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Network Hierarchy and Multilayer Survivability

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1 Network Hierarchy and Multilayer Survivability
<draft-team-restore-hierarchy-00.txt> TEWG Requirements Design Team J. Boyle, M. Carlzon, R. Coltun, T. Griffin E. Kern, W.S. Lai, D. McDysan, T. Reddington Objective: determine the current and near term requirements for survivability and hierarchy in multi-vendor service provider environments Feedback from working group solicited Definitions Requirements

2 Hierarchy Horizontally oriented hierarchy
between two areas or administrative subdivisions within the same network layer the abstraction necessary to allow a network at one network layer, for instance a packet network, to grow. Examples of horizontal hierarchy include BGP and multi-area OSPF. Vertically oriented hierarchy between two network layers the abstraction, or reduction in information, which would be of benefit when communicating information across network layers, as in propagating information between optical transport layer and packet/router layer networks.

3 Survivability the capability of a network to maintain service continuity in the presence of faults within the network. Protection based on predetermined failure recovery: as the working entity is established, resources are reserved for the protection entity Restoration mainly relies on the use of spare capacity in the network Trade-offs protection: usually offers fast recovery from failure with enhanced availability restoration: usually achieves better resource utilization.

4 Survivability Requirements
need for common, interoperable survivability approaches in packet and non-packet networks suggested survivability mechanisms path-based local repairs in proximity to the network fault timing bounds for service restoration voice call cutoff (140 msec to 2 sec) protocol timer requirements in premium data services mission critical applications coordination among layers currently based on use of nested timers issue: may limit the recovery time for fast MPLS restoration if SDH/SONET protection switching must be completed first

5 Hierarchy Requirements
Horizontally oriented hierarchy (intra-domain) mechanisms for edge-to-edge signaling, in the context of layer-2 and layer-3 VPN services where SLAs would appear to necessitate signaling from the edges into the core of a network issues potential current protocols limitations in networks which are hierarchical (e.g. multi-area OSPF) scalability concerns of potentially O(N^2) connection growth in larger networks Vertical oriented hierarchy instead of direct exchange of signaling and routing between vertical layers, some looser form of coordination and communication is a nearer term need

6 Survivability Requirements in Horizontal Hierarchy
Protected end-to-end connection a concatenated set of connections that are each protected within their area Connection routing a network element that participates on both sides of a boundary (e.g., OSPF ABR) - note that this is a common point of failure route server Inter-area signaling of survivability information to enable a “least common denominator” survivability mechanism at the boundary to convey the success or failure of the service restoration action; e.g., if a part of a "connection" is down on one side of a boundary, there is no need for the other side to recover from failures

7 Next Step Discussion New version of draft
incorporate comments received to clarify some of the text refine definitions of terminology include results in the discussion of this meeting Discussion future plan of the design team, target date for completion any issues with current draft kick off work in tewg and other working groups on more specific requirements drafts and protocol specifications drafts


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