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ATM switching

ATM switching. Ram Dantu. Introduction . Important characteristics switching speed potential to lose cells Must minimize queuing and switching delay Line rates may be > 150Mbps Available switching rates are ~80Gbps. Switch Positioning.

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ATM switching

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  1. ATM switching Ram Dantu

  2. Introduction • Important characteristics • switching speed • potential to lose cells • Must minimize • queuing and switching delay • Line rates may be > 150Mbps • Available switching rates are ~80Gbps

  3. Switch Positioning • http://design-net.com/solutions/wired/atm/fabric.html

  4. Switch Fabric • Components of a switch which include its hardware and software • General switch operation • routing table • self routing • new header inserted in outbound cell

  5. ATM Routing Operations a w Routing Table VPI = 6 b x c y VPI = 8 d z VPI in Port in VPI out Port out 6 b 8 x ... … … ...

  6. Switching System Architectures • Functional Requirements • Model • Input modules • Output Modules • Switch Fabric • Connection Admission Control • System Management

  7. Generic Switch [Block Diagram] CAC SM IM Cell Switch Fabric OM IM OM IM: Input Module OM: Output Module SM: Switch Management CAC: Connection Admission Control

  8. Generic Switch

  9. Administration Module

  10. Input Module • Extract from SONET • Optical -> electronic->bit stream • Process SONET overhead • Cell Delineation and HEC • Discard empty cells • Prepare to Route • Check errors, VPI/VCI • Signaling->CAC? Management->SM? • Policing • Internal tag [for routing and performance monitoring]

  11. Output Module • Prepare ATM cell stream for transmission • remove/process internal tag • translation of VPI/VCI values • HEC field generation • mixing of cells from CAC, SM and data • cell rate decoupling • mapping to SONET/SDH • conversion to optical signal

  12. CAC • Establishes, modifies and terminates virtual path/channel connections. Responsible for: • high layer signaling protocols • signaling AAL functions to interpret/generate signaling cells • interface to signaling network • negotiation of traffic contracts with user • renegotiation with users to change established VP/VCs • switch resource allocation • route selection • admit/reject requests • generation of UPC/NPC parameters

  13. Switch Fabric • Function • Routing of cells from I/P to O/P • Potential Features • Cell buffering • Traffic concentration and multiplexing • Fault tolerance • Multicast and Broadcast support • Cell scheduling • Discard • Congestion Monitoring

  14. Switch Fabric • Responsible for routing cells between the other switch sections. Also: • cell buffering • traffic concentration and multiplexing • redundancy and fault tolerance • multicasting and broadcasting • scheduling (cell delay priorities) • congestion monitoring and setting of EFCI

  15. Routing and Buffering • Major Fabric functions • IM attaches a routing tag to each cell • Fabric routes cells from input to output • Single cell buffers may be used to align cells in time • Buffers needed in case of contention for output port • Design approaches use parallelism, distributed control • Routing is done in hardware

  16. Fabric Design Approaches • Shared Memory • Shared Medium • Fully Interconnected • Space Division

  17. Switch Fabric Examples • http:/design-net.com/solutions/wired/atm/fabric.html

  18. Shared Memory • Incoming Cells: Serial->Parallel • Write to dual port RAM in sequence • Cell headers + routing tags -> memory controller [MC] • MC decides memory read out order • Cells de-multiplexed then Parallel->Serial • Shared memory must operate N times faster than port speed • Not very scalable (Read/Write times are limited) • achieves 100% throughput under heavy load • Examples • Hitachi’s shared buffer memory switch • AT&T GCNS-2000

  19. Shared Memory Concept • http:/design-net.com/solutions/wired/atm/fabric.html

  20. Shared Memory Fabric

  21. Shared Medium • E.g. TDM bus • Cells sequentially broadcast on bus • At output: address filters examine internal routing tag • Address filters pass appropriate cells to O/P • Bus speed > NV cells s-1 then all queuing is at O/P • Examples • IBM’s PARIS, plaNET NEC’s ATOM • NET Adaptive’s ATMX ForeRunner ASX-100 Siemens’ EWSM

  22. Shared Medium Buffers TDM BUS S/P AF P/S 1 1 AF: Address Filter S/P: Serial to Parallel P/S: Parallel to Serial Buffers S/P AF P/S N N

  23. Fully Interconnected • Independent paths between all N2 Inputs and Outputs • Cells are broadcast to all outputs on separate buses • Appropriate cells are passed through address filters • Filters and buffers need only operate at port speed • ie. no speed up factor • scalable, limited by quadratic growth in buffers • Must limit N • Knockout switch [early design] • limited buffers at O/P: not N but L (based on an observation that only L cells will arrive at any output at the same time) • L=8 =>cell loss of 10-6 [uniform random traffic]

