Posts Tagged ‘Accedian Networks’

A Hidden Cause of Network Latency – MTU Size Mismatches

Monday, July 11th, 2011
RSS Feed Subscribe to EtherNEWS Bookmark and Share
Also in this issue: Interview: What’s up with Accedian? The Power of the Pink Dress!, Accedian Networks Joins Symmetricom’s SyncWorld, Mobile Backhaul Issues in AT&T – T-Mobile USA Buy

In the war against delay in Ethernet mobile backhaul networks, there is a new threat – Maximum Transfer Unit (MTU) size configuration mismatches. The MTU is a physical characteristic of the Ethernet port in a network element (NE). It defines the maximum size of an Ethernet frame (packet) that can be transmitted by the NE. If a frame exceeds the MTU size, it must then be fragmented into multiple smaller frames that are each equal to, or smaller than the MTU. As networks evolve and change, some of the NEs may not meet the MTU requirements of the network causing latency, dropped packets and other issues in network performance or even failure.

Each NE already adds some delay in the backhaul network. The amount varies by its type, and whether it’s forwarding traffic via hardware-based mechanisms vs. software-based, sometimes referred to as fast-path vs. slow-path. Most NEs forward traffic in fast-path using hardware-based switching and routing processors that are part of the Ethernet port and switching fabric hardware. All other processing including: fragmentation and re-assembly of frame fragments; application of bandwidth profiles; examining Quality of Service (QoS) markings; multi-cast traffic replication; and checking the packet against access-control lists (ACLs) is typically handled by software running on a CPU in the NE. This not only adds delay, but results in additional overhead as one frame is split into two or more frames, each with its own header overhead added to it!

Delay is a silent killer of Carrier Ethernet performance in mobile backhaul and enterprise networks. However, one of the easiest sources of delay to eliminate is the one caused by fragmentation due to MTU configuration errors. Most Ethernet frames can be transmitted without fragmentation by simply setting the MTU size to 2000 bytes—as recommended by the MEF—when configuring a Carrier Ethernet UNI or NNI on the NE port. This setting will usually remain persistent until the port is disabled or the UNI is moved to another NE, where it will once again need to be reset. Changes to the configuration in the network resulting from de-commissioning service ports or replacing equipment often results in this critical detail being overlooked and the port will be configured with the default MTU value of 1518 or 1522 causing fragmentation of Carrier Ethernet traffic.

In order to monitor and manage this potentially destructive network configuration, a device is needed at the cell site to verify that the MTU in the network path is sufficient to support Carrier Ethernet. Test equipment can inject a test frame of the desired size (e.g. 2000 bytes) using an OAM loopback message (LBM) to verify that the frame can pass—from source to destination—without being subjected to fragmentation. This test can be run manually using the CLI, GUI or from a network management interface to periodically verify that the network is properly configured so that all NEs can transmit traffic without fragmentation. Read More.

Light Reading Backhaul Summit: Craig Easley and Joe Braue—Light Reading Group Director & Senior VP—evaluate the Ether-zation of Mobile Backhaul, synch up on Packet Synchronization techniques and explore the top exports from Quebec – NIDs and Beauty! View Online. Also read The Power of the Pink Dress

SymmetricomAccedian is participating in Symmetricom’s SyncWorld™ Ecosystem Program, launched earlier this year to support precise timing and synchronization requirements for 4G LTE deployments that ensure seamless integration for service provider networks. “Accurate timing and precise synchronization in mobile backhaul networks is critical to measuring and maintaining QoS and performance as mobile users travel between cell sites,” said Craig Easley, V.P. of Marketing and Product Management at Accedian Networks. “By combining Symmetricom’s world-leading precision time and frequency technologies with Accedian’s Ethernet demarcation devices, we can jointly deliver a fully-interoperable solution that includes the timing and synchronization services required to support the rapid deployment of 4G LTE networks.” Read Press Release

magic ball
U.S. backhaul markets are now part of the regulatory review of the proposed AT&T purchase of T-Mobile USA. Specifically, the Federal Communications Commission is looking at potential harm to the market for supplying mobile backhaul connections. The FCC asked six of AT&T’s top competitors to answer questions on network coverage, backhaul, pricing and spectrum for its review of AT&T’s $39 billion takeover of T-Mobile USA.

The agency sent 37-page letters with a list of nine questions to Verizon Wireless, Sprint Nextel, U.S. Cellular, MetroPCS, Cellular South and Cricket Communications parent Leap Wireless International, asking for detailed information about the companies’ operations.

Citing a new business arrangement between AT&T and Verizon, Lynn Refer, president and CEO of Telecom Transport Management, a small wireless backhaul provider, says the future of the independent backhaul business may be at risk.

