Systems/Enterprise:
VIRTUALIZATION, REGULATORY TRENDS WILL STIMULATE GRID
By Alan J. Weissberger, Contributing Editor
A. IEEE Globecom
One of two premier IEEE telecommunications conferences each year, IEEE
Globecom was held in Dallas from Nov. 29 through Dec. 3. The conference
featured keynote speeches from industry luminaries, a telecom business forum,
design and developers forum, research-oriented papers and several tutorials --
including one on high-performance global Grid networks (download abstract
from: www.globecom2004.org/workshop_w05.html).
B. Keynote Speech
In his conference opening keynote address, Hossein Eslambolchi (president of
Global Networking Technology Services, CTO and CIO of AT&T) listed several
networking and IT technology trends that augur well for Grid computing and the
interconnection of multiple Grid sites. His talk, titled "Future Directions in
Networks" emphasized AT&T's campaign to transform its multiple legacy networks
to one global IP MPLS network. Eslambolchi stated that AT&T's packet network
carries 4TB of traffic per day (it was not clear whether the "packet network"
was AT&T's IP/Internet or their traffic engineered IP-MPLS network or the sum
of traffic on both networks).
Eslambolchi identified the top 10 trends in both networking and IT.
The top 10 Networking trends:
1. "IP will eat everything": confirming that IP will be the single dominant
networking technology and be pervasive throughout the enterprise and
residential networks (Grid networks are based on IP for the Network layer).
2. Convergence of communications and applications will be a reality.
3. *Ethernet will be universally deployed, including in the WAN (optical
Ethernet will provide bandwidth on demand as well as cost effective multi
gigabit connectivity between Grid sites).
4. Wireless Internet will drive mobility.
5. *Sensor nets (e.g. RFID based) will be everywhere, but IPv6 will be
required for the large address space needed (sensor networks will be part of
many Grids and will stimulate the movement to IP v6, with its much larger
address space then IPv4).
6. *Death of locality, since geography is not relevant in IP based networks
(this should make it more cost effective to interconnect widely dispersed Grid
sites -- including sites located in different countries).
7. Broadband access will be common (isn't it already?).
8. Wireless and wire line networks will converge, with wireless eventually
subsuming wire line (editor does not agree with this).
9. *Information mining will transform the way we do business (information
mining will be done on almost all Grids to classify and extract relevant
information from the tremendous volume of scientific and financial data that
seems to be doubling every year -- or less).
10. Home LANs will proliferate -- many alternative technologies now exist.
The top 10 IT trends:
1. *Data volume and storage explosion is moving faster then Moore's law (we'll
need Grid-based storage servers to manage this proliferation of data -– see
related networking trend No. 9 above).
2. *eCollaboration will dominate the workplace (this implies use of Web
Services for eBusiness applications and for multi-site Grid management and
control planes).
3. A universal communications device is emerging that will supply all video,
audio and communications needs.
4. *Self-adapting networks will eliminate human intervention for network
management (implies auto fault detection, self healing, and re-configuration
of networks to meet new user requirements; this will be an inherent capability
of Grid networks).
5. *Knowledge based mining will drive on line business processes and give rise
to "just in time decision making" (this will push the need for more efficient
use of compute resources and the movement toward Grids).
6. *Networks will appear as a computer utility -- the complexity of the
applications will be masked (virtualization of networks and compute resources
will be facilitated by Grids).
7. *IT Cybernation will drive operational costs much lower (part of IT
Cybernation is the throughput monitoring, job scheduling, and load balancing
which is inherent in Grid computing).
8. *Investment in IT security and its complexity will escalate. Perimeter
security around the network will be essential (several levels of security will
be required for Grids, including SSL, WS Security and
authentication/authorization).
9. *Open source software will be everywhere. Eslambolchi claimed that 73
percent of Web Services software is already available as open source code
(there are already several open source organizations committed to development
of Grid middleware stacks, e.g. Globus Alliance).
10. PINs and passwords will be replaced by biometric ID's.
* These trends seem to be especially important for accelerating the adoption
of Grid computing networks on a large scale. Please note parenthetical remarks
form this editor.
In closing, Eslambolchi examined what AT&T has learned from current activities
to automate its network wherever possible. He also talked about the technical
developments necessary to achieve AT&T's desired goal of a "Cybernated
Network" that will automatically configure itself to provide robust and secure
new capabilities.
