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AARNet The Future

This article provides an update on the progress and design of AARNet, including improved network capacity, partnerships, charging and operational issues.

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AARNet The Future

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  1. AARNet The Future Jonathan Potter Executive Director

  2. AARNet and the AREN • The Higher Education Bandwidth Advisory Committee (HEBAC) Report • $42.5m over two years • The Australian Research and Education Network (AREN) • The AREN Advisory Committee (ARENAC) • The AREN Management Company (ARENMC)

  3. Partnerships • Transgrid • Powerlink • Electricity • Gas • Rail • Other Utilities • 2nd Tier Telecommunications companies

  4. AARNet – The AREN • Increased network capacity and a new architecture that enables applications such as video over IP, and high speed collaboration • Comparable with R&E networks in the US and Europe • Link with Australian high speed and experimental networks • GrangeNet • Centie • Link with the global high speed and experimental networks • Provide educational & teaching links with Asia • No dependence on a single internet supplier

  5. AARNet – The AREN (2) • Internet traffic purchased in the US and reticulated over APL links in Australia • Negotiate Peering Strategies with other ISPs • Provision of information storage on the net to save money, increase ease and speed of access • Replace key equipment at each aggregation point (PoP) (Two PoPs in each capital except Hobart and Darwin)

  6. AARNet – The AREN (3) • Provision of an APL managed router at each member’s site(s) (To be negotiated with Members) • Guaranteed end to end measured service delivered to each member’s site. • Wavelength research capacity to the US linked with GrangeNet and possibly Centie (subject to suitable agreement with Government funding sources)

  7. Charging Issues • No initial reduction in charges but increasing reductions as the Network usage increases. • Review of charging system including subscription models and revised R&E international charging. • Differential charging for types of traffic and lower rates for members to be explored

  8. Operational Issues • APL support for the AREN Advisory Committee • APL forming the AREN Management Company for the control of AREN funds supplied by DEST • AARNet Acceptable Use Policy to be based on what is needed by the owners, financially viable and legal • Provision of increased services and content to the research, education, health, government and cultural communities • Enhance APL’s position in the development of the Internet in Australia through arrangements with other service providers to reach a wider user base

  9. Australian Research and Education Network

  10. Australian Research and Education Network

  11. Australian Research and Education Network

  12. Australian Research and Education Network

  13. AARNET’s Pacific Rim Network

  14. AARNET’s International Network

  15. AARNet3 DesignAn Update on ProgressQUESTNet 2003 Don Robertson Deputy Executive Director

  16. Acknowledgement • Slides from yesterdays workshop on Connecting Sites to AARNet and GrangeNet • Thanks to Mark Prior

  17. Disclaimer • No Transmission or Equipment Vendors have been selected • So commercial negotiations are yet to commence • No details on vendors will be available until after commercial negotiations are completed • This is a design discussion only

  18. RFP Team • Mary Fleming (chair) • Business Development • Don Robertson • Deputy Executive Director • George McLaughlin • Director - International Development • Steve Maddocks • Network Operations Manager • Mark Prior • Network Architect

  19. RFP Process • Issued on 25 February 2003 • Closed on 21 March 2003 • Received 25 respondents • Wide variety of responses • Some covered whole of RFP • Some very specialised • RFP Team divided task • Domestic Transmission • International Transmission • Internet Transit • Other issues

  20. Domestic Network

  21. Domestic Transmission • Conventional National ISP design, following underlying transmission paths • Redundant and Diverse Trunks • STM-16 (2.5Gbps) Loop (MEL/CBR/SYD) • STM-4 (622Mbps) BRI/SYD • STM-4 (622Mbps) PER/ADL • STM-4 (622Mbps) ADL/MEL • E3 (34Mbps) ADL/ASP • E3 (34Mbps) ASP/DRW • E3 (34Mbps) MEL/HBT

  22. Dual Capital City POP

  23. Interconnection of intra city POPs • Canberra, Melbourne & Sydney • 10 Gigabit Ethernet connection from router to router, through switches • Adelaide, Brisbane & Perth • 10 Gigabit Ethernet connection between switches • Gigabit Ethernet between router and switch • Alice Springs, Darwin & Hobart • Single POP only