Under the pact, Refer and others in the industry said, the two largest wireless companies have a reciprocal arrangement to provide infrastructure to connect each other’s wireless data traffic. Read more

Those sorts of questions never quite go away in the telecom access and wholesale business. Similar concerns have been raised in the past about interconnection agreements between AT&T and Verizon in other instances. Consider the matter of how carriers interconnect with each other, specifically in terms of the business arrangements.

Historically, networks have used two dominant mechanisms. Networks that estimate they will typically exchange equal amounts of traffic will negotiate “settlement-free” peering agreements, whereby the carriers agree to exchange traffic without payments to the other provider. This is based on the theory that, when traffic exchanged between the networks is roughly equal, there is no reason to conduct detailed billing operations that would result in a net zero effect in any case.

That typically is not the case for networks of unequal size, though. A smaller network with fewer users, typically will originate much more traffic for the exchanging networks than it will ever terminate on behalf of any other large carrier. In such cases, the larger carriers will negotiate “transit” agreements to account for the unequal traffic flows.

Basically, the smaller network pays the bigger network for the excess traffic being delivered. In a business with huge network effects, that might be expected.

In such cases, smaller networks and backhaul providers will always fear that the top two U.S. companies with the largest networks, will use their leverage to raise rates for smaller carriers who need to buy backhaul services from either AT&T or Verizon. Though a conceptually different issue from competitive impact on the broader mobile market, because of the AT&T purchase of T-Mobile USA, potential impact on U.S. backhaul rates has now become an issue in the merger approval process.

The concern always exists in every segment of the market where smaller networks and service providers compete with AT&T and Verizon, of course. But one might argue the “problem” is self correcting. Were AT&T and Verizon to raise rates too much, incentives would be created for third-party backhaul providers to get into the business.

Some would argue that the backhaul doesn’t have as much to do with any actual potential harm, but simply is a way policy advocates can continue to argue for more regulation of special access pricing in general.

Washington lobbyists generally in the pay of smaller carriers and service providers have for years been trying to get the FCC to dictate terms in this market, without success. There are obvious reasons. A small carrier does not have the money to build a significant amount of special access capacity most places it is needed, and must buy from other carriers. A competitive market for access circuits, where rates reflect demand, will tend to benefit those who own the assets, especially where there aren’t so many other providers.

“Market power” tests never go away. But the success many firms have had in providing competitive backhaul services, precisely because an AT&T or Verizon is the only other alternative, has generally created opportunity for competitors to jump in and provide options for buyers. Oddly enough, “higher prices” are the magnet to attract new competitors. Lower prices will keep them away. Some might argue that so long as competitors are free to enter markets, neither AT&T nor Verizon will have the ability to harm other providers by maintaining excessively high prices.

In fact, given the general and legitimate concern within the global industry about bandwidth pricing, deals that might lead to marginally higher prices might be exactly what is needed to encourage all providers to invest more in facilities. In a competitive market, high prices fix themselves. Mobile backhaul won’t be any different.

In fact, lots of firms have built businesses supplying backhaul connections in competition with AT&T and Verizon. Higher prices by the two dominant firms would actually increase demand for service provided by the new competitors.

Thanks for reading the EtherNews Blog, and for more information about Accedian Networks solutions, please visit our document library on Accedian.com


RSS Feed Subscribe to EtherNEWS Bookmark and Share

February EtherNEWS – The $$$ Value of a Microsecond in Financial Trading, High Performance Service Assurance Summit in Barcelona, Accedian On Tour, the Launch of Accedian’s Release 5.1

Monday, January 31st, 2011
RSS Feed Subscribe to EtherNEWS Bookmark and Share
The $$$ Value of a Microsecond in Financial Trading

One millionth of a second is a microsecond, and 1,000 of those is a millisecond. How fast is that? Three hundred milliseconds is the time it takes for a human eye to blink. That’s how fast! Now consider this. According to estimates by Tabb Group, if a broker’s electronic trading platform is 5 milliseconds behind its competition, it could lose 1% of its order flow. At 10 milliseconds, the loss grows to 10%.

While not the case for all verticals, delay and delay variation performance is obviously vital for the financial services segment, and more important than bandwidth or physical redundancy when adopting Ethernet-based bandwidth services.

In the trading world, information delayed is money lost. Missing a transaction that can result in the purchase of thousands or hundreds of thousands of shares by just a nano-second could cost the financial institution big bucks. Ultra-low delay and delay variation is therefore a high priority feature that’s directly tied to the core business process of trading.

Algorithmic trading has been one of the biggest catalysts for low delay response over the past decade. Computer code is now responsible for most of the activity on Wall Street. By some estimates, computer-aided high-frequency trading now accounts for about 70 percent of total trade volume. Increasingly, the market’s ups and downs are determined not by traders competing to see who has the best information or sharpest business mind, but by algorithms feverishly scanning for faint signals of potential profit. The delay factor then becomes a huge driver of how fast a computer can identify a market anomaly and respond before the anomaly is corrected.