C. Global Market and Regulatory Trends
This pragmatic session featured panelists from Goldman Sachs and McKinsey
(including Reed Hundt, former FCC chairman).
In his talk on Carrier Economics, C. Krishnamurthy of McKinsey identified
three triggers for carrier migration to next generation networks (that would
offer services such as managed interconnection of Grid computing sites):
- Competitive Imperative -- defensive reaction to competitors before
economics of the new services are proven.
- Early replacement -- may be more cost effective where network operators
face higher operations cost.
- Regulatory incentives or disincentives along with capital markets willing
to finance the new investments -- this will directly impact telco capex.
It was suggested that new services (e.g. video) would drive Fiber to the
Premises (FTTP) and Fiber to the Node (FTTN) and this has now just started to
happen on a worldwide scale. However, telco's need to consider how soon they
would realize a payback from their investments before they could commence a
major fiber build-out. The implication was that fiber is being driven closer
to the subscriber, which would enable higher speed interconnection of Grid
sites, as well as higher speed remote access to Grid based server clusters.
Chris Fine of Goldman Sachs provided a capital markets perspective of
telecoms. He stated that last mile migration form copper/TDM to fiber/IP was
moving slower then many expected. This was because the telco needed at least a
60 percent equipment price reduction to consider replacement of class 5
central office switches. Chris noted that without new revenue sources, the
FTTN business case would be challenging. A telco moving to FTTN (or FTTP) was
betting on new applications or competitive threats (from MSO's or wireless
telcos). The key question was "how soon will the telco realize a payback from
investment in new access infrastructure?"
Chris made several other key points regarding telco investments:
- OPEX was more important then CAPEX to telco's, yet they had limited ability
to reduce OPEX through automation. This calls for new ways to automate network
operations (how about use of Web Services?).
- The movement to IP is getting a growing part of the CAPEX budget.
- Broadband rollout is likely to continue at a rapid pace (assume this refers
to DSL based Internet access for residential and small business customers).
- Movement to open standards will drive investment costs down and result in
better ROI. This will stimulate more investment in new plant and equipment.
- Telecom industry is evolving into a selective and cyclical business.
- Success breeds success and vice-versa (assume to be failure breeds failure
and eventually bankruptcy).
Hundt suggested that communications policy from regulators can "do more by
doing less." That would imply less regulation of U.S. telcos, who have faced
an uncertain regulatory environment up until now. That uncertainty (over
sharing of facilities and network resources/ equipment with competitive
carriers at below ROI prices) has been a deterrent to incumbent telco (ILEC)
investment in new plant and equipment, as well as the introduction of new
network services. Reed categorized the telco industry as being in "a frozen
state." In addition to regulatory uncertainty over sharing of facilities,
(local) telcos were faced with: uncertain take rates for new services
(resulting in potential low ROI), high fixed costs (for new infrastructure
builds), OPEX risks, loss of fixed line phone revenue (cash cow gone to
pasture), threats from MSO's (Internet access and cable telephony).
Hundt believes that we now need a "new rule of law" for the broadband
information sector of a national economy. The objective would be to stimulate
broadband infrastructure creation and encourage innovative new services that
could take advantage of such an infrastructure. He was encouraged by the
recent FCC ruling that ILECs do not have to unbundle new fiber access systems
(e.g. share them with competitive carriers at discount prices) and felt that
would stimulate the telecom industry.
D. Fiber Access PONs As a Potential Private Network for Metro Grids?
In the session on Passive Optical Networks (PONs), panelists from Optical
Solutions, Alcatel, Freescale, and FTTH Communications made a convincing case
for the rollout of Broadband (B) PONs and the migration to Gigabit (G) PONs.
They also noted that Ethernet (E) PON deployment had commenced in Japan and
trials were being held in Asia. These PONs are intended to serve the small
business and residential markets. Video services are seen as a key driver of
PONs for the residential market.
This editor observed that for enterprise applications, the Optical Network
Unit (ONU) could be placed in the building leased or owned by an enterprise.
- If the ONU also had protocol conversion capability (it is then referred to
as an ONT), it could embed the Ethernet LAN frames (from the subscriber
equipment) within a PON frame (to the network -- OLT).
- If the OLT had an embedded Ethernet VLAN switch (preferably one that used
two sets of VLAN tags), that would facilitate inter-building communications.