  24. Equipment • Core Router • 10Gbps capable • Redundant power but not CPU • Packet over SDH to STM-64 • Gigabit and 10 Gigabit Ethernet • Core Switch • Pure L2 switching • Fast, Gigabit and 10 Gigabit Ethernet only • Member Edge and in POP “Legacy” routers • 3 x Gigabit Ethernet • Capability to handle legacy (slow) interfaces • Member edge router provides flow accounting and guaranteed quality of service

  25. Traffic Accounting • Still flow based • Moved to edge, on member’s site, due to scaling issues • 1RU server • Redundant (emergency) feed to central collector • Central reporting server

  26. DDoS Mitigation • Investigate appliances • Interest in automatic detection and filtering • Locate next to transit (and peering) links

  27. Member Connections • Diverse connection to each POP • Two diverse, independent links, one to each POP • Dual connection connecting each POP • Two links over same infrastructure to single POP • AARNet trunks one link to the second POP though switches • AARNet provided diversity • Single link to one POP, AARNet provides LAN linking both AARNet POPs and the member

  28. Member Connections • One or more AARNet supplied and managed edge routers • No firewall functionality, a member responsibility • Member provides “last mile” link between institution and POP • What technology will the members need? • Gigabit Ethernet over metro fibre preferred • Managed Ethernet service • E3 Microwave • Something else? • Will members dual home to both POPs? • If so, how?

  29. AARNet POP Requirements • Space for 4 consecutive 600x900 45RU racks • Individually locked racks or located in private, locked caged area • False floor with underfloor air-conditioning • VESDA • Fire suppression systems, such as FM-200 or Inergen • Dual, redundant AC power feeds to each rack • Backup AC power, with uninterrupted transition between mains and generator • 24x7 secure access • 24x7 “remote hands” for basic hardware changes • 2 PSTN lines • Unrestricted access for any APL nominated carrier • Accessible via multiple carriers over diverse paths

  30. Intra city POP Requirements • Power supply diversity, each POP fed by different sub stations • Availability of diverse fibre paths between POP sites • Physical separation of at least 0.8km

  31. AARNET’s International Network

  32. International Transmission • Dual STM-4 (622Mbps) for commodity Internet transit • San Jose (Silicon Valley) • Los Angeles • Potential for Research STM-64 (10Gbps) • Hawai’i • Seattle (Abilene, CA*net 4) • Los Angeles (Abilene, CENIC, CUDI) • Potential for STM-1’s (155Mbps) to Asia • Tokyo • Singapore

  33. Current Status • National Transmission: • Reviewing final responses from suppliers • Further meetings with potential suppliers next week • Initial POP equipment RFQ closed, responses reviewed and further details sought • Need more detail on exact requirements before going to “best and final offers” • Evaluating potential POP sites

  34. Current Status • International Transmission • On hold, pending further discussions with the Commonwealth government regarding funding for the 10Gbps wavelength • Asian links dependant on available funds and member demand

  35. Current Status • Commodity Internet Transit • Currently seeking information on a transition phase • Plan to obtain transit within Australia initially • Migrate to San Jose and Los Angeles once international transmission in place

  36. Current Status • Peering • Developing national policy • A consideration for POP site location • Regional links • Awaiting outcome of national transmission • AARNet Mirror • Still in queue

  37. Design QuestionsMember Site • What type of service will members use? • Will member dual home on diverse paths? • Will member require dual edge routers? • Will member retain their own border router? • Do members have a firewall appliance? • Netscreen, PIX, Watchguard, SonicWall, … • Is it in a dual, fail over configuration? • Will it connect directly to AARNet edge router? • Routing functionality? • OSPF, RIPv2, BGP, …

  38. Design QuestionsMember Site • NAT? • Please say no :-) • IPv6 support? • Native or tunnel to AARNet tunnel broker? • Multicast? • Jumbo frames? • Does campus infrastructure support it? • Connection to Grangenet or CeNTIE • Directly from member site? • Indirectly via AARNet POP? • Other connections?

  39. Questions Jonathan.Potter@aarnet.edu.au Don.Robertson@aarnet.edu.au Mark.Prior@aarnet.edu.au

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