Financial customers are unusual in other ways. Moves, adds and changes are an area where competitive advantage can be gained. Say a firm moves its traders to a new floor in the same building and circuits go down for a week during a move. The damage there is that the trading relationship is lost, not simply that there is an interruption of service. While delay is an issue, delay variation can be an even bigger issue. Delay variation causes packets to arrive unpredictably, killing real-time applications.

Another market vertical that’s a natural candidate for ultra-low delay Ethernet service is health care, followed by the legal community. The difference from the financial vertical is that legal customers require resiliency and availability as well as delay and delay-variation performance.

The main take-away is that ultra-low delay and delay variation, as well as robust physical route diversity, are what drive these verticals, and not necessarily bandwidth or the price of that bandwidth.

High Performance Service Assurance Summit



February 14 – 17, 2011
Barcelona, Spain

Accedian is hosting a High Performance Service Assurance Summit at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. If you’ll be at the event, please join us for lunch and presentations by senior Accedian executives and invited guests as they discuss best practices and techniques for delivering assured high performance Ethernet backhaul services for next generation 4G/LTE systems. This executive summit will take place at Barcelona’s renowned Oleum Restaurant (located in the Museu Nacional D’Art De Catalunya) on Wednesday, February 16th. Space is limited, so RSVP today to reserve your place.

Accedian on Tour :

Mobile World Congress is only one of the stops we’re making as we take to the road once again this year. We’ll be attending and speaking at a number of important industry events and we invite you to join us live. Over the next couple of months, we’ll be presenting on a variety of topical subjects including The Long-Term Growth Opportunities in Wireless Backhaul, Successful Business Models for Mobile Backhaul, and a case study on how Accedian ‘Etherization’ of 40,000 cell sites in 2010. Here are some of the events we’ll be attending in the first three months of the year.

February 22 & 23, 2011
Miami, Florida
March 6 & 8, 2011
Toronto, Ontario
March 15 & 16, 2011
Munich, Germany
March 20 – 22, 2011
Las Vegas, Nevada
March 22 – 24, 2011
Orlando, Florida
 
   
Product News


January ushered in the launch of Release 5.1 of Accedian’s High Performance Service Assurance™ platform for the MetroNID® and MetroNODE 10GE™ demarcation units. The release includes enhanced resolution on 1-way delay and delay variation measurements, through more accurate synchronization between MetroNIDs in the network using GPS. The release also includes support for a Synchronous Ethernet interface option in the MetroNID. The MetroNID GPS unit works with both indoor and outdoor antennas, tracks up to 12 satellites, and raises alarms if the GPS signal is lost. The SyncE option enables the deployment of the MetroNID with Synchronous Ethernet-enabled equipment to distribute synchronization and timing information across the network. For the MetroNODE 10GE, Release 5.1 features a 4-port CE model, RFC 2544 test suite and environmental alarms. Both MetroNODE 10GE and MetroNID also now include RADIUS authentication enhancement and unified firmware. Read More.

Thanks for reading the EtherNews Blog, and for more information about Accedian Networks solutions, please visit our document library on Accedian.com


RSS Feed Subscribe to EtherNEWS Bookmark and Share

July EtherNEWS – Case Study: Performance Assurance for Mobile Backhaul Networks

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010
RSS Feed Subscribe to EtherNEWS Bookmark and Share
This Month’s Issue

Continually measuring the Key Performance Indicators (KPI’s) of the SLA’s being delivered in backhaul networks, is critical to the successful execution of the delivery of Ethernet mobile backhaul services. This month we’re excited to publish a case study of SureWest Communications experiences delivering their Wireless Carrier Backhaul Service to some of the top tier wireless operators. Performance assurance is a fundamental requirement for success in this growing market for Carrier Ethernet services and you’ll learn how SureWest evaluated the Accedian Networks Performance Assurance solution and hear about their experiences deploying it in their network to support both their Wireless Carrier Backhaul and business grade EtherMAN services.

Next up to help prepare for the migration to 4G LTE networks, Accedian has recently published our LTE Performance Assurance Handbook. The handbook provides a comprehensive look at the 4G network technology, architecture and components and examines the implications of each on the backhaul networks that will so critical to the successful migration to 4G. A short video will walk you through the contents and provide a preview of the technical content inside.

Finally, we’re proud to announce the General Availability of our much anticipated MetroNODE 10GE™ platform. Introduced several months ago, the MetroNode is the most powerful Performance Assurance Agent in the Accedian product family. This scalable, high performance NID is now available for deployment in a variety of demanding Performance Assurance applications.

