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Connecting hospitals to the NREN The Danish case story Copenhagen, 15th September 2009 Martin Bech Deputy Director, UNI•C [email protected] Optical network • • Backbone in production from the middle of 2009 Access connections are continuously upgraded to optical networking Metro-ring in the Copenhagen Area IHK LYNGBY 15 km 4,75 dB 16 km 5 dB 28 km 8 dB Panum 12 km 4 dB Risø KVL-T 7 km 2,75 dB KUA 3 km 1,75 dB RUC National and International connections 6 km 2,5 dB 12 km 4 dB Hørs. 6 km 2,5 dB 23 km 6,75 dB ØRESTAD Lightpaths for production IP AAU-2 AAU-1 LYNGBY AU-2 AU-1 ØRESTAD SDU-2 SDU-1 8 x 1GE 10GE Physical fibre Moving towards supplying multiple network connections everywhere At every location we now offer: • Internet production IP service (as always) • Infinite traffic and bandwidth… • A connection type appropriate to the need • Multiple dedicated network connections for “intranet” and “lambda” use • Segregation between the networks are realized by means of a combination of lightpaths, MPLS and even VLANs University of Aarhus: 23 locations …and the other universities are not much better This means a lot of lightpaths… Special services for special user groups • Network for everyone But on top of that, many of us are involved in serving the needs of special user groups: • Supercomputing facilities • GRID clusters • Facilities for radio astronomy • Video and telephony • Content portals, databases etc. But what about services for health research and health care? Why is health research and health care different from our other users? • • • • • Not just a few large facilities, but also huge numbers of smaller entities/departments Huge numbers of scanners, databases and other facilities They all need their own separate private connections Users are very aware of security constraints, but totally unaware of the services and equipment that implement these constraints • Many ad hoc projects and connections Communicating across organizational boundaries LAN LAN FW FW External network FW LAN The challenge External Network FW A Lab A User A FW B Firewall rules (A) Firewall rules (B) ----------------------User A may access Service B ---------------------- ----------------------Service B may be accessed by User A ---------------------- Lab B Service B Setup of a new connection External Network FW A Lab A User A FW B Firewall rules (A) Firewall rules (B) ----------------------User A may access Service B ---------------------- ----------------------Service B may be accessed by User A ---------------------- Lab B Service B Expiry of a connection External Network FW A Lab A User A FW B Firewall rules (A) Firewall rules (B) ----------------------User A may access Service B ---------------------- ----------------------Service B may be accessed by User A ---------------------- ? Lab B ? Service B Manual administration • No problem for a single example such as this, except that the set-up of each connection typically takes a day • But, if a research project with 20 partners are sharing just 10 common services, the total number of rules are 1.900 • Most firewall administrators can’t say who is responsible for every rule Therefore: We need a system to keep track of all these connections The Connection agreement system • All groups of users and all services are put into the system by the users • User A finds Service B in a large directory • User A enters a request for a connection to system B • Both User A and the administrator of Service B accepts the connection in the system • The system generates rules which the fírewall administrators put into their firewalls Using the Connection Agreement System Connection Agreement System FW A Lab A User A VPN gateway FW B Firewall rules (B) Firewall rules (A) ----------------------User A may access Service B ---------------------- ----------------------Service B may be accessed by User A ---------------------- Lab B Service B The connection agreement system • Everybody can find the services they need – and each other • Eliminates the need for administering a huge number of VPN tunnels • Establishes documentation of who ordered what connection and how long it is supposed to exist • Simplifies security administration • A simple and inexpensive solution to a problem that is common to most researchers sharing resources The technology works: In production since 2003! • The nation-wide Danish Health Data Network is based on the Connection Agreement System • The swedish health network, Sjunet, has also decided to use the Connection Agreement System • Several other countries and regions are considering implementing the Connection Agreement System Number of connections registered Traffic volumes in the Danish Health Data network Kbytes pr. month NRENs provide a lot of services… Universities and research institutions Hospitals Basic Internet connectivity Yes Yes Video conferencing Yes Collaboration tools Yes Lambda networking Yes IPv6 Yes (but no use) Roaming services Yes CERT and security Yes GRID and Scientific Computing Yes Media Libraries Yes The Health Data Network provides: Hospitals Basic Internet connectivity No Video conferencing Yes Collaboration tools Yes Lambda networking Not yet IPv6 If needed Roaming services Yes CERT and security Yes GRID and Scientific Computing Yes Media Libraries Yes Can we generalize this approach? Mega-science has it all: • Separate λ-connections • Dedicated GRID-clusters • Services hardened to tolerate being directly on the internet What do researchers with more modest budgets do? Connecting two research resources Lab A Lab B Analysis equipment Scanner No connection Connecting two research resources Lab A Lab B Scanner Analysis equipment Too expensive and unflexible Connecting two research resources Lab A Analysis equipment Lab B Scanner Not safe: Equipment will be hacked and connection is not secure Connecting two research resources Lab B Lab A Analysis equipment Scanner FW FW Using firewalls: Works, but unflexible and time-consuming to set up each time Connecting two research resources Lab A Lab B Connection Agreement System Analysis equipment Scanner FW Using the Connection Agreement System: Flexibility by user configuration FW Have we now solved all problems? YES – Once connected, new connections are operational almost immediately YES – We can now manage the increased complexity of the explosion of many types of connections between organizations YES – A light-weight alternative to dedicated lambda connections (no cost, immediate set-up) YES – Local security administrators can let their users do the administration and documentation of their security components NO – Network interoperability does not guarantee working interoperability of services NO – The present system does not offer any means for identity management of users (yet…) The health sector • • • • • Ought to be an integral part of every NREN community They do research, education and an every-day production Security constraints on the network usage Their bandwidth needs are growing rapidly Today, they are no different from our traditional community Do we want to focus on the needs of the health sector? Why do many NREN not have a health sector strategy?