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OIF Certification Optical Control Plane UNI
MPLS+SDN+NFV World March, 2017
Optical Networks Transformation
• Proprietary, vendor-specific silos • Complex to operate across vendors and
technologies
Î Interoperable control plane Î Interoperable data plane Î End to end orchestration
OSS
Proprietary OS
Vendor X HW
Proprietary OS
Vendor Y HW
Proprietary OS
Vendor Z HW
from closed networks… …to open networks
OSS / Apps
Multi-vendor Multi-domain Network
open SW
open HW
open APIs Vendor-specific management systems SDN Control Infrastructure
OIF certification program Initial focus on optical control plane
• Benefits of an optical control plane
– Simplified provisioning – Automated path selection – Dynamic restoration – Multi-layer optimization
• Combined with the benefits of multi-vendor interoperability
– Reduced costs – Freedom to introduce new features or innovations – Operational agility
Centralized and distributed control
Centralized and distributed controls are complementary and need to interwork with each other, as to ensure end-to-end coordination across heterogeneous networks.
distributed control centralized and distributed control
centralized control
Transport APIs
SDN control infrastructure
Optical Control Plane UNI
RSVP-TE controller
OPTICAL controller
OPTICAL controller
OPTICAL controller
RSVP-TE controller
Client nodes optical switch
(ROADM) optical switch
(ROADM) Client nodes
UNI NNI NNI UNI
The optical control plane enables dynamic provisioning, restoration and optimization, across optical networks. User Network Interfaces (UNI) extend these capabilities to client nodes. The UNI control protocol is based on RSVP-TE.
Transponder
Transponder
RSVP-TE controller
RSVP-TE controller
Why Certification?
• Issue to be solved : Multi-vendor interoperability of the optical control plane is still missing from commercial products, although various demonstrations have proven it is feasible.
• Certification is a powerful tool to bridge the gap between technical standards and commercial implementations: it will provide a unique reference and a market advantage to compliant, interoperable products.
• In line with its mission is to enable global interoperability in optical transmission networks, OIF surveyed the market and decided to create a certification program for interoperable products – starting with the Optical Control Plane UNI.
Initial Focus on Optical Control Plane UNI • Focus on Control Plane UNI (black & white