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Transcript
Advanced Services and
Multicast Deployment
Pierre Vander Vorst
Solutions Architect
WWSP Carrier Ethernet
Presentation_ID
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Confidential
1
Agenda
 Advanced Services
 Lifecycle Methodology
Prepare
Plan
Design
Implement
Operate
Optimize
 Conclusion
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© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Confidential
2
Advanced Services
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© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Confidential
3
Cisco Advanced Services
 Using the Cisco Lifecycle Services approach, Cisco
provide a broad portfolio of services that address all
aspects of deploying, operating, and optimizing your
network to help increase business value and return on
investment
 Cisco Advanced Services is a Worldwide organization,
which delivers services on a Technology basis
 Services can be
Reactive – Technical Support
Proactive – Network Operations Subscription
Projects - Transactional
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© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Confidential
4
Lifecycle Methodology
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© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Confidential
5
A Lifecycle Approach to Service and Support
Coordinated
Planning and Strategy
Make Sound
Financial Decisions
Prepare
Operational Excellence
Adapt to Changing
Business Requirements
Assess Readiness
Optimize
Cisco
Plan
Can Your Network Support
the Proposed System?
Partner
Customer
Maintain Network Health
Manage, Resolve,
Repair, Replace
Operate
Design the Solution
Design
Products, Service, Support
Aligned to Requirements
Implement
Implement the Solution
Integrate Without Disruption or
Causing Vulnerability
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© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Confidential
6
Carrier Ethernet Service Lifecycle Program
Services offering for Multicast Deployment
Business Modeling
Competitive Assessments
Regulatory/Financial Environments
Content Acquisition
Network/Operational Assessment
Network Audit and Roadmap
High Level Network Design
System/sub-system specifications doc
System Security policies
Lab criteria
System test plans
Prepare
Operational Assessments
Network health check
Service Level Agreement
Network Change Support
Optimization Consulting
Education/Training
Organizational Design
Service Provisioning Scripts
Call Handling Scripts
Subscriber Satisfaction Measurement System
Service Assurance reference doc
Monitoring tools reference doc
Inventory/config. Management system
Staging/Inventory Management
Optimize
Plan
The Lifecycle Services approach defines the
minimum set of activities needed, by
technology and by network complexity, to
help you successfully deploy and operate
Cisco Metro Ethernet solutions and optimize
performance throughout the network
lifecycle.
Operate
Design
Functional Design
Wiring Design
Component Engineering
Low Level Design Document
Network Maps
Test plans
Implement
Site Survey
Material Logistics
Vendor Management
Site Labor and Management
Commission and Test
Presentation_ID
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Confidential
7
Metro Ethernet Services Lifecycle Program
Prepare & Plan deliverables
 Prepare
Prepare
Plan
Requirements
Business Plan
 Plan
Network Audit
High level design
Lab criteria
System test plans
Presentation_ID
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Confidential
8
Carrier Ethernet Services Lifecycle Program
Prepare
Prepare
 Requirements for the Multicast Application – IPTV as an example
200-300 SD TV, 2-3.5 Mbps each
10-20 HD TV, 6-20 Mbps each
Few sources, usually centralized
Redundancy between sources is always required
Load-balancing between sources is not always required
Number of subscribers
 Example of requirements
Presentation_ID
Traffic type
Packet Loss
Ratio
Latency
Jitter
Video
< 10-6
150 msec
< 50 msec
Voice
< 10-2
125 msec
< 30 msec
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Confidential
9
Carrier Ethernet Services Lifecycle Program
Plan
Plan
 High Level Design
Video Content
Acquisition and Serving
Service Integration
SHE / VHE
• Antenna Farm
• Encoding
• Terrestrial
• Decoding
• VoD Library
• Switching
Quad-play IP-NGN
Content Service Control
Access
Core, Edge, Aggregation
DSL
FTTx
Service Center
From SHE and Service Center to
VHE to VSO etc
IPTV Middleware
HA, mCast, QoS
Cable
Video Headend
Office
VoD
Servers
PON
Connected
Home
STB
HAG
eMTA
WiFi
Video
Switching
Office
+STB
Super
Head
End
MPLS
Core
Access Network
(DSL/ Cable/Metro E/
FTTx)
Distribution
Edge
Routers
Live B’cast &
VoD Asset Dist.
