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OSPF for Broadband Wireless Campus Backbone Joseph Hui ISS Chair Professor and Director, Telecommunications Research Center Arizona State University Talk Outline • Applications for Wireless Broadband Campus Networks • Optical versus Radio Frequency • OSPF for Broadband Wireless Networks • On-going embedded system prototype. Applications of Broadband Wireless Backbone • Large data storage facilities scattered on campus • Growing need for multimedia educational material storage/retrieval • Digital/video libraries • Massive data stores (Mars Probe, 3D models) • Wireless LAN hot spots • Portable wireless multimedia booths? ASU Campus Backbone • • • • • • Hub and Spoke Gigabit Ethernet. Three level hierarchical network East-Central-West Campus A few isolated, off-campus buildings Want: Scalable and reconfigurable networks Solutions: – Wireless broadband – Distributed Storage Area Networks – Reliable OSPF protocol for wireless links ASU BACKBONE NETWORK 2000 ASU WEST ASU EAST SD Power Supply 1 SD Power Supply 2 Power Supply 1 POWER 115/230 VAC 9.8/4.9 A 60/50Hz Power Supply 2 POWER 115/230 VAC 9.8/4.9 A 60/50Hz 10MB ETHERNET 10MB ETHERNET 1 1 2 Internet 2 3 Internet 1 2 Internet 1 3 4 4 5 5 155Mbps OLD MAIN ASUW-gw Layer 3 Etherswitch 155Mbps ASUE-gw Layer 3 Etherswitch MAIN-gw Layer 3 Etherswitch SD Power Supply 1 Power Supply 2 POWER 115/230 VAC 9.8/4.9 A 60/50Hz 2 BUILDING 1 100 MB BUILDING 2 . . 100 MB BUILDING N ASU-gw ROUTER ASU2-gw ROUTER 1 3 4 T1 100MB 5 100MB 100MB 100MB 1GB SD Power Supply 1 SD Power Supply 2 Power Supply 1 POWER 115/230 VAC 9.8/4.9 A 60/50Hz LAYER 2 ETHERSWITCH NAU, UofA AND ASPIN CUSTOMERS LEASED LINE AND FRAME RELAY CONNECTIONS DMZ ROUTER Power Supply 2 POWER 115/230 VAC 9.8/4.9 A 60/50Hz 1 1 2 2 3 3 4 4 5 5 LAYER 2 ETHERSWITCH 1GB BAC ECA SD Power Supply 1 BUILDING 1 100MB BUILDING 2 . . 100MB BUILDING N SD Power Supply 2 Power Supply 1 POWER 115/230 VAC 9.8/4.9 A 60/50Hz 1 1 2 2 3 3 1GB 1GB 4 5 100MB 4 5 BAC113-gw ECA141B-gw Layer 3 Etherswitch Layer 3 Etherswitch SD Power Supply 1 Power Supply 2 POWER 115/230 VAC 9.8/4.9 A 60/50Hz COMPUTING COMMONS SD Power Supply 1 BUILDING 1 BUILDING 2 . . 100MB BUILDING N Power Supply 2 POWER 115/230 VAC 9.8/4.9 A 60/50Hz 100MB 1 2 3 4 5 CPCOM-gw Layer 3 Etherswitch 2 3 4 5 GWC-gw TYPICAL CAMPUS BUILDING 100MB Catalyst 2900 SYSTEM SERIES XL SD WorkStation 100MB ETHERNET Layer 3 Etherswitch WorkStation RPS 1 2 1X MODE 2X 3X 4X 5X 6X 7X 8X 9X 10X 11X 12X 13X 14X 15X 16X 17X 18X 19X 20X 21X 22X 23X 24X BUILDING 1 BUILDING 2 . . 100MB BUILDING N 100MB 1 GOLDWATER 10MB ETHERNET May 15, 2001 Power Supply 2 POWER 115/230 VAC 9.8/4.9 A 60/50Hz 100MB ETHERNET WorkStation ASU INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY SERVER FARM TYPICAL CAMPUS BUILDING 100MB 100MB Building IDF N Layer 2 Etherswitch 1x 6x 13 18x 7x 12x19x 24x Status green = enabled link OK flashing green = disabled off = no link MDI MDIX 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 yellow = partition SUPER STACK Segment off = no traffic green = traffic yellow = collision 10 11 12 Tcvr1 Seg1 Seg2 Power/Self test 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 Tcvr2 Seg3 Seg4 Stack/Attn 100MB SD 3Com Super Stack II Port Switch . . . . . Building. IDF 3 Layer 2 Shared Ethernet Concentrator 10MB USER 1 USER 2 . . USER N 10MB 10MB 10MB 100MB 10MB Building IDF 3 Layer 2 Etherswitch 100MB 1x 6x 13 18x 7x 12x19x 24x Status green = enabled link OK flashing green = disabled off = no link MDI MDIX 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 yellow = partition SUPER STACK Segment off = no traffic green = traffic yellow = collision 10 11 12 Tcvr1 Seg1 Seg2 Power/Self test 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 Tcvr2 Seg3 Seg4 Stack/Attn SD 3Com Super Stack II Port Switch 10MB 10MB Building IDF 2 Layer 2 Etherswitch 100MB 1x 6x 13 18x 7x 12x19x 24x Status green = enabled link OK flashing green = disabled off = no link MDI MDIX 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 