Introducing the Specifications of the MEF

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
MEF 30.1 Service OAM Fault Management Implementation Agreement
Advertisements

1 UNIT I (Contd..) High-Speed LANs. 2 Introduction Fast Ethernet and Gigabit Ethernet Fast Ethernet and Gigabit Ethernet Fibre Channel Fibre Channel High-speed.
Virtual Trunk Protocol
McGraw-Hill©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2003 Chapter 11 Ethernet Evolution: Fast and Gigabit Ethernet.
1 Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Appendix 01.
MEF Technical Activities
1 Introducing the Specifications of the Metro Ethernet Forum.
1 Introducing the Specifications of the Metro Ethernet Forum.
1 Introducing the Specifications of the Metro Ethernet Forum.
1 Introducing the Specifications of the Metro Ethernet Forum.
1 Introducing the Specifications of the Metro Ethernet Forum.
1 Introducing the Specifications of the Metro Ethernet Forum.
1 Introducing the Specifications of the Metro Ethernet Forum.
1 Introducing the Specifications of the Metro Ethernet Forum.
1 Introducing the Specifications of the Metro Ethernet Forum MEF 32 Requirements for Service Protection Across External Interfaces.
1 Introducing the Specifications of the Metro Ethernet Forum.
1 Introducing the Specifications of the Metro Ethernet Forum MEF 19 Abstract Test Suite for UNI Type 1 February 2008.
1 Introducing the Specifications of the Metro Ethernet Forum MEF 17 Service OAM Framework and Requirements February 2008.
Introducing the Specifications of the Metro Ethernet Forum
Introducing the Specifications of the Metro Ethernet Forum
Introducing the Specifications of the Metro Ethernet Forum
Introducing the Specifications of the Metro Ethernet Forum
MEF 30 Service OAM Fault Management Implementation Agreement
Introducing the Specifications of the Metro Ethernet Forum
Introducing the Specifications of the Metro Ethernet Forum
Introducing the Specifications of the MEF
Introducing the Specifications of the MEF
18 Copyright © 2005, Oracle. All rights reserved. Distributing Modular Applications: Introduction to Web Services.
1 The Metro Ethernet Forum Helping Define the Next Generation of Service and Transport Standards Ron Young Chairman of the Board
Introduction to HTML, XHTML, and CSS
1 MEF Reference Presentation December 2012 Carrier Ethernet Delivery of Cloud Services.
REVIEW: Arthropod ID. 1. Name the subphylum. 2. Name the subphylum. 3. Name the order.
1 Chapter One Introduction to Computer Networks and Data Communications.
Chapter 1: Introduction to Scaling Networks
Ethernet Access Services Definition and Implementation
MEF Service Types and Service Definitions Overview and Use Cases
IP Multicast Information management 2 Groep T Leuven – Information department 2/14 Agenda •Why IP Multicast ? •Multicast fundamentals •Intradomain.
1 MEF Reference Presentation November 2011 Carrier Ethernet Service OAM.
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.Cisco Public 1 EN0129 PC AND NETWORK TECHNOLOGY I IP ADDRESSING AND SUBNETS Derived From CCNA Network Fundamentals.
© 2012 National Heart Foundation of Australia. Slide 2.
1 © 2004, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. CCNA 1 v3.1 Module 6 Ethernet Fundamentals.
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.Cisco Public 1 ETHERNET Derived From CCNA Network Fundamentals – Chapter 9 EN0129 PC AND NETWORK TECHNOLOGY.
©Brooks/Cole, 2001 Chapter 12 Derived Types-- Enumerated, Structure and Union.
1 12/18/ :21 Chapter 12Bridges1 Rivier College CS575: Advanced LANs Chapter 12: Bridges.
Connecting LANs, Backbone Networks, and Virtual LANs
PSSA Preparation.
VPN AND REMOTE ACCESS Mohammad S. Hasan 1 VPN and Remote Access.
MEF Reference Presentation November 2011
TCP/IP Protocol Suite 1 Chapter 18 Upon completion you will be able to: Remote Login: Telnet Understand how TELNET works Understand the role of NVT in.
1 MEF Reference Presentation June 2013 An Overview of the Work of the MEF.
1 1 MEF Reference Presentation November 2011 Carrier Ethernet Interconnect.
1 Carrier Ethernet Services Overview March Agenda Carrier Ethernet Terminology –The UNI –Ethernet Virtual Connections (EVCs) E-Line Services –Ethernet.
1 Introducing the Specifications of the MEF MEF 50: Carrier Ethernet Service Lifecycle Process Model.
1 MEF 35: Service OAM Performance Monitoring Implementation Agreement July 2012 Introducing the Specifications of the MEF.
1 MEF 40: UNI and EVC Definition of Managed Objects April 2013 Introducing the Specifications of the MEF.
… what buyers need to understand … what providers need to communicate Ralph Santitoro Co-chair, MEF Technical Marketing Committee
Introduction to Ethernet Services
1 Introducing the Specifications of the Metro Ethernet Forum February 2008.
1 Introducing the Specifications of the Metro Ethernet Forum.
Enabling Broadband On-Demand Services Ethernet Services.
1 MEF 35: Service OAM Performance Monitoring Implementation Agreement (includes MEF ) December 2013 Introducing the Specifications of the MEF.
1 MEF 35.0.x: Service OAM Performance Monitoring Implementation Agreement December 2013 Introducing the Specifications of the MEF.
1 Ralph Santitoro Director, CE Market Development, Fujitsu Founding Member and Director, MEF 17 April 2012 Carrier Ethernet for Delivery of Cloud Services.
Metro Ethernet UNI Standards Update Gary Southwell VP of Product Marketing Internet Photonics MEF Marketing Collateral co-chair
1 Amendment to MEF10.3 – UNI Resiliency Enhancement (All-Active UNI Operation)
1 1 Carrier Ethernet Services Overview 26 September2007 Moderator: Ralph Santitoro - Turin Networks Panelists: Tony Tam - Anda Networks Dr. Sarath Kumar.
Introducing the Specifications of the MEF
MEF 10.4 Notes MEF 10.4 Notes.
Introducing the Specifications of the MEF
… what buyers need to understand … what providers need to communicate
Presentation transcript:

