presentation_ID © © 2003, 2005 Cisco Cisco Systems, Systems, Inc. Inc. All All rights rights reserved. reserved. 10 Networks for Networking Research • Examples of these include The ten NSF-sponsored networks of the mid1980’s, one of which blossomed into today’s Internet DARTNET/DARTNET2 CAIRN CANARIE (NREN, but pioneered concept of consortium fiber) US National Lambda Rail Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 11 Interesting side effects of testing - NSFNET NSFNET: Congested network resulted in TCP’s congestion avoidance algorithms Scenario: Routers had limited buffering Traffic routinely exceeded network capacity Effect: Congestive collapse drove development of congestion avoidance procedures Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 12 Interesting side effects of testing - CSNET CSNET X.25 network that wrung out TCP implementations Scenario: Edge routers set up X.25 VCs sufficient to support ambient traffic Load sharing and HDLC bit stuffing resulted in significant traffic reordering Effect: Many TCPs had issues handling disordered traffic Several TCP implementations got fixed at that time Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 13 What do I think is important in research? • I think the network should support the research being done I think it should allow for a great deal of flexibility • To me, that means Providing a stable production network for GRiD work Providing a network that can be changed easily for localized experiments Providing lambdas that can be deployed for special purposes at limited times Not limiting the network to a single technology Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 14 What is “the right technology”? • The “right” technology is always the technology that: meets current needs and allows for growth • Always a value judgment, comparing merits and demerits against requirements Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 15 What does Taiwan have, and how might we use it? Presentation_ID © © 2003, 2005 Cisco Cisco Systems, Systems, Inc. Inc. All All rights rights reserved. reserved. 16 Lets look at technologies being tested in Taiwan today • Fiber networking • WiMax • WiFi • 3GPP Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 17 Fiber networking • TANET/TANET2: 台灣大學 中央研究院 東華大學 Taipei C7609 collaboration Production network for common C7609 中央大學 C7609 C7609 GSR • TWAREN: 中正大學 交通大學 C7609 C7609 Designed for flexibility in high end science 成功大學 TWAREN Three networks in parallel: GSR 新竹 IP production network Hsin-chu 清華大學 C7609 GSR Tainan 暨南大學 IP network for networking experiments 中興大學 GSR 中山大學 Lambda network available for special uses C7609 C7609 C7609 C7609 Taichung High capacity: 10 GBPS on backbone paths Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 18 WiMax • Wide Area Wireless LAN Nominally 6 km diameter radio cells Connected with a fiber backbone Wide area broadband • Issues Shared medium, vs DSL/Cable point to point Signal strength, BER issues common to wireless Metropolitan/Urban • Advantages Potentially cheaper and higher capacity than DSL/Cable Mobile user supported Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 19 WiFi • Local Area Wireless LAN Hundreds of meter diameter radio cells Connected to access infrastructure • Issues Shared medium, wired is faster Signal strength, BER issues common to wireless Home/office area • Advantages Potentially cheaper than house wiring More flexible usage Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 20 3GPP • Limited access rate general purpose network 2 MBPS within cell, shared among (potentially many) users Or, 64 KBPS circuit • Issues Low bit rate compared to WiFi/Wimax • Advantages Low BER compared to WiFi/Wimax More predictable access due to CAC Often available in the countryside Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 21 How we build networks • Local Policy I am always in control of my computer and who it can talk with Information security may be an issue, both in the network and on the host • Access How I access the “big I” Internet • Distribution How an ISP organizes his network to support his customers • Core The Information Superhighway Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 22 My home network diagram The Internet Cable Modem Access Network Family Network Home Office Network Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 23 How do I go to work? Broadband Access/Distribution Network Core Fiber Network VPN Connectivity Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 24 How I might use Taiwan’s networks • Security Model: Wired gives speed/reliability, wireless gives flexibility Home or corporate network has defense in depth Perimeter security (firewall) Intrusion management End system security • Requirements Ease of network use Control of resources Controlled access to sensitive materials Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 25 How I might use Taiwan’s networks • Local network Solution WiFi and wired networks in the home/office • Access solution: DSL, Cable Modem, or Wimax Choice depends on price, capabilities, and availability • For my uses, combine wired with all three wireless approaches, giving different security and access capabilities depending on location Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 26 So which is better? • Each is, for its purpose • The biggest fallacy in the networking industry: “one size fits all” Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 27 Research Fallout of Wireless solutions • Next generation TCP/SCTP procedures are being developed for improved performance in wireless and long delay networks • A network that combines commercial service and elevated probability of loss will require, and will test, those procedures • Think of CSNET’s contributions… Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 28 Network Research and Research Networks Fred Baker Cisco Fellow Session Number Presentation_ID © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 29