The EtherNEWS Community:

Accedian’s online industry newsletter is an interactive blog that enables you to collaborate and discuss each issue with other telecom professionals. To be notified when EtherNEWS is updated you can subscribe to our RSS, follow us on Twitter, or like us at Accedian.com/Facebook.

We hope you enjoy the newsletter and other related Carrier Ethernet articles on our blog which is continually updated each week.

Application Highlights

Accedian recently announced during the Light Reading Mobile Backhaul Convergence Conference that SureWest Communications is deploying Accedian Network’s Performance Assurance Platform to ensure high quality service delivery for its Wireless Carrier Backhaul Ethernet-based mobile backhaul service.

Wireless Backhaul

The explosive growth of smart phones and mobile broadband devices, coupled with the deployment of next generation mobile broadband applications, is creating a demand for bandwidth that simply cannot be met using the legacy mobile backhaul networks. Existing wireless backhaul networks originally designed for voice have a typical capacity of 1-3 Megabits per cell site and do not accommodate the onslaught of broadband data traffic, where mobile operators are seeing demand for 10-50 Megabits per cell site. SureWest’s fiber and Ethernet-based networks in both the greater Sacramento and Kansas City regions are more than sufficient to meet this demand.

SureWest’s Wireless Carrier Backhaul is an Ethernet-based service that provides the capacity and performance needed for wireless operators to effectively deliver mobile broadband services. Delivering Ethernet mobile backhaul services can be challenging as the mobile network demands precise service quality. Monitoring latency, packet delay variation, packet loss and availability of mobile backhaul services is critical to successfully meeting the wireless operators’ needs and requires robust performance assurance to ensure that the mobile backhaul network meets these needs around the clock.

Wireless Backhaul

Before deploying the MetroNIDs in the SureWest network, SureWest compared them against a number of alternatives. The decision criteria included not only performance assurance monitoring and reporting features, but SureWest also compared performance, interface density and power consumption. All aspects for deploying the most efficient service performance infrastructure were evaluated.

For more insight into the innovative deployment of Accedian Networks’ Performance Assurance solution in SureWest’s Carrier Ethernet network, click here to download a copy of the full report.

Watch an overview presentation of Accedian’s new LTE Performance Assurance Handbook which covers all aspects of LTE backhaul testing, monitoring, SLA reporting and maintenance. This comprehensive technical guide features detailed information on the performance requirements and objectives for successfully providing mobile backhaul services for LTE mobile platforms. It contains extensive references to ITU, IEEE and MEF standards along with in-depth explanations of key technologies are illustrated with extensive network and engineering diagrams.

Request your copy of the industry’s most comprehensive guide to LTE Backhaul testing – free to engineering & operations professionals while quantities last.

You need to upgrade your Flash Player

The feature application video in this EtherNEWS edition is also available as a free Video Podcast. Download Now.
MetroNODE 10GE™ Packet Performance Node

Based on our customers’ input based on years of successful Carrier Ethernet Performance Assurance experience, Accedian is proud to announce the General Availability of newest product in the Accedian family, the MetroNODE 10GE™ packet performance node. This scalable, high performance product features a comprehensive blend of service assurance and service creation capabilities. The MetroNODE 10GE™ provides the same wire-speed, zero-latency performance as our existing products only now at 10 Gig.

With the ability to establish and maintain 1,000s of Y.1731 OAM connectivity fault management (CFM) and performance monitoring (PM) sessions, the MetroNODE 10GE™ is ideal for head-end service assurance functions for 3G & 4G mobile backhaul networks – allowing per-second, real-time visibility into SLAs and per-service QoS scaling to multiple service classes for hundreds of cell sites.

This much anticipated product is now available for deployment to meet your most demanding performance assurance applications.

10GE

Learn all about the MetroNODE 10GE with our quick intro video:

Overview Video

For more information about Accedian Networks solutions, please visit our document library on Accedian.com.

Latest News

Accedian Networks, the market-leading developer of Carrier Ethernet Performance Assurance Network Interface Devices (NIDs) and service management solutions, today announced that SureWest Communications (NASDAQ: SURW) is deploying Accedian Network’s Performance Assurance Platform to ensure high quality service delivery for its Wireless Carrier Backhaul Ethernet-based mobile backhaul service.

Read Press Release.

Vancouver, BC, 19 July

Accedian Networks, Craig Easley, Accedian’s new VP of Marketing and Product Management will be speaking and Co-Chairing the Marketing Committee at the upcoming MEF members’ meeting. If you’re planning to attend please make plans to meet Craig. If you’re not a member of the MEF and would like to attend please contact the MEF and request an invitation to audit.
More Info.


RSS Feed Subscribe to EtherNEWS Bookmark and Share