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OIF UNI/NNI Interoperability Demo Overview OIF Interoperability Goals University of New Hampshire Testing • • Interoperability topologies and test Methodology UNH testing and outcomes OFC’2003 Public Demo Conclusions OIF Interoperability Agreements: Timeline Decision to focus initially on UNI May 2000 First UNI 1.0 draft ballot UNI Interop Event UNI 1.0 approved, NNI req. work starts First NNI proposals & Interim NNI NNI routing & signaling baseline spec. Jan 2001 May/June 2001 Oct. 2001 Jan. 2002 Jul. 2002 UNI/NNI Interop. Mar. 2003 UNI/NNI Interoperability Goals Proof of concept of the OIF (Inter-domain) E-NNI concept Validate the UNI/NNI interworking solution Demonstrate maturity of UNI 1.0 Agreements UNI and NNI: Definition and Placement Switched Connection: initiated by clients over UNI interface Soft Permanent Connection (SPC): initiated by management agent Optical Transport Network Control domain UNI NNI UNI Client Network (IP, ATM, SDH) NNI Control domain NNI Control domain UNI - User to Network Interface NNI - Network to Network Interface UNI UNI/NNI Interoperability Trial Assumptions Interoperability agreements are based on • User Network Interface (UNI) 1.0 Signaling Specification (IA, OIF2001.125.7) • NNI Implementation Agreement Proposal for OFC 2003 (OIF2002.476) Connections are established dynamically over • an UNI initiated interface (switched connections) or • an EMS/NMS initiated interface (soft permanent connections) The test network topologies refer to clients and domains. Each domain could represent either an individual TNE (Transport Network Equipment) or a vendor domain containing multiple TNE devices Explicit routing is provided by the first metro or core node initiating the network connection Inter domain link dissemination Testing focused on control plane only Protocol Overview Signaling • • • • Routing • • • RSVP-TE RFC 3209, 3471/3473 G-UNI object (esp. TNAs) as in UNI 1.0 Multi-session RSVP and SPCs as in oif2002.353 OSPF-TE RFC 2328 and gmpls, sonet/sdh extensions Domains and TNA reachability as in oif2002.023 Interoperability Goals • • • Interoperable multivendor signaling and routing SPC and UNI connection setup Domain abstraction Relationship with GMPLS GMPLS – Generalized MultiProtocol Label Switching • • • • Current limitations • • A set of IETF standards for Sub-IP Control Plane Signaling: RSVP-TE and CR-LDP Routing: OSPF-TE and ISIS Link Management Restricted to single routing area – limited scope Limited support of hierarchy or abstraction Future • Multi-area extensions Relationship with ASON ASON – Automatic Switched Optical Networks • • • • Top-down design • • A set of ITU-T standards for Optical control plane G.8080 ASON architecture G.7712, 7713, 7714, 7715 ASON requirements G.7713.1/2/3 and G.7714.1 protocol specs Carrier-based requirements Multi-domain model Alignment with NNI • • Signaling aligned Routing tbd Interoperability Participating Companies Alcatel (UNI-C, UNI-N, E-NNI, NMS/EMS) Avici (UNI-C) Ciena (UNI-N, E-NNI) Data Connection (UNI-C, UNI-N, E-NNI, NMS/EMS) Elematics (UNI-N, E-NNI) Mahi Networks (UNI-N, E-NNI, NMS/EMS) NEC (UNI-C, UNI-N, E-NNI) Motorola/Netplane (UNI-C, UNI-N, E-NNI, NMS/EMS) Nortel (UNI-N, E-NNI) Sycamore (UNI-N, E-NNI, NMS/EMS) Tellabs (UNI-N, E-NNI, NMS/EMS) Tellium (UNI-N, E-NNI, NMS/EMS) Test Methodology Round robin approach - random vendor pairings /grouping • • create diversity and fairness maximize partner/interoperability exposure by exhaustive pairing Testing Steps • • • Routing establishment among the network devices Signaling are tested with UNI initiated and EMS/NMS initiated connections Network build out are based on results from daily test progress Interoperability Network Alcatel2 (4) (7) (5) (7) (8) DCL UNI-C (3) (3) (10) (14) (10) Nortel (9) (8) (4) (4) (4) (4) (3) (2) Tellabs (11) Mahi (6) (5) (10) (8) (14) (9) Avici UNI-C (3) (9) (8) DCL (3) (2)(9) Alcatel Italia (6) Avici UNI-C DCL UNI-C (13) Netplane UNI-C (7) (9) (12) (14) (13) Alcatel1 (1) (10) (6) (1) Elematics (5) (2) (6) (1) (12) Alcatel Italia (2) (1) (1) (11) Tellium (12) Netplane UNI-C Alcatel UNI-C (5) Netplane (8) (7)(13) Sycamore (10) (11) (11)(12)(13) NEC Ciena (2) (5) Avici UNI-C NEC UNI-C Avici UNI-C OFC’2003 Highlights OFC 2003 • First time ever in the industry to successfully demonstrate multi vendor UNI/NNI interoperability; demonstrated set up and removal of 15 LSPs across multi-domain network in real time; • • • Participated by 12 vendors with 15 types of product of real network equipment or simulated nodes Network topology with 10 network client devices and over 30 simulated network elements in 12 domains Signaling and routing information exchanges was captured and updated in the real time with display software to reflect dynamic connection establishment UNI/NNI Signaling Display NNI Routing Display Acknowledgements UNI Interoperability Team • Florencia Dazzi, Andi Kosich, Steve Cortez, Todd Cline OFC NNI Demo Spec Primary Authors (OIF2002.476) • • • Dimitrios Pendarakis (Tellium) Dimitri Papadimitriou (Alcatel) Additional Contributors Jonathan Sadler, Lyndon Ong, Erning Ye, Edward Harrison, David Drysdale, Charles Chen, etc. • Cary Wright Test plans (OIF2003.018) • • Strong support from UNH team at the closed door testing Result Finding document (OIF 2003.035) Lyndon Ong, Dimitri Papadimitriou, Dimitrios Pendarakis, Jonathan Sadler, Erning Ye, Ben Mack-Crane Signaling and routing displays developed by Clearpond and Alcatel • Amy Wang (Avici) and Ben Schultz (UNH) Interoperability Test Event at UNH OFC2003 Interoperability Demo Participants Conclusion Summary • Early planning and weekly technical team calls identifies interop issues ahead of time • Extensive test rotations at UNH closed door testing • Commitment from all interop participants (9 day, 12 – 18hr/day) Next Steps • Accelerate protocol development with discussion on the Interoperability Finding document (oif2003.035) • • • NNI spec UNI 1.0 impact Share ideas with Carrier WG on value added features and applications