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Geneva, Switzerland, 11 June 2012 Switching and routing in Future Network John Grant Nine Tiles

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Presentation on theme: "Geneva, Switzerland, 11 June 2012 Switching and routing in Future Network John Grant Nine Tiles"— Presentation transcript:

1 Geneva, Switzerland, 11 June 2012 Switching and routing in Future Network John Grant Nine Tiles j@ninetiles.com www.iec62379.org/FN-standardisation.html Joint ITU-T SG 13 and ISO/JTC1/SC 6 Workshop on “Future Networks Standardization” (Geneva, Switzerland, 11 June 2012)

2 Geneva, Switzerland, 11 June 2012 2 the one part of the stack that's universal Network layer routing encapsulation physical layers applications transport protocols users

3 Geneva, Switzerland, 11 June 2012 like ISO 668, 1161,...

4 Geneva, Switzerland, 11 June 2012 4 Two kinds of data staticdynamic content files, web pages, etc audio, video, voice contextITAV; real world trafficburstyregular servicebest effortneeds QoS IP designed for? yesno

5 Geneva, Switzerland, 11 June 2012 Two kinds of service Synchronous appropriate for dynamic data one-to-many packets sent at regular intervals QoS guarantees (if supported by lower layers) Asynchronous appropriate for static data one-to-one or many-to-one best-effort service (not 1, not 4)

6 Geneva, Switzerland, 11 June 2012 6 Connection-oriented paradigm Required for synchronous needed for QoS etc negotiation Useful for both kinds offers facilities such as per-call billing Fits many current protocols TCP SIP “sockets” API

7 Geneva, Switzerland, 11 June 2012 7 Connection-oriented paradigm Provides separation between: global addressing (in set-up messages) local routing (in packets) Enables new routing technologies no “world launch day” needed Connection-oriented ≠ TDM though FN supports use of TDM and WDM circuits

8 Geneva, Switzerland, 11 June 2012 8 Connection-oriented paradigm “Link” between network elements may be: point-to-point connection shared media (e.g. WiFi, LTE) legacy network, including connectionless Provides migration path on legacy network, only edge / gateway devices need to implement FN

9 Geneva, Switzerland, 11 June 2012 Switch structure controller (computer) routing table buffer memory inputsoutputs control packets etc logic scheduling

10 Geneva, Switzerland, 11 June 2012 10 Addressing Access to a service by name in IP use DNS, SIP, etc, to find IP address IP address is then used for packet routing switches use ARP to find lower-layer address problems with mobility etc documented in TR29181

11 Geneva, Switzerland, 11 June 2012 11 Addressing Access to a service by name in FN put service name in signalling message reply includes a “handle” for the route handle format depends on the link technology for the first hop each network element only needs to know the local part of the route rerouting, handover, etc are transparent

12 Geneva, Switzerland, 11 June 2012 12 Fast set-up for asynchronous HTTP typically uses many short TCP sessions after the first, the addresses are already in the routing table for popular web sites, destination is there even for the first return route can be cached as the SYN packet is forwarded

13 Geneva, Switzerland, 11 June 2012 13 Fast set-up for asynchronous FN has an equivalent for connection- oriented connection to server is many-to-one return route set up by switching fabric does not involve controller software described in 8.2 of 29181-3

14 Geneva, Switzerland, 11 June 2012 14 Finding a route Application sends request to local controller on signalling channel includes address (or other identification) of target target is the equipment, not its interface may also be a service or some content also includes a globally-unique “call identifier”

15 Geneva, Switzerland, 11 June 2012 15 Finding a route Multiple addressing schemes must support legacy schemes, e.g. IPv4, IPv6 must also support URLs etc must allow new schemes to be added decoupling global addressing from local routing means no change is needed to lower-layer switching logic unlike the change from IPv4 to IPv6

16 Geneva, Switzerland, 11 June 2012 16 Finding a route Controller in each switch decides the next hop topology discovery depends on the address scheme in sub-networks, may simply flood the request to all neighbours loops easy to detect not scalable to large networks

17 Geneva, Switzerland, 11 June 2012 17 Finding a route Controller checks required capacity is available provided the switching technology supports it Labelling of packets depends on link technology route may pass over several different technologies

18 Geneva, Switzerland, 11 June 2012 18 Control / signalling protocol Tag-length-value format like Q.931, Q.2931; unlike SIP suitable for small embedded processors no character string interpretation required appropriate for Internet of Things easy to skip unrecognized / uninteresting items some for network, some for remote application Could be based on IEC 62379-5-2

19 Geneva, Switzerland, 11 June 2012 19 Next steps Find a name without “future” in it soon (2015?) it’ll be in the present Standardize signalling messages including route-finding protocols Standardize new lower layer(s) QoS for synchronous flows low overhead per packet all capacity not used by synchronous flows available for asynchronous


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