Introducing the Specifications of the MEF An Overview of MEF 33 Ethernet Access Services Definitions 2012 March

Agenda Approved MEF Specifications This Presentation About these Specification Terminology, Concepts Section Review Examples/Use Cases Summary  

Approved MEF Specifications REF Description MEF 2 Requirements and Framework for Ethernet Service Protection MEF 3 Circuit Emulation Service Definitions, Framework and Requirements in Metro Ethernet Networks MEF 4 Metro Ethernet Network Architecture Framework Part 1: Generic Framework MEF 6.1 Metro Ethernet Services Definitions Phase 2 MEF 6.1.1 Layer 2 Control Protocol Handling Amendment to MEF 6.1 MEF 7.1 EMS-NMS Information Model MEF 8 Implementation Agreement for the Emulation of PDH Circuits over Metro Ethernet Networks MEF 9 Abstract Test Suite for Ethernet Services at the UNI MEF 10.2 Ethernet Services Attributes Phase 2* MEF 10.2.1 Performance Attributes Amendment to MEF 10.2 MEF 11 User Network Interface (UNI) Requirements and Framework MEF 12 Metro Ethernet Network Architecture Framework Part 2: Ethernet Services Layer MEF 13 User Network Interface (UNI) Type 1 Implementation Agreement MEF 14 Abstract Test Suite for Traffic Management Phase 1 MEF 15 Requirements for Management of Metro Ethernet Phase 1 Network Elements MEF 16 Ethernet Local Management Interface * MEF 6.1 replaced MEF 6., MEF 7.1 replaced MEF 7, MEF 10.2.1 & MEF 10 .2 replaced MEF 10.1.1, MEF 10.1, MEF 10 which replaced MEF 1 and MEF 5.