  24. Fully Interconnected 1 2 N AF AF AF AF AF AF Address Filters Buffers

  25. Space Division • Crossbar Switch • 100’s Gbps switching speeds • Multistage Interconnection Networks [MINs] • tree like structures • reduces the N2 dependence • Banyan networks • 2x2 switch element • incoming cell routed according to a control bit • bit = 0 => cell routed to upper (addr=0) output • bit = 1 => cell routed to lower (addr=1) output

  26. Building up a switch 00 01 Control Bit 0 1 10 11 Switching Element 4x4 Banyan network

  27. Blocking and Buffering • Cells may collide in a Banyan network • internal blocking • only one cell is passed to the next stage • overall throughput is reduces • One Solution • add a sorter (e.g. a Batcher-bitonic sorter) to arrange the cells before switching • works for cells addressed to different output ports • head of line blocking • Need buffering if cells are addressed to same output port

  28. Buffering • Put buffers in the switching elements • Can use backpressure method • queues in one stage send feedback signal to previous stage to hold up cells • can lead to HOL blocking (back at first stage) • Recalculating • conflicts detected after the Batcher network and one cell is passed the other(s) are recirculated • makes Batcher network bigger and requires complex priority control to keep cell order

  29. Buffering • Banyan’s can’t directly implement output buffering • only one cell delivered at a time • Possible workarounds • make internal network run faster • routing groups of links together • use multiple planes in parallel • extra switch stages

  30. Multiple Path MINs • Achieve more uniform traffic distribution • Reduce potential internal conflicts • Fault tolerance • Need to preserve cell order when there are independent paths for cells to follow • better to fix this at connection setup time • Examples • Non-blocking Benes and Clos networks • Helical switch of Widjaja and Leon-Garcia

  31. Buffers and Queues Input Queuing Central Queuing Output Queuing

  32. Approaches • Input Queuing • suffers head of line blocking • change FIFO, increase speed of internal network • Output Queuing • optimal in terms of throughput and delay • need to deliver multiple cells per cell time to output port • hence speed up factor • Internal Queuing • head of line blocking may occur • can lead to increased CDV • Recirculating • potentially optimal in terms of throughput and delay • needs large switching network and an ‘order’ control mechanism

  33. Buffer Sharing • Shared Memory Switches • can absorb large bursts to any output • requires the least total amount of buffer space • for random, uniform traffic and large N as buffer space of only 12N cells is needed to achieve a cell loss rate of 10-9 at 90% load • TDM would need about 90N cell buffers

  34. Switch Fabric Scalability • For ATM switches to replace large existing switching systems we need ~1Tbps throughput • Scaling up certain fabric designs won’t work • Space division • Batcher-Banyan’s limited by possible circuit density/ I/O pin numbers • synchronization of N cells at each stage • size increases versus the difficulty of reliability and repairability • modifications to maximize the throughput increase complexity • Build large fabrics by interconnecting small switch modules (any type) of limited throughput • most popular way is the multistage interconnection of network modules

  35. Multicasting • Inherent in design of shared medium and fully interconnected • instruct address filters accordingly • Shared memory • read cell many times or duplicate it • extra memory or control circuitry • Space division • simple to implement but increases HOL blocking at input buffers • Banyan (Broadcast Banyan Network) • each switching element can duplicate cell • requires 2 bits for control at each stage • require routing resolution (multicast address/full address set) • complicated

  36. System Management • System Management • Physical + ATM layer OAM • Switch resource usage measurement • MIB + NM • Supervise and coordinate all NM activities • Collect and administer management info • MIB • Communicate with users and Net managers • SNMP, CMIP

  37. System Management • System Management Functional Diagram

  38. Fault • Physical Layer [e.g. SONET] • Loss of: SIGNAL, FRAME, POINTER, SYNC • SONET management info (APS…) • SM determines actions • ATM layer • IM may extract/copy fault management cells • SM may generate outgoing OAM cells [->OM]

  39. Traffic • Congestion monitoring and control • Notify NM to control manually • Discard - CLP • Reroute • CSF Internal flow control • Reconfigure CSF • Adjust UPC/NPC (Usage/Network Parameter Control)

  40. Where to get more information • ATM Switching Systems, Chen and Liu 1995, Artech House [621.382] • Web Search on ATM+Switches • eg. http:/design-net.com/solutions/wired/atm/fabric.html • Emerging Communications Technologies, Black, 1994, Prentice Hall • Halsall 4th edition • Stallings 5th edition

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