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Telecommunications Concepts Chapter 3.2 Packet Switched Store and Forward Networks 1 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB Contents • • • • 2 Store and Forward Networks X25 Frame Relay ATM 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB Contents • • • • 3 Store and Forward Networks X25 Frame Relay ATM 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB Point to Point Networks Normal Operation Mode : Store & Forward Commonly used in Wide-Area Networks The Network itself has considerable storage capacity 4 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB The 3 lower OSI layers For Store & Forward Networks Internet 3 Network 5 2 Data Link Control 1 Physical 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB Contents • • • • 6 Store and Forward Networks X25 Frame Relay ATM 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB X25 and related standards • Standardized, multivendor interface for packet switched networks. • Initially published by CCITT in 1974 • Major revisions in 1976, 1978, 1980, 1984, 1988. • Provides common procedures between a DTE and a packet switched DCE for – Establishing a connection to the network – Exchanging data with another DTE – releasing the connection • Can be used for direct DTE-DTE connection 7 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB X25 and related standards Virtual Circuit DTE DTE X25 Packet switched data network X25 The standard does not specify the internal operation of the packet switched data network. It is however possible, and common practice, to use also the X25 protocols between nodes inside the data network 8 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB X25 Applications : Public Packet Switched Data Networks Main purposes : Connect terminals to mainframe Interconnect mainframes Example : Belgacom's DCS PSTN/ ISDN 9 PAD public PAD X75 PAD private PAD 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB X25 Applications : Private Packet Switched Data Networks Example: old Banksys network PSTN /ISDN Public PAD 10 Private PAD 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB X25 in the world • Public networks – Very successful in France (Transpac) – Quite successful throughout Europe – Marginal in the rest of the world • Private networks – dominant technology: » Seventies : proprietary networks » Eighties in Europe : X25 » Nineties : IP 11 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB X25 Reference Uyless Black X25 and related protocols IEEE Computer Society press, 1991. ISBN 0-8186-8976-5 ISBN 0-8186-5976-9 (microfiche) 12 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB Contents • • • • 13 Store and Forward Networks X25 Frame Relay ATM 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB Frame Relay Origin: Developed to allow fast packet switching in ISDN channels. Simple protocols allow very high data rates. Frame Relay has replaced X25 in high-speed packet switching independently from ISDN 14 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB Frame Relay • Facts : – Transmission errors have been significantly reduced – Most high-speed links are seldom switched • Design consequences : – Simplify error handling – Separate connection management and data transmission • Main Frame Relay characteristics : – Layer 2 : » Error detection but no correction » Permanent virtual circuits through layer 2 entities – Layer 3 : empty on data transmission protocol stack 15 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB Switching in Frame Relay Any transport or internet protocol switching node Data protocol Network management 16 Signaling protocol (possibly manual) 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB Frame Relay Error Correction: • All frames have Frame Check Sequence. Bad frames are not relayed • Upper layers have to handle the missing frames • A transport layer designed for a connectionless network service can handle such missing frames. 17 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB Frame Relay Flow Control Basic mechanism : Frame Discarding Transport protocol Frame Relay layer Risks: 18 Unfairness Congestion Collapse 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB Frame Relay Flow Control additional mechanisms : • At set-up, committed rate is negotiated (CIR) • Frames in excess of committed rate have “Discard Eligible” bit set. • Frames with DE bit set discarded first. • Users can voluntarily set the DE bit. • Congestion notification bits in each frame to warn upper layers. 19 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB References Philip Smith Frame Relay : Principles and Applications Addison-Wesley, 1993 ISBN 0-201-62400-1 20 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB Contents • • • • 21 Store and Forward Networks X25 Frame Relay ATM 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB Broadband ISDN Dominant ideas in the early 80's • Convergence of telecommunication networks – Telephone – Cable TV – Data • Dominant application : Video On Demand – High Definition TV : 155 Mb/s – Four different programs per home 22 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB Broadband ISDN A single, universal, communications network 23 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB Broadband ISDN Design Specifications • Dominated by the HDTV requirements – 600 Mb/s throughput to every home » Fiber to the home » Simple protocols implemented in hardware – Guaranteed Quality Of Service » Connection oriented protocol • General purpose network – HDTV, LDTV, Voice, Data » Different service classes – Very low data-rate applications (meter reading) » Multiplexing of very different data-rates » Low multiplexing overhead 24 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB Asynchronous Transfer Mode • Designed for broadband ISDN • Dissociates completely data transfer and signaling • Provides virtual circuits at the physical layer, supporting directly the application layers • Uses very small, fixed size packets, called "cells” • Unique protocol for a universal BISDN network. – Used in the interface between network and enduser. – Used inside the network between nodes 25 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB ATM technology • Data encapsulated in small (53 bytes) cells – Long low priority packet can not block service of high priority packet – Very different throughputs can be multiplexed – Header decoding and cell handling simple – Hardwired switches – Very high throughputs possible • Communication by Virtual Circuits – Established through separate signaling network – Addressing etc handled by signaling network – QOS negotiation through signaling network 26 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB Virtual Path & Virtual Channel Virtual Path Transmission Path 27 Virtual Channel 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB ATM in the OSI model with ad-hoc signaling Any Application Protocol switch Network management 28 ATM Signaling protocol 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB ATM Interfaces UNI NNI 29 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB ATM cell format Header Data(48 bytes) VPI GFC VPI VCI VCI PT 30 PT CLP CLP HEC HEC User Node Interface Network Node Interface 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB ATM Adaptation Layer Service Classes Type of Service Timing coordination Bit Rate Connection Mode 31 Constant Variable Connection Connectionless Bit Rate Bit Rate Oriented Data Oriented Data Class A Class B Class C Class D Required Constant Not Required Variable Connection Oriented Connectionless 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB ATM Adaptation Layer Data encapsulation Higher layer PDU pad AAL ATM header 32 pad AAL 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB Broadband ISDN The situation in the 90's • HDTV – Broadcasters not willing to invest in HDTV – Public prefers diversity over technical quality – Video on demand can't compete with video rental • Digital Signal Processing – Video compressed into 1.5 Mb/s – XDSL allows up to 6 Mb/s over copper local loop • Internet – Explosive success of cheap, low quality but very diversified universal communications network 33 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB ATM The situation in the 90's • Huge research investments by vendors – Data transfer protocols mature – Signaling immature : target market ??? • No push from Telco's – Privatization restricts long term developments – New operators compete with low cost technology (Voice over IP, …) • Corporate backbones / high throughput LAN's – Only possibility to recover quickly some of the huge investments made in ATM research 34 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB ATM bridges for Ethernet ATM switch X X X 35 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB ATM bridges for Ethernet X X X WAN with ATM over SDH 36 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB References • M.De Prycker Asynchronous Transfer Mode : Solutions for broadband ISDN. Ellis Horwood 1993. • Web sites: – http://www.atmforum.com » Official web site of ATM forum – http://www.atm25.com/ATM_Reference.ht ml » Links to many sites on ATM 37 10-01-K.Steenhaut & J.Tiberghien - VUB