yellow = partition SUPER STACK Segment off = no traffic green = traffic yellow = collision 10 11 12 Tcvr1 Seg1 Seg2 Power/Self test 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 Tcvr2 Seg3 Seg4 Stack/Attn USER 1 USER 2 . . USER N USER 1 USER 2 . . USER N 10MB 100 MB CONNECTIVITY FROM ASU BACKBONE Layer 3 Etherswitch USER 1 USER 2 . . USER N SD 3Com Super Stack II Port Switch 10MB 10MB Building MDF Layer 2 Etherswitch Catalyst 1900 Series SD CISCO SYSTEMS 10BaseT SYSTEM May 16, 2001 RPS STAT UTL FDUP MODE 1x 2x 3x 4x 5x 6x 7x 8x 9x 10x 11x 12x 13x 100BaseTX 14x 15x 16x 17x 18x USER 1 USER 2 . 100MB . USER N 100MB 19x 20x 21x 22x 23x 24x Ax Bx Building IDF 1 Layer 2 Etherswitch Proposed Broadband Wireless Network Topology • An adjunct broadband wireless network • Mesh/Ring network for the second tier hubs • Mesh/relay network for third tier nodes Optical versus Radio Networks • Advantages of optics: – – – – – – No spectrum licensing No multipath problems Cheaper/smaller transceivers high speed/DWDM Excellent channel isolation Security • Advantages of radio: – – – – – – LOS not mandatory Longer distances More weather resistant Less background noise Ease of pointing Eye safe Going Optical Wireless Campus Network • Current approaches – LMDS for WLL, not backbone – Hub architecture – Shared bandwidth – LEC model – DSL over ATM • Proposed Approach: – Totally wireless backbone, no distinguishable local loops. – Mesh architecture – Multiple parallel paths – Internet model – {SCSI,FC,10xBaseT,TCP,IB} over IP Key Challenges • Optical links – propagation, pointing, power budget, eye safety • Data links – link/node failure, traffic measurements, QoS control • Network routing/management – Ad-hoc routing, IP switching, resource discovery, traffic balancing, domain management • System Analysis – Interface interoperability, multiple protocols, device mapping/configurations. Network Types • Meshed Networks – Fully Meshed (Each and every node is connected to all others by no more than one hop) – Partially Meshed (A node may be connected to other nodes by more than one hop) • Fragile Networks – Any link of the network may become inoperative at any time. The failure of a single link should not prohibit message delivery The Effect of Fragility (Providing A High Availability Environment) 1. Router Failure 2. CPE Failure 3. Premise Link Failure 4. Link Failure Protocols for Wireless Optical Ad-Hoc Networks 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Link-state monitoring QoS provisioning Rapid yet distributed rerouting upon link/node failure Resource discovery and management Multi-protocol adaptations Reliable IP based on OSPF • OSPF is the predominant IP protocol for – Intra-domain, distributed, link-state based routing – Problem: rerouting require broadcast of link-state • To make OSPF reliable – QoS control based on DiffServ, TOS queue scheduling – Pre-compute multiple paths based on QoS and link failure – Rapid switch over to source routing if link or node fails • Problem: Is it possible to retain much of OSPF distributed computation, yet able to route correctly when link/node fails? Reliable IP based on OSPF • Answer is Yes! • Multipath OSPF with IP-encapsulation for source routing • Node broadcasts link state infrequently – Each node compute multiple paths contingent on fault/QoS – Multiple IP for QoS assignments – Use of IP encapsulation to forward packets along precomputed path. Experimental Prototypes • The Existing Project – Pizza box Router for Network Edge use based on IP – Free Space Laser Link at 850 nm and 1Gb/s – Millimeter Wave RF Link at 57-64 GHz and 1 Gb/s • Applied both indoor and outdoor Conclusion • Distributed Router Development – Protocol (Reliable IP) – QoS Routing and QoS Link Management – Network Management (IP encapsulation) – Mirroring and Multicasting • Four link implementations at 1 GHz – Free Space Laser – Wireless Millimeter Wave – Fiber optic – Copper • Currently soliciting public and private funding for prototype