Approved MEF Specifications REF Description MEF 17 Service OAM Framework and Requirements MEF 18 Abstract Test Suite for Circuit Emulation Services MEF 19 Abstract Test Suite for UNI Type 1 MEF 20 User Network Interface (UNI) Type 2 Implementation Agreement MEF 21 Abstract Test Suite for UNI Type 2 Part 1: Link OAM MEF 22 Mobile Backhaul Implementation Agreement Phase 1 MEF 23 Class of Service Implementation Agreement Part 1 MEF 24 Abstract Test Suite for UNI Type 2 Part 2: E-LMI MEF 25 Abstract Test Suite for UNI Type 2 Part 3: Service OAM MEF 26 External Network Network Interface (ENNI) – Phase 1 MEF 27 Abstract Test Suite For UNI Type 2 Part 5: Enhanced UNI Attributes & Part 6: L2CP Handling MEF 28 External Network Network Interface (ENNI) Support for UNI Tunnel Access and Virtual UNI MEF 29 Ethernet Services Constructs MEF 30 Service OAM Fault Management Implementation Agreement  MEF 31 Service OAM Fault Management Definition of Managed Objects MEF 32 Requirements for Service Protection Across External Interfaces MEF 33 Ethernet Access Services Definition

This Presentation Purpose: Audience Other Documents Introduction to MEF 6.1, MEF 6.1.1, MEF 10.2 and MEF 10.2.1 Highlights of MEF 6.1 Services and Service Attributes. This presentation does not cover examples of all Services and Service Attributes Audience Most importantly, Subscribers of Ethernet Services Equipment Manufacturers supporting MEF 6.1 Services using Service Attributes defined in MEF 10.2 & MEF 10.2.1. Service Providers supporting MEF 6.1 Services Other Documents Presentations of the other specifications and an overview of all specifications is available on the MEF web site Other materials such as white papers and case studies are also available This slide deck highlights key recommendations and requirements as defined in the MEF 6 and MEF 10 specifications. It leverages the Ethernet services model and terminology as defined in MEF 10 as well as the Metro Ethernet Network Architecture concepts further defined in MEF 4. The service Definitions and concepts covered in the first half of the deck are outlined in greater detail within MEF 6. The traffic classification and traffic profile concepts are detailed in MEF 10 in greater detail. This deck also summarizes the MEF 10 defined attributes and parameter requirements/recommendations for each MEF 6 defined service type.

Key Carrier Ethernet Definitions and Concepts Provides foundational definitions and concepts for Metro Ethernet Services, service attributes and parameter requirements and as well as traffic classification, traffic profiles and related recommendations to deliver Carrier Ethernet Services. MEF 6.1 uses service attributes and parameters defined in the MEF Specification “Ethernet Services Attributes Phase 2”, applies them to create different Ethernet services and defines three Ethernet Service types and their associated service attributes and parameters used to create Point-to-Point, Multipoint-to-Multipoint, and Rooted-Multipoint Ethernet services. MEF 10.2, which supersedes MEF 10, defines the attributes of Ethernet Services observable at a User Network Interface (UNI) and from User Network Interface to User Network Interface (UNI to UNI) and a framework for defining specific instances of Ethernet Services is described. MEF 10.2.1 enhances and modifies MEF 10.2 in the definition of Qualified Service Frames, Availability, new performance attributes for resiliency performance and adds new terms.

Overview of MEF 33

MEF Specification Overview Ethernet Access Services Definitions MEF 33 Purpose Defines OVC-based Ethernet services in contrast to the EVC-based services defined in MEF 6.1 Technical Specification. Standardized Services Audience All, since they provide the fundamentals required to build devices and services that deliver Carrier Ethernet. For Enterprise users it gives the background to Service Level Specifications for Carrier Ethernet Services being offered by their Service Providers and helps to plan Ethernet Services as part of their overall network.

Scope of MEF 33

Scope of MEF 33 Defines a new Ethernet Service Type, Ethernet Access, and corresponding OVC based Ethernet services between a UNI and An ENNI Ethernet access service offered by an Ethernet Access Provider Ethernet Access Provider operates the access network to reach the Service Provider’s out-of-franchise Subscriber locations as part of providing an end to end service to a Subscriber

MEF Ethernet Access Services New E-Access Service Type is defined to normalize and accelerate provisioning New definitions for UNI-ENNI Carrier Ethernet Access Services Two most popular Services supported in first phase New MEF Certification follows new E-Access specification Service Type Port-Based Service (at the UNI) VLAN-Aware Service (at the UNI) E-Access Access EPL Ethernet Private Line Access EVPL Ethernet Virtual Private Line 2012 End-User UNI Carrier Ethernet Access Service Provider ENNI E-Access Carrier Ethernet Service Providers, Carrier Ethernet Exchanges, etc. Ethernet Virtual Connection (EVC) 11

Ethernet Access Services – Certification Enhances Existing Program: From MEF9,&14 (UNI-UNI), MEF 21(UNI) for Carrier Ethernet Interconnect Certified services provide trusted baseline for market adoption Requirement in many RFPs, Cost savings and accelerates deployment 47 service providers and 77 equipment manufacturers MEF-certified New Certification for Ethernet Access Services* Access EPL, Access EVPL, Functionality and Performance MEF 9 and 14 UNI-UNI certification recommended but not prerequisite End-User UNI Carrier Ethernet Access Service Provider ENNI Ethernet Virtual Connection (EVC) E-Access Carrier Ethernet Service Providers, Carrier Ethernet Exchanges, Transport Networks, etc. Summarize the chart… Certification puts everyone on the same page – it implies an understanding and expectation of adherence to a common set of standards for service and functionality. Certification helps service providers select vendors for compliance with MEF interconnect definitions, opens new opportunities for vendors, and ultimately the end-customer sees greater reliability, more service options and greater reach. * Ethernet Services specification, Abstract Test Suite and Certification targeted mid 2012. All specifications subject to change until approved.

Terminology, Concepts & Relationship to other standards

Ethernet Service Definition Framework Ethernet Service Definition Framework defined in MEF 6.1 provides a model for specifying Ethernet services Each Ethernet Service type has a set of Ethernet service attributes that define the service characteristics Parameters provide various options different service attributes MEF 10 defines the concept of Service attributes and parameters. MEF 6 helps establish what those attributes are for each service type.

MEF 6.1 Ethernet Services Definitions Phase 2 Service Type Port-Based (All-to-One Bundling) VLAN-Based (Service Multiplexed) E-Line (Point-to-Point EVC) Ethernet Private Line (EPL) Ethernet Virtual Private Line (EVPL) E-LAN (multipoint-to-multipoint EVC) Ethernet Private LAN (EP-LAN) Ethernet Virtual Private LAN (EVP-LAN) E-Tree (rooted multipoint EVC) Ethernet Private Tree (EP-Tree) Ethernet Virtual Private Tree (EVP-Tree) MEF 6.1 Enhancements Defines a service type (E-Tree) in addition to those defined in MEF 6 Adds four services – two each to E-LAN and E-Tree EPL with > 1 CoS Updates Service Attributes Updates L2CP Processing

Ethernet Service Classification and Definitions for Ethernet Access Services (UNI to ENNI) Service Type Port-Based Service (at the UNI) VLAN-Aware Service E-Access Access Ethernet Private Line (Access EPL) Access Ethernet Virtual Private Line (Access EVPL) Ethernet Access Services classified into two categories (just like EVC-based services): Port-based at the UNI endpoint Single OVC Instance per UNI (dedicated UNI endpoint) VLAN-aware at the UNI endpoint Multiple OVC Instances per UNI endpoint (multiplexed UNI endpoint) ENNI supports multiplexed Access EPLs or Access EVPLs Access EPL = Port-based P2P Ethernet access service Access EVPL = VLAN-aware P2P Ethernet access service

Structure and scope of Access EPL service A Service Provider can use the Access EPL service from an Access Provider to deliver the port-based Ethernet services defined in MEF 6.1 and supported by the ENNI defined in MEF 26: Ethernet Private Line (EPL), and Ethernet Private LAN (EP-LAN).

Structure and scope of Access EVPL service Access EVPL a UNI can support multiple service instances, including a mix of Access and EVC Services OVC End Point map determines which CE-VLANs are mapped to OVCs or dropped

UNI Service Attributes An Access EPL, EVPL Service instance MUST assign UNI Service Attributes and values UNI Identifier Physical Medium Speed Mode MAC Layer UNI MTU Size CE-VLAN ID for untagged and priority tagged Frames Maximum number of OVCs per UNI Maximum number of CE-VLAN IDs per OVC Ingress Bandwidth Profile Per UNI Egress Bandwidth Profile Per UNI

OVC per UNI Service Attributes Service attributes for each instance of an OVC at a specific UNI may be viewed as OVC End Point per UNI service attributes UNI OVC Identifier OVC End Point Map Class of Service Identifier for Service Frames Ingress Bandwidth Profile Per OVC End Point at a UNI Ingress Bandwidth Profile Per Class of Service Identifier at a UNI Egress Bandwidth Profile Per OVC End Point at a UNI Egress Bandwidth Profile Per Class of Service Identifier at a UNI

OVC Service Attributes The following are OVC service attributes, parameters, and values for the Access EPL service which must assigned OVC Identifier OVC Type OVC End Point List Maximum Number of UNI OVC End Points Maximum Number ENNI OVC End Points OVC Maximum Transmission Unit Size CE-VLAN ID Preservation CE-VLAN CoS ID Value Preservation S-VLAN ID Preservation S-VLAN CoS ID Value Preservation Color Forwarding Service Level Specification Unicast Frame Delivery Multicast Frame Delivery Broadcast Frame Delivery

OVC End Point per ENNI Service Attributes ENNI OVC End Point Service Attributes for Access EVPL Service. OVC End Point Identifier Class of Service Identifier for ENNI Frames\ Ingress Bandwidth Profile Per OVC End Point Ingress Bandwidth Profile Per ENNI Class of Service Identifier Egress Bandwidth Profile Per End Point Egress Bandwidth Profile Per ENNI Class of Service Identifier

ENNI Service Attributes for the Access EVPL service The Maximum Number of OVC End Points per OVC is required to be exactly 1 for Access EVPL as this service does not support “hairpin switching” of traffic Operator ENNI Identifier Physical Layer Frame Format Number of Links Protection Mechanism ENNI Maximum Transmission Unit Size End Point Map Maximum Number of OVCs Maximum Number of OVC End Points per OVC

Service OAM Fault Management (SOAM-FM) Requirements Enabling uniform behavior of SOAM-FM for the Access EPL and Access EVPL Services across all Access Providers (SOAM FM IA (MEF 30)) Configurable to tunnel all SOAM frames at the default Test and Subscriber MEG levels as defined in the SOAM FM IA (MEF 30)

E-Access Use Cases & Examples

Ethernet Private Line (EPL) example that uses Access EPL P2P EVC Ethernet Private Line (EPL) example that uses Access EPL P2P OVC1 P2P OVC2 UNI1 UNI2 ENNI End User Subscriber Retail Service Provider Ethernet Access Provider Access EPL ordered EPL delivered Retail Provider orders Access EPL from Ethernet Access Provider Access provider constructs OVC1 between Subscriber UNI1 and ENNI Retail Service Provider constructs OVC OVC2 between ENNI and Subscriber UNI2 Retail Provider constructs EVC between subscriber locations Retail Service Provider delivers EPL to Subscriber

Internet Access Service example using Access EPL P2P OVC UNI1 ENNI End User Subscriber Ethernet Access Provider Internet Service Provider Internet Access EPL ordered ISP orders Access EPL from Ethernet Access Provider Access provider constructs OVC between Subscriber UNI and ENNI ISP delivers Internet Access Service

EVPL Example using Access EPL P2P EVC EVPL Example using Access EPL P2P OVC1 P2P OVC2 UNI1 UNI2 ENNI End User Subscriber Site 1 Subscriber Site 2 Retail Service Provider Ethernet Access Provider P2P EVC Access EPL ordered Subscriber Site 3 UNI3 EVPL1 delivered EVPL2 delivered Retail Provider orders Access EPL from Ethernet Access Provider Access Provider constructs OVC between Subscriber UNI1 and ENNI Retail Service Provider constructs OVC2 between: ENNI and Subscriber UNI2 Retail Provider constructs P2P EVC between subscriber sites 1 & 2 Retail Provider delivers EVPL1 to Subscriber Subscriber adds new site and wants to connect to site 2 Retail Provider constructs P2P EVC between subscriber sites 2 & 3 Retail Service Provider delivers EVPL2 to Subscriber

EVPL Example using Two Access EPLs Retail Service Provider UNI1 UNI3 ENNI End User Subscriber Site 1 Subscriber Site 3 Ethernet Access Provider EVPL1 E-NNI Access EPL1 EVPL2 Access EPL2 UNI2 End User Subscriber Site 2 Retail Provider buys Access EPL1 from Ethernet Access Provider To connect Subscriber Site 1 UNI1 to ENNI Retail Provider buys Access EPL2 from Ethernet Access Provider To connect Subscriber Site 2 UNI2 to ENNI Retail Service Provider sells EVPL1 to End User Subscriber To connect Subscriber Sites 1 and 3 Retail Service Provider sells EVPL2 to End User Subscriber To connect Subscriber Sites 2 and 3

EP-LAN Service example using 2 Access EPL tail circuits UNI1 UNI2 End User Subscriber Site 1 Subscriber Site 2 E-NNI1 E-NNI2 Retail Service Provider Ethernet Access Provider1 Ethernet Access Provider2 EP-LAN Access EPL1 Access EPL2 UNI3 End User Subscriber Site 3 Retail Provider buys Access EPL1 Ethernet Access Provider1 To connect Subscriber Site 1 UNI1 to ENNI1 Retail Provider buys Access EPL2 from Ethernet Access Provider2 To connect Subscriber Site 2 UNI2 to ENNI2 Retail Service Provider sells EP-LAN to Subscriber To connect Subscriber Sites 1, 2 and 3 Two off-net sites reached using Access EPLs

EVPL Example using 1 Access EPL and 2 Access EVPLs UNI1 UNI2 End User Subscriber Site 1 Subscriber Site 2 Ethernet Access Provider2 E-NNI1 Retail Service Provider E-NNI2 Ethernet Access Provider1 Access EVPL1 EVPL1 EVPL2 Access EVPL2 Access EPL UNI3 End User Subscriber Site 3 Retail Provider buys Access EPL from Ethernet Access Provider1 To connect Subscriber Site 1 UNI1 to ENNI1 Retail Provider buys Access EVPL1 from Ethernet Access Provider2 To connect Subscriber Site 2 UNI2 to ENNI2 Retail Service Provider delivers EVPL1 to Subscriber To connect Subscriber Sites 1 UNI1 and 2 UNI2 Retail Provider buys Access EVPL2 from Ethernet Access Provider2 2 OVCs multiplexed at UNI2 Retail Service Provider delivers EVPL2 to Subscriber To connect Subscriber Site 2 UNI2 and Site 3 UNI3

Technical Summary EVCs can be composed of 2 or more OVCs If there is no ENNI, there are no OVCs New E-Access Ethernet Service Type Category of services which provide connectivity between one or more UNIs and one ENNI Targeting Wholesale Ethernet Access Services Access EPL (Access Ethernet Private Line) Port-based P2P Ethernet Access Service Definition Supporting 1 access service per UNI Consists of 1 UNI and 1 ENNI Access EVPL (Access Ethernet Virtual Private Line) VLAN-aware P2P Ethernet Access Service Definition Supports multiple access services per UNI

Summary Establishes industry standard for buying, selling, deploying Ethernet Access Services Enables new providers to much more easily capitalize on wholesale Ethernet business opportunities Lowers costs and reduces time to market Key for local, regional and global adoption of Carrier Ethernet End-User UNI Carrier Ethernet Access Service Provider ENNI E-Access Carrier Ethernet Service Providers, Carrier Ethernet Exchanges, etc. Ethernet Virtual Connection (EVC) Establishes industry standard for buying, selling, deploying Ethernet Access Services New E-Access Service Type is defined to normalize and accelerate provisioning of Off-Net Ethernet Access services Key for local, regional and global adoption of Carrier Ethernet New definitions for UNI-ENNI Carrier Ethernet Access Services New MEF Certification accompanies new E-Access specification 33

Accelerating Worldwide Adoption of Carrier-class Ethernet Networks and Services www.MetroEthernetForum.org