Such a configuration could make the PON a cost effective private metro network
for enterprise applications (including Grid site interconnect) -- one that
might compete with a metro switched Ethernet, for example.
This topic will be discussed further in a forthcoming article.
E. Network Management and Operations
The basic premise of this session: telcos need to move beyond traditional
Network Management and Operations Support Systems (OSS's) when they deploy
next generation network services. The telco should provide a more integrated
approach to management and operations on a service level (vs network
technology) basis.
One presentation seemed to be particularly relevant to Grid networks.
GMPLS-based control plane for IP/DWDM networks by Lou Berger of Movaz
Networks. This is because it is quite likely that a GMPLS control plane will
be used to set up dedicated, point to point optical channels –- either
SONET/SDH or Ethernet framed -- that interconnect Grid sites.
Berger's premise was that a GMPLS control plane would greatly contribute to
OSS simplification. Traditional OSS functions such as Planning and Traffic
Engineering, Inventory Management, Service Activation, etc., could be moved
from the backend OSS to the GMPLS based control plane (between EMS and NE's
and between adjacent NE's within the network). The OSS based installation
functions and parameters can be realized or determined by GMPLS based: auto
discovery of topology and circuit end points, auto initialization, auto remote
configuration (and path selection), auto power equalization (?). What's left
for the OSS is: Facility inventory and assignment, detecting exception
conditions, EMS interface (to NMS/OSS).
Likewise, the Customer Network Management (CNM) functionality can be reduced
via a GMPLS based control plane. What's left is Customer Relationship
Management and Application Server software.
Benefits to the telco providing dedicated optical channels via GMPLS CP
include:
- Simplified network inventory discovery (assumes that equipment and service
inventory is distributed amongst all the NE's).
- Simplified NE service activation.
- NE Service awareness.
- Service Level alarm correlation by NE's (assumes that NE faults, e.g.
circuit pack, are propagated through the network via GMPLS CP and this enables
"per service visibility of faults."
F. Tutorial on Global Grid Networks
Friday 3 December 2004 • 13:30 -- 17:00 • W05: High-Performance Global Grid
Networks The workshop will focus on the use of novel optical networking
concepts that support future global Grid computing applications.
It is now evident to the technical community that local computational
resources cannot keep up with the demands generated by some
users/applications. Therefore, distributed computing and the concept of a
computational Grid are now emerging. Novel network concepts are needed to
support such vision and high speed optical networking may be the required
infrastructure that will enable global Grids. Optical networks have the
potential to support a large portion of Grid networking infrastructures since
they offer bandwidth manipulation at the wavelength (wavelength switching) and
sub-wavelength level (optical packet and burst switching) supporting not only
high service granularity but also the capability to accommodate a wide variety
of traffic characteristics. Research on novel optical switching paradigms
(such as Optical Burst Switching -- OBS) has recently emerged but the
technology will not see any boost if there is no proper application space. We
believe that the design of new optical network concepts (including OBS) should
be linked to the demands of the real emerging applications.
The workshop will try to identify the features and properties of
Grid networks and the characteristics of a suitable network infrastructure:
- Photonic Grid network characteristics: functional requirements, network
architecture, transport protocols, etc.
- Standardization activities on Photonic Grids
- Control, management & signaling for optical Grid networks.
- Experimental showcases.
About Alan J. Weissberger
As the founder and Technical Director of Data Communications Technology (DCT),
a technical consulting firm started in March 1983, Alan J. Weissberger
specializes in telecommunications standards and their implementation. His
clients have included network providers (AT&T, NTT, Pacific Bell, US West,
Entel and CTC in Chile, Telkom South Africa, Moroccan PTT, others), equipment
and semiconductor manufacturers, and large end users. In 1995 and 1996 Alan
was the principal architect for the European Commission's multi-service,
multi-country ATM network -- the largest private network in Europe (that
network has now evolved into Gig Ethernet over CWDM). In 2000-01, he was
Ciena's lead ITU-T delegate, contributing to the standardization of the
optical control plane in SG13 and SG15. Alan now represents NEC Corp in
several OASIS TCs dealing with Web Services, while also attending the Global
Grid Forum and the Optical Internetworking Forum (OIF).
Weissberger can be reached via e-mail at aweissberger@sbcglobal.net or
ajwdct@technologist.com. To read his entire biography, please visit
www.gridtoday.com/04/1011/bio.html, or e-mail gridmore@gridtoday.com
with "740119" in the subject line.
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