Posts Tagged ‘Service Assurance’

April EtherNEWS – 10GE Networking Redefined

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010
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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:

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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.

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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.


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LTE: Cleaning Up the Cell Site

Thursday, March 18th, 2010
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I’ve winced every time I’ve heard the time “convergence” over the past several years.  Convergence has always been a marketing word for “mess”, where multiple technologies co-exist and intermingle in ways that increase Tylenol consumption and slow down true telecom innovation.

Today’s wireless networks, including the current 3G deployments, still rely on this dirty word with “converged” cell site connections – duplicating provisioning of both TDM private lines for voice, timing and signaling and Ethernet for data.

There are many good reasons why.  Until recently, Ethernet hasn’t proven as reliable as required to carry conversations, and T1s are already in place at cell sites where sync is required to keep radios locked on a common frequency and phase for roaming hand-offs.  Necessary for now, but inefficient (and despised?) all the same.

LTE offers a chance to do some spring cleaning at the cell site, simplifying backhaul connectivity with a single, performance-assured Carrier Ethernet link.  Simplicity looks like it’s making its way back into telecom, right?

Cell Site Evolution

Unfortunately, we may be gaining capacity and working with less equipment, but the clutter has simply moved from physical equipment to the way it’s configured.  No one ever had their Mom tell them “clean up your virtual room”, but this is where the mess goes in LTE backhaul networks – into the provisioning, monitoring and performance assurance required to compensate for having all your data running through a single pipe.

Making a clean break to a fully packet-based architecture, voice calls will be VoIP, carried over the same all-IP infrastructure carrying the latest generation of multicast and on-demand web-based video, Internet, messaging and email traffic.  With each vying for available bandwidth, maintaining per-application Quality of Service (QoS) is critical – the best-effort, limited-bandwidth backhaul connections serving legacy data services will not suffice.

4G services require ultra-low latency, jitter, and packet loss with assured throughput and availability.  Latency can spell the end of conversations if signaling delays interrupt session continuity when roaming between cells.  Jitter and packet loss can make audio inaudible and video unwatchable.  Insufficient backhaul bandwidth leads to congestion, increasing latency, packet loss and packet retransmission resulting in degraded QoS.  Availability is the most basic of all –  if the network goes down, so do your customers – outages and lack of bandwidth are the primary drivers for customer churn.

So while Ethernet to the cell site is certainly the future (and looks clean from the perspective of slick, stylized network diagrams), it doesn’t come without its own baggage.  Best to be prepared for the surprises that are popping up in field trials – keep an eye on QoS, monitor it proactively or you may just discover the monsters in the closet.

CTIA next week will be a good place to explore these trends – check out the backhaul pavilion, get trained and attend the talks going on to learn all about what we’re facing.


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Teletimes: Optimizing Mobile Carrier Backhaul-Ethernet Latency & Bandwidth Efficiency

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010
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Teletimes published this Feature Article in their current edition: download original Teletimes backhaul article.

tele-article

Mobile Carrier Ethernet backhaul services from network operators, and the advent of packet based mobile systems, are predicted to provide mobile operators with scalable and more cost efficient solutions for handling both the increasing number of mobile devices attached to their networks and the traffic volumes they generate.

A major reason for the increased use of Carrier Ethernet in wireless backhaul applications is the ability to use a diverse physical infra­structure to deliver Carrier Ethernet to the base station. The physical delivery mecha­nisms for Carrier Ethernet include:

  • Ethernet over copper
  • Ethernet over fiber (both dark fiber and over SONET/SDH)
  • Ethernet over bonded copper
  • Ethernet over radio (microwave)
  • Ethernet over PON (Passive Optical Networks)

Low latency is the key to delivering reliable, high-performance backhaul for 3G and 4G wireless networks. Real-time communications, transactional applications, high-speed roaming, and media streaming are all delay-sensitive. Latency increases of just a few milliseconds can result in dropped calls, garbled voice and unresponsive applications, and can mean significant losses in financial trading.

At times, service providers over-provide bandwidth to keep latency and jitter in check. While increasing bandwidth can sometimes reduce latency, it often has little effect. In packet-based networks the relationship between latency and bandwidth is complex and varied. Consider the four main sources of latency, categorized as:

  • Serialization delay: time required for a port to transmit a packet, related to frame size and bit-rate;
  • Propagation delay: limita­tions imposed by the laws of physics (speed of light, path length, circuit design);
  • Congestion delay: the time a frame idles in the output queue of a network element (NE) while a backlog of packets is being transmitted. Congestion delay can be caused by traffic bursts, larger ingress vs. egress bandwidth (e.g. oversub­scribed aggregation), or due to network congestion resulting in paused trans­mission (flow control).
  • Forwarding delay: the time required for the Network Element (NE) to analyze, process and forward a packet in a congestion-free scenario; a function of NE architecture and packet-processing requirements (the number and complexity of operations performed on a packet between receipt and transmission, e.g. service mapping, switching, rate limiting, shaping, etc).

Of these components, serialization delay is the most constant, having only a small influence on end-to-end latency. Propagation delay, typically stable in circuit-switched networks, can be irregular and introduce jitter over routed networks due to path variation; overall, its contribution is usually small, even under heavy utilization.

Packet Delay Sources

Packet Delay Sources

The more important sources of latency – congestion and forwarding delay – are not entirely independent: as a NE is subject to heavy load (conges­tion delay), it may need additional queue time to handle and process the increased volume of traffic (forwarding delay). Depend­ing on the NE’s design, forwarding delay can be significant when advanced functions such as traffic shaping and multi-flow Ethernet OAM (Operations Administration & Mainte­nance) are enabled. (more…)


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