chapter 10 wide area networks. contents the need for wide area networks (wans) point-to-point...

Post on 18-Dec-2015

220 Views

Category:

Documents

1 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

Chapter 10

Wide Area Networks

2

Contents

• The need for Wide area networks (WANs)• Point-to-point approaches• Statistical multiplexing, TDM, FDM approaches• Dial-up, T/ DS links• X.25, Frame relay, ATM• SONET• DWDM• WANs and TCP/ IP stack

3

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

Definition

• WANs are physical or logical networks that provide data communications to a large number of independent users. These users are usually spread over a larger geographic area than a LAN

4

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

The need for WANs

• LANs are very effective at connecting computers within offices

• Links are short, so dedicated link to each PC is not too expensive

• But many organizations have offices in many states and countries

• Web pages, email servers are located world-wide• As users spread over large distances, link costs

become very high

5

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

The need for WANs (contd.)

• Broadcast lowers costs of LAN equipment

• But as number of users increases, CSMA slows down the network significantly

• As number of network users increases, need mechanisms to merge traffic from multiple users

6

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

Roads and computer networks

• There are many similarities between the challenges and design solutions used in road networks and computer networks

• Neighborhood networks are like LANs

• Interstate networks are like WANs

7

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

Local intersection as LAN node

Stop sign promotes carrier sensingWhite car will wait till black car passes

8

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

Interstate exit as WAN node

Merging lane: Entry ramp for local traffic

Existing traffic does not stop for merging traffic

Shared lanes

Merging lane: Exit ramp for local traffic

9

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

Categories of WANs

• Point-to-point– Dial-up– T/ DS

• Statistical multiplexing– X.25, Frame relay, ATM

• TDM– SONET

• FDM/ WDM– Fiber optics

• MPLS

10

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

#1UCLA

#4Utah

#3UCSB

#2SRI

Sigma 7

PDP 10

940

360

Point-to-point WANs

• Earliest WANs used dial-up networking– Use phone line to

connect to a remote computer

– Leverage existing communication network

– End stations perform routing

Phone lines

Internet in 1969

11

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

T/ DS carriers

• Phone companies realized business opportunity in providing data services

• Combined (multiplexed) data carrying capacity of multiple phone lines to provide high speeds

• Offered as T/ DS carriers– T =– DS =

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

WAN built using T-carriers

Branch

Branch

Branch

Branch

HQ

13

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

T/ DS carriers

• Formally, t-carriers are the physical line, DS is the signal carried by the line– Both terms used interchangeably in the industry

• Offer point-to-point connection like dial-up

No. of phone lines aggregated T-carrier name DS name Data rate

1 DS-0 64 kbps

24 T-1 DS-1 1.544 mbps

96 T-2 DS-2 6.312 mbps

672 T-3 DS-3 44.736 mbps

14

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

Statistically multiplexed WANs

• Point-to-point is very inefficient when network grows– No switching within network

– Inefficient use of bandwidth• Statistical multiplexing

allows WANs to aggregate traffic– Reduces “burstiness”

A

A

B

B2

B1

T1

T1T1

A

A

B

B2

B1

T1

Carrieraccesspoint

Carrieraccesspoint

T1

T1T1T1

X.25/ FR/ ATM

A

B

AB

15

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

Reducing “burstiness”

8:00 9:00 10:00 11:00 12:00 13:00 14:00 15:00 16:00 17:000

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

ABA+B

Time of day

Perc

enta

ge li

nk u

tiliza

tion

16

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

Virtual circuits

A

A

B

B2

B1Carrieraccesspoint

Carrieraccesspoint

X.25/ FR/ ATM

VC = 1VC = 2 VC = 3

A-A

B-B1

B-B2

Connection Virtual-circuit IDA-A 1B-B1 2B-B2 3

17

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

X.25/ Frame relay/ ATM

• Shared network services offered by telcos– Multiple end users can share the same

infrastructure

– Aggregation similar to interstate system• End users connect to shared network using

point-to-point links such as T1/ T3

18

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

X.25/ Frame relay/ ATM

• When data packets enter shared network, carrier assigns label based upon destination

• Shared network uses labels to direct packets to correct destinations

• Each label is called a virtual channel– Data link layer technologies– Many virtual channels can be carried over a single

physical link, limited only by link capacity

19

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

X.25/ Frame relay/ ATM

• X.25– Standardized by CCITT in 1976– Data rates: 56 kbps – 2 mbps

• Frame relay– Specified/ standardized in 1990 (Cisco)/ 1992 (CCITT)– Data rates: 56 kbps – 45 mbps

• ATM– Standardized: 1992 by CCITT– Data rates: 1.544 mbps – 622.080 mbps– Pricing: ~ $400/ mbps/port (domestic) – upto $4,000/

mbps/port (internationally)

20

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

TDM WANs

• Available line data rate divided into time slots– Physical layer technology

• Each virtual channel given one or more slots• Commercially available as SONET services

– Synchronous Optical NETwork– Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH) in Europe– Offered as optical carrier (OC) services

• Pricing generally dependent on distance: ~ $15/ mbps/ mile

21

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

TDM WANs

• X.25/ Frame relay/ ATM often transported over SONET links

• SONET data rates first standardized in 1988 by CCITT

SONET service names Data rate Data + overhead

OC-1 50.112 mbps 51.84 mbps

OC-3 150.336 mbps 155.52 mbps

OC-12 601.344 mbps 622.08 mbps

OC-48 2.405,376 gbps 2.488,320 gbps

OC-192 9.621,504 gbps 9.953,280 gbps

OC-768 38.486,016 gbps 39.813,120 gbps

22

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

FDM WANs

• Optical fiber has very high bandwidth– Capable of supporting extremely large data rates

– No single user needs such high bandwidths• Available line bandwidth split into multiple

lower bandwidth channels– Like lanes on interstate highways– Vehicles are not wide enough to use entire road

width

23

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

FDM WANs

• DWDM channel frequencies standardized by ITU-T as ITU grid in 2001– 3 bands: L band, C band, S band– 50 channels/ band = 150 channels total– Data rates up to 10 gbps possible per DWDM channel

• DWDM commonly used in network core– Considered below physical layer

• Each FDM channel on a DWDM link may transport a SONET signal, which in turn may transport multiple ATM channels

24

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

WANs and TCP/ IP stack

• Where are WAN technologies positioned on the TCP/ IP stack?

• Typically, multiple WANs traversed by packet from source to destination

• Routers interface between WANs– Hence WANs typically considered a data link layer

technology

25

Point - point

X.25/FR/ATMNeed SONET DWDM

WANs and

TCP/ IP

WANs and TCP/ IP stack

• Traceroute to Google

Network layer

WAN 1 technology confirms router is WAN destination

WAN 2 technology frames data for transmission

Incoming frame from WAN 1

RouterDestination IP address passed to network layer to determine

next WAN

Outgoing frame to WAN 2

Data routed to correct WAN for onward transmission

Summary

• WANs are long distance links that aggregate traffic from multiple networks

• WANs generally have very high data rates• WAN types include point-to-point, statistically

multiplexed, TDM and FDM• Carriers define virtual circuits for each source-

destination pair of nodes• WANs operate at the data link layer

Case study – UAVs

• Remote wars were fought with soldiers• Now, increasingly de[end upon satellite based

WAN networks• UAVs

Hands-on exercise

• OPNET– Download academic version of software

• Approx. 50 MB

– Run scenario– Collect statistics

Network design exercise

• Choosing appropriate WAN technologies• Adding routers to the network

top related