Posts Tagged ‘OAM’

April EtherNEWS – 10GE Networking Redefined

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

This month we provide an overview of a new class of 10GbE networking gear: the MetroNODE 10GE™ packet performance node, an all-hardware ENNI, head-end OAM & service assurance node and 10Gbps network interface device for Ethernet & IP networks. Enjoy a five minute overview of this latest technology, fine-tuned for performance-critical Ethernet wireless backhaul, business services and wholesale hand-off applications.

The EtherNEWS Community:

We publish our online newsletter in an interactive blog format so you can discuss each issue with other telecom professionals. Get notified when EtherNEWS is updated by subscribing to our RSS feed or Twitter feeds, or join our fans at Accedian.com/Facebook.

We hope you enjoy the newsletter and other selected technology and insight articles on our blog, updated several times each week.

 

Application Highlights

Based on service providers’ input, the MetroNODE 10GE features a critical mix of service assurance and service creation features – no-compromise functionality that delivers effective service performance with assurance™ at 10 Gig rates over existing networks.

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.

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.

Backhaul Service Assurance & OAM with Accedian Solutions

Real-time 3G and 4G / WiMAX / LTE packetized services require inexpensive, wireless backhaul with the most strict performance requirements in telecom. Only a few milliseconds of jitter and latency can be tolerated, and committed throughput must be met. Making the grade means establishing managed Ethernet links with premium quality of service and high availability while keeping OpEx in check.

The world’s leading wireless operators turn to Accedian Networks’ MEF 22 compliant Ethernet Service Assurance Platform (ESAP ™) to monitor and assure their backhaul networks. Managing traffic from MSC to cell site, over wireline or microwave, ESAP enables end-to-end SLAs, OAM scalable to 1,000´s of sessions and in-service performance monitoring, troubleshooting and control that optimizes your network and services. Ethernet service creation, traffic filtering, shaping and policing define end-to-end links with guaranteed performance. Remote troubleshooting means no more blind truck-rolls, less downtime and more efficient operations.

Learn more on the Wireless Backhaul web page – with additional videos and white papers as reference.

10GE Backhaul

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

Latest News

Featuring a hardware-based, ultra-low latency architecture, the 10GE delivers highly-scalable performance monitoring for critical 10 gigabit Ethernet applications. Addressing a critical need in 3G & 4G (LTE & WiMAX) backhaul networks, the 10GE can establish and maintain thousands of Y.1731 sessions at the Mobile Switching Center (MSC), providing comprehensive Ethernet Operations, Administration & Maintenance (OAM) coverage unachievable using today’s switches or routers.

Learn more.

Meet our team in NYC this April 26th at the A-Team Insight Exchange, focused on ultra-low latency networking tech for financial trading. We’ll be hosting the panel: “Monitoring & Reporting for Ultra-Low Latency Services” featuring RCN Metro, Optimum Lightpath, Equinix and industry analyst & blogger Gary Kim as moderator. Event Agenda.

Visit our events calendar on Accedian.com to learn where we’ll be exhibiting and participating in conferences in 2010. We’re going global with our events team, so we’re likely to be near you this spring or summer.


RSS Feed Subscribe to EtherNEWS Bookmark and Share

Accedian Introduces 10GbE Packet Performance Node

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010
RSS Feed Subscribe to EtherNEWS Bookmark and Share

New unit assures 10 GbE performance, scales to 1,000s of Y.1731 sessions for wireless backhaul monitoring.

Las Vegas; March 23rd, 2010 – Accedian Networks ™, a leading provider of Packet Performance Assurance ™ solutions for telecom, cable and wireless communications providers, introduced today the MetroNODE 10GE™ packet performance node. Featuring a hardware-based, ultra-low latency architecture, the 10GE delivers highly-scalable performance monitoring for critical 10 gigabit Ethernet applications. Addressing a critical need in 3G & 4G (LTE & WiMAX) backhaul networks, the 10GE can establish and maintain thousands of Y.1731 sessions at the Mobile Switching Center (MSC), providing comprehensive Ethernet Operations, Administration & Maintenance (OAM) coverage unachievable using today’s switches or routers.

The MetroNODE 10GE is a unique networking product, reflecting input from leading service providers seeking an enhanced alternative to traditional network elements. With an initial feature set optimized for mobile backhaul applications, the 10GE unit’s ultra-precise OAM capabilities easily scale to the large number of sessions required to monitor and maintain 3G & 4G service deployments.

To guarantee Service Level Agreements (SLAs) for a wide variety of real-time communication and data services, backhaul connections maintain different service classes for high, medium and low priority traffic. Used to monitor connectivity and performance for each service class between the MSC and each cell site, Y.1731 sessions converging at the MSC quickly scale into the thousands as operators light up hundreds of towers in a metro region.

Existing routers with software-based OAM implementations can incur processing delays that result in nonsensical latency and jitter measurements – often several times longer than accurate measurements provide. This lack of precision under real-world conditions leads to false alarms and inconsistent or incomplete monitoring visibility. By contrast, the 10GE unit features a dedicated-silicon, all-hardware architecture capable of processing thousands of flows in parallel with microsecond precision – technology scaled from Accedian’s well known MetroNID® units, widely deployed to establish OAM and monitor performance at cell sites worldwide.

