Juniper Logs Ppt 855

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Internet Backbone Routersfrom

Ben PilletMajid IqbalNaveen BothireddyNitin PantRebecca RomoffVeena Muthuraman

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What we’ll discuss today

• Juniper Networks• Internet backbone• Challenges faced by service providers• Solutions for managing backbone traffic

– Architecture– Products

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Juniper Networks

• Started in 1997 by Silicon Valley engineers with VC funding. Went public in 1999.

• Provides infrastructure solutions for service providers with optically-enabled IP networks

• Revenues– Fiscal Year 1999: $102.6 million– First 6 months of 2000: $177 million

• Market capitalization: ~ $42 billionhttp://www.juniper.net/

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Products and services

• Products– Internet backbone routers– Physical interface cards– Internet software

• Services– Professional services– Education services

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Operating environment

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Internet backbone

• 1985: NSFnet connected six supercomputer sites with 56K lines

• 1992: NSFnet connected 11 sites connected by T3 (45Mbps) lines

• 1995: vBNS* - 155Mbps ATM network run by MCI and Merit accessed through Network Access Points (NAP)

Source: Gartner Group* Very high-speed backbone network services

NAP

ISP ISPISP

vBNS

NAP

ISP

NAP

ISP ISP

NAP

ISP

NAP

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Services providers

Backbone• UUNet• AT&T• Qwest• Cable & Wireless

NAP• Sprint• Pacific Bell• Ameritech

Source: Whatis.com

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UUNet’s Global Internet backbone

Source: UUNet

UUNet's Service Level Agreements (SLAs) commit them to monthly latency figures of: - Under 85ms within Europe, North America, and USA- Under 120ms transatlantic between London and New York

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Challenges faced by ISPs

• Providing 24x7 service in face of exploding traffic and higher expectations from customers

• Optimizing utilization of available bandwidth while maintaining network reliability and SLAs

• Keeping pace with rapid evolution of Internet technology – protocols, hardware, transport media

According to Censorware Project's Dynamic Estimates of Web Size

As of 7/31/2000 the Web has: - 2,290,000,000 pages; - 43,000,000,000,000 bytes of text; - 516,000,000 images; and - 8,600,000,000,000 bytes of image data

Source: Censorware.org

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Internet backbone routers

• Stable and complex routing software

• Traffic engineering with sophisticated control

• Wire-speed packet-processing

• Support for wide variety of protocols and interfaces

A Super POP Environment

Source: Juniper Networks

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A few concepts first

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Multi-layer switching

• Integrated approach– Intelligence of layer 3

routing– Speed of layer 2 switching

• Balance between speed and control

Packet-forwardingperformance

Function and control

Router

Switch

Traffic growth

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Dedicated resources

• Separation of routing and packet-forwarding functions

• Routing with sophisticated software

• Packet forwarding with specialized hardware

Routing process

Packet-forwardingprocess

Packets in Packets out

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Multi Protocol Label Switching

• MPLS classifies and expedites traffic based on policy considerations – destination, application, CoS, etc.

• Packets identified by Forwarding Equivalence Class (FEC) labels – no longest-match address look-up

• Supports popular technologies - IP, ATM, Frame Relay

Assign initial label

IP addr Out label

Ingress label switch

192.4/16 5

Layer 2 transport

Remove label

IP addr Out label

Ingress label switch

219.1.1.12

Layer 2 transportLabel

swapping

Out labelIn label

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Label switch

Edge Core Core Core Edge

Label swapping

Out labelIn label

9 2

Label switch

5 9 2192.4.2.1 192.4.2.1

Label Switched Path

Source: Juniper Networks

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Juniper’s architecture

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Router elements

• Routing engine • Packet forwarding engine

Source: Juniper Networks

• Switch fabric• Line cards

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M40 System Architecture

Source: Juniper Networks

• Routing Engine running on purpose-built router operating system

• ASIC-powered Packet Forwarding Engine

• Over-sized switch fabric

• Flexible configuration of physical interface cards (PIC)

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JUNOS™ Internet Software

• Implements BGP4, IS-IS, OSPF and IP multicast

• Policy definition language• Runs applications in

protected memory• Modularized• User-friendly command

line interfaceSource: Juniper Networks

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Internet Processor II™ ASIC

• Adds IP intelligence to wire-rate packet-forwarding

• Packet filtering, traffic analysis and load balancing without degrading performance

• Enables upto 160 Mpps with OC-48 loads, long-prefixes and large routing tables

Source: Juniper Networks

Transit traffic

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Products

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M40 - core router

• December 1998• M40 upgrades to M160• Up to 128 DS3s• Efficient using JUNOS and ASICs• Flexibility with 13 different PICS

Interfaces – DSx, OC-x• Supports ATM, Frame Relay,

Ethernet, MPLS • Useful for backbone and long haul

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M20 - edge router

• September 1999• 14” of rack space• Possible 64 DS3s• Speeds up to OC-48 in single

card• Supports ATM, Frame Relay,

Ethernet, MPLS• Useful for ISPs and edge of

backbone

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M160 - newest core router

• Spring 2000• Long haul backbone• Accommodates 384

DS3s• Routes 160 Mpps• Throughput of 160 Gbps• Extensive support

– ATM, SONET, Frame Relay, MPLS

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Position on Internet backbone

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Scalable performance

M20 M40 M160

Release Date Late 1999 Late 1998 Early 2000

Route lookups 40 Mpps 40 Mpps 160 Mpps

Throughput 20+ Gbps 40+ Gbps 160+ Gbps

Size 14” x 19” 35” x 19” 35” x 19”

Port density* 4 8 32

Price ~$150,000 ~$225,000 ~$350,000

* OC48s per box

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High-end competition

Juniper M160 Cisco GSR 12012

Throughput 160 Gbps 60 Gbps

Route lookups 160 Mpps 44 Mpps

Port density* 32 11

Latency ≥ 1ms ≥ 2ms

* OC-48s per box

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Customers and partners

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Conclusion

• Traffic on Internet backbones presents service providers with a specific set of challenges

• Purpose-built hardware and software from Juniper Networks enable service providers to meet these challenges

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