Posts Tagged ‘performance’

LTE & 3G False Alarms

Thursday, February 25th, 2010
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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.


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Accedian Fills Cell-Site Technology Void

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010
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Widely deployed in 3G & 4G wireless networks, solutions address base station equipment limitations.

Montreal, Canada; February 3rd, 2010 – Accedian Networks ™, the leading provider of Packet Performance Assurance ™ solutions for telecom, cable and wireless communications providers, announced today record demand for EtherNID® and MetroNID® packet assurance demarcation units destined for cell-site deployment in 3G & 4G (WiMAX, LTE) wireless networks. In many cases operators rely on the units to overcome the technical shortcomings of base station networking equipment – in addition to using the advanced service assurance and networking functions the devices provide.

Current base stations excel in radio transmission, data encoding, encryption and session management, but often lack the sophisticated performance monitoring and Ethernet operations, administration and maintenance (OAM) functionality required to maintain quality of service (QoS) and reliability. As 3G & 4G technology moves from the lab to large-scale networks, managing backhaul network performance becomes central to successful service deployment.

nids-at-cell-site.jpg

Cox Business is one of the leading Ethernet providers in the U.S. and wireless backhaul for the company’s carrier customers is one of the fastest growing applications for the networking technology.

“Performance monitoring and Ethernet OAM is required between every cell site and the mobile switching center,” said Jay Clark, Director of Carrier Product and Sales Operations for Cox Business. “This involves maintaining QoS for multiple flows, something NIDs do very well. Ideally we’ll see hardware-based NID features integrated into the base stations and Ethernet transport elements of the future.”

Accedian’s compact, cost-efficient EtherNID & MetroNID units provide Ethernet & IP monitoring, maintenance and troubleshooting features designed into a dedicated silicon processor that provides the processing power required for these demanding tasks. While many base stations offer a handful of OAM and monitoring features, software implementation limits accuracy and scalability, making these functions unreliable or unusable in large-scale, real-world deployments.

FiberTower’s Vijay Lewis, Chief Network Architect of America’s first multi-mobile operator backhaul provider, explains their experience, “With multiple service classes carrying a combination of real-time communication, mobile video, internet and email traffic, FiberTower’s Ethernet wireless backhaul network needs continuous, precise performance monitoring to maintain acceptable quality of experience for subscribers. Latency, jitter, packet loss and throughput need to be assured, and the service needs excellent availability. The Accedian EtherNID unit provides this end-to-end visibility non-intrusively and very precisely – the result of careful engineering that can’t be replicated by simple software-based features sometimes included as afterthoughts in switches, routers and our customer’s base stations.”

Fibertech Networks, also providing backhaul to leading mobile operators, agree. “When you couple today’s network architecture with the capabilities of an EtherNID, you have everything you need, all the OAM functionality – 802.1ag, Y.1731 – plus loopback testing and stats reported in real-time,” explained Tom Perrone, Director of Engineering & Network Planning Manager at Fibertech Networks, adding “We also book-end at the mobile switching center (MSC) with a MetroNID that allows us to monitor end-to-end so we can predict, trend and troubleshoot the network at anytime.”

Accedian solutions will be on display at the Mobile World Congress show in Barcelona, Feb 15-18, booth 2B122, as well as at CEBIT (Germany), COMPTEL Spring (Nashville),CTIA (Las Vegas) – see our events calendar at www.Accedian.com for details or to arrange a meeting at these events.

Watch Video case studies of Accedian Networks’ technology in high-performance backhaul applications are available for on-demand viewing at www.Accedian.com. Latest product introductions and announcements are streamed regularly through the EtherNEWS blog, on www.Twitter.com/accedian, and at www.Accedian.com/facebook.


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Accedian Ethernews, October 2009 Issue

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009
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Welcome to the October 2009 issue of EtherNEWS, offered in video and Podcast versions. Each month’s edition covers a wide range of applications and solutions related to Ethernet service creation, service assurance, SLA & QoS monitoring and evolving industry standards.

This month we focus on the challenges providers face when deploying or using Ethernet wholesale to interconnect with other carriers and extend business services to off-net locations. Our video this month covers the requirements for effective service handoff (E-NNI), technology required to maintain QoS as traffic enters or leaves a wholesale segment, and continuous performance monitoring techniques for SLA assurance for unicast, multicast and full-mesh services.

Your Thoughts?

Is Ethernet wholesale becoming a key need or emerging service offering? Let us know and you’ll see what your colleagues from over 100 other providers think as well.

We offer Ethernet Wholesale:

  • As a core service offering (64%, 9 Votes)
  • To selected customers (36%, 5 Votes)
  • No plan to offer (14%, 2 Votes)
  • Not yet but planning to (7%, 1 Votes)

Total Voters: 14

Vote

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We use Ethernet Wholesale

  • As transport to bridge our networks (64%, 7 Votes)
  • For last-mile off-net access (55%, 6 Votes)
  • Not yet but planning to (18%, 2 Votes)
  • No plan to use (9%, 1 Votes)

Total Voters: 11

Vote

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Application Highlights

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The feature application video in this EtherNEWS edition is also available as a free Video Podcast. Download Now.

Product Highlight: MetroNID Demarcation Unit

Wholesale applications need standards-based, low-latency hand-offs between networks. QoS needs to be established, maintained and monitored over to meet strict SLAs. And providers need on-net visibility for off-net locations to enable and assure end-to-end performance.

A practical way to introduce Ethernet wholesale into existing networks is to deploy Accedian Networks MetroNID™ units as Ethernet Network to Network Interface Units (E-NNIU) and customer-located Network Interface Devices (NIDs). These cost-efficient, hardware-based units provide continuous Ethernet & IP performance monitoring, Ethernet OAM, and high performance MEF service mapping and traffic shaping functionality at a fraction of the cost of a typical switch. With the ability to handle up to 100 flows per unit, you can deliver fully assured Ethernet services over existing networks, and even maintain performance of full mesh and multicast applications to off-net locations. Learn More.

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

Latest News

11-14th October, 2009, Orlando

Ethernet wholesale is the topic of the moment as Accedian joins XO Communications and Covad Communications to explore the growth opportunities and challenges of Ethernet interconnect. The session: Wholesale Ethernet Access Services: New Revenue Stream for Competitive Operators will take place at 3pm on October 12th. Learn More.

28-30th October, 2009, Denver

Accedian Networks’ VP Marketing Scott Sumner is an invited speaker on the Cable-Tec Expo conference session Moving up the Value Chain of OSS/BSS. This session looks at architectural approaches to enhancing the role of OSS and BSS in the evolving network. Learn More.

3-4th November, 2009, NY

Join us at booth 118 for a live demo of our Packet Performance Assurance solutions, at the most important Ethernet event of the year. Accedian Networks will be presenting on the panel: Success Stories – Carrier Ethernet Access Technologies for the Fastest Return on Investment (Tuesday at 9:50 – 10:30am)
Learn More
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