+STB
Aggregation
Router
OSS, BSS (+Performance, Policy, Provisioning, Inventory)
Legacy Integration, CRM, Biz Workflow, Customer Care, etc
Presentation_ID
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Confidential
10
Carrier Ethernet Services Lifecycle Program
Plan
Plan
 Network Audit for Multicast delivery
Provide an assessment and review the readiness of the
existing IP network infrastructure for delivering Multicast
Service
Advise customers in preparing the network to meet Multicast
requirements without impacting existing services
Analyze the network in terms of capacity, quality of services,
security, high availability, bandwidth available
Example findings
Upgrade network link capacity to accommodate projected traffic
Introduce DiffServ-based QoS to differentiate between traffic types
Ensure consistent deployment of high availability mechanism
Define subscriber density guidelines
Add redundancy to eliminate significant single points of failure
Presentation_ID
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Confidential
11
Carrier Ethernet Services Lifecycle Program
Design & Implement deliverables
 Design:
Low Level design
Network maps
Test plan
Design
Implement
 Implement:
Commission
Test
Presentation_ID
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Confidential
12
Carrier Ethernet Services Lifecycle Program
Design – Multiple Options
Design
 Architecture supports multiple models for delivering Multicast
Native Multicast in the global routing table
Native Multicast in a VRF/VPN
Point-to-Point Pseudowire (MPLS/L2VPN)
Multipoint Pseudowire (VPLS)
Routed Pseudowire
Multicast VLAN Registration (MVR) for Layer2 access
Multicast VPN (mVPN) based on mGRE
 The choice depends on criteria like customer requirements,
definition of the Multicast Application, type of Video delivery,
Security, Convergence Time
Presentation_ID
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Confidential
13
Carrier Ethernet Services Lifecycle Program
Design - Multicast Source Discovery Protocol
Design
Option 1 - MSDP with unique Rendez-Vous Point
(Anycast RP)
Redundancy is achieved with good
convergence (unicast routing is the
convergence time)
Load-Sharing depends on topology, not on
group range
Can work in sparse-mode only (no need for
sparse-dense)
RP1
A
10.1.1.1
Rec
Src
RP2
MSDP
X
Load-Sharing between the two RPs is a plus
Src
SA
Rec
SA
B
10.1.1.1
Rec
Rec
Can be combined with RP hierarchies
Very robust, but the RP address needs to be configured on every router
Security is part of the protocol (SA Filtering and conditional Register)
Very good option when Source redundancy needs to be achieved on a geographical
based (redundancy between cities for national TV channels and not regional)
Presentation_ID
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
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14
Carrier Ethernet Services Lifecycle Program
Design – Source Specific Multicast
Design
Source
172.23.20.70
Option 2 - SSM
Very convenient for One-to-Many
applications
If sources are static, SSM
Mapping can be used
PIM (S,G) join
DNS Server
No need of RP engineering, no
Shared Tree
Easy to maintain and configure,
especially with static mapping
No packet loss due to Shared Tree
to Shortest Path Tree Failover
Redundancy between sources can
be achieved with Anycast IP
PIM (S,G) join
Last Hop
Router
DNS response:
IGMPv2 join
232.1.2.3
Group G -> Source S
Set Top
Box (STB)
Very good option when Source redundancy does not need to be achieved on a
geographical based (redundancy between sources in the same cities)
Presentation_ID
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Confidential
15
Metro Ethernet Services Lifecycle Program
Implement
Implement
 Advanced Services can be responsible for the
deployment, the implementation, and the testing of
the network
 Phasing approach
Staging
Implementation
Test Plan
Migration of the existing services
Presentation_ID
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Confidential
16
Carrier Ethernet Services Lifecycle Program
Operate & Optimize deliverables
 Operate
Operate
Optimize
Education and training
 Optimize
Network Health Check
Presentation_ID
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Confidential
17
Carrier Ethernet Services Lifecycle Program
Engineering Documents
Prepare
Plan
Design
Operates
 During the Lifecycle, Cisco Advanced
Services delivers the engineering
documents:
High Level Design
Network Audit
Low Level Design
Network Implementation Plan
Network Staging Plan
Network Ready For Use
Network Migration Plan
Transfer of Information
Operates
Presentation_ID
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Confidential
18
Carrier Ethernet Services
Typical Customers
 Type of Deployment
 Reference Architecture
Greenfield
Migration of an existing network into IP NGN
Country transformation
 Platforms
MPLS
BGP Free core
Layer 3 up to the Aggregation
Layer 2 with MST at the Access
One VLAN per service per Access
Node
Core:
CRS-1 4 or 8 slots
 Services
Distribution and Aggregation:
L2VPN
Cisco7609 with ES20 uplink and downlink
E-LINE, E-LAN, VPLS
ME6524
MPLS L3VPN
Catalyst4500
Residential Voice
Access:
Residential Video
Cisco3750
ME3400
ME6524
Presentation_ID
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Confidential
19
Conclusion
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© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Confidential
20
Conclusion
 Cisco Advanced Services is committed to work with the
partners and the customers to deploy Multicast services
on the network
 Cisco Advanced Services has adopted the Lifecycle of
the network as methodology
 Deliverables are associated to every phase
 Cisco Advanced Services has proven to be able to
successfully deploy large and complex infrastructure
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© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Confidential
21
Questions & Answers
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© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Confidential
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Presentation_ID
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
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