“Mobile operators no longer have to maintain networks with sparse, inaccurate OAM measurements as they move from field trials to full-scale 3G & LTE deployments,” explained Patrick Ostiguy, President of Accedian Networks. “Hundreds of operators count on our solutions to assure critical applications – we engineered the MetroNODE 10GE™ to exceed their requirements and expectations. By using the 10GE to deploy service with confidence, they can overcome shortcomings in what they now consider legacy technology.”

A video overview of Accedian Networks’ MetroNID 10GbE packet performance node is posted on the EtherNEWS industry blog at Accedian.com/blog and Accedian.com.

Accedian is currently exhibiting at CTIA in Las Vegas (booth 6565); Mr. Ostiguy will address the challenges of 3G & LTE deployment on the panel “Engineering Mobile Backhaul” at 12:20pm on Tuesday, March 23rd.


RSS Feed Subscribe to EtherNEWS Bookmark and Share

LTE & 3G False Alarms

Thursday, February 25th, 2010
RSS Feed Subscribe to EtherNEWS Bookmark and Share

Capacity and next generation mobile services (3G & 4G/LTE) seem to be constantly under scrutiny.   Ever since the iPhone came on the scene and sucked the lifeblood out of at&t’s backhaul network we constantly hear about the impending doom, the bandwidth desert we’re all facing ahead.  This has been labeled “The Capacity Crisis” – here’s an example of one of a gazillion articles harping on the uncertainty of our mobile broadband future.  Sound a bit like the swine flu?  What ever happened to that?

One thing you learn working with real operators doing real deployments is that:

  1. backhaul capacity is something they dealing with (don’t lose too much sleep);
  2. there are bigger issues: real deployment challenges to figure out first.

And field trials for 3G & 4G are full of such examples.  No one’s finding an issue getting bandwidth to the cell site – no magic formula is required for that – simply put, if a fiber is laid or a good microwave connection is setup the capacity is there, pretty much on tap.  The issues that operators are stumbling over have more to do with the operational nuts and bolts.  A lot of new technologies are getting put through their paces at the same time, and some that work great in the lab seem to be falling short in the field.

Ethernet OAM: Lies, Lies & More Lies

One of the key technologies almost every operator is counting on is Y.1731 – the popular Ethernet operations, administration and maintenance (OAM) standard for connectivity fault monitoring (CFM) and performance monitoring (PM).  Y.1731 is a must, and for good reason: it’s the only standards-based QoS monitoring method available to assure Ethernet latency, jitter, frame loss and availability meet the demanding targets required for packet backhaul.  It works in multi-vendor networks; it works in multi-operator networks (great for using and keeping tabs on wholesale backhaul carriers).  Every network element maker selling into backhaul has it in their products and they’re all tuned up and ready to go.  Are they?

A recent field trial in a 3G deployment in North America went into crisis mode when one leading mobile operator turned on OAM PM to verify latency over their backhaul provider’s network.  The one-way latency target (and SLA) from mobile switching center (MSC) to tower was set at 5ms.  Y.1731 measured 20ms.  The mobile operator freaked.  The backhaul carrier claimed 3ms.  What was up?

Using an alternative test method transparent to OAM processing, the mobile operator confirmed the 3ms, giving both carriers another problem to solve: why were the OAM measurements in error by more than 300%?  The first step was to turn off OAM at all intermediate nodes in the network – suddenly Y.1731 PM measurements said 3ms.  They turned it back on: 20ms.  It’s important to point out here that the delay only affected OAM traffic – real traffic was unaffected and was meeting spec the whole time!  With the problem isolated to OAM processing itself, they were starting to experience something most network element vendors knew full well might turn up, but were hoping would go unnoticed.

oam-delays

The problem?  Most switches and routers claim to offer the full Y.1731 feature set, but none of this was thought out when the products were originally architected.  When Y.1731 became a must-have for backhaul, the features were typically shoe-horned into a software patch.  Running delay-sensitive monitoring features in software is a big faux-pas, because shared CPU time in the network element is a poor place to do anything critical.  These CPUs are busy doing more important things (like routing / switching functions) most of the time, putting OAM into background processing queues.  When traffic is at its peak, the network elements are heavily taxed – and just when you need performance measurements the most, they turn out the least accurate of all.

oam-delays2

Scary stuff.  In this case, every latency alarm the operators saw wasn’t an indication of network performance issues, but of CPU processing restrictions.  Not a very useful alert.

There of course ways to fix this situation, and these two operators came to their own conclusions and had things humming a little while later.  OAM can certainly work in large-scale, multi-provider deployments, and can assure critical services.  It just takes a few tricks and some solid, hardware-based OAM devices to help things out.

y1731-flows

This gets especially critical when you consider the OAM flows hitting the MSC: expect 1,000’s at a time as CFM and PM for 3 service classes from say, 250 towers, converge at a single router.

We’ve been getting a lot of calls in the middle of the night recently, and things can always be worked out.  Let’s just say none of these calls are about ‘The Capacity Crisis’.  That’s for the media to worry about.


RSS Feed Subscribe to EtherNEWS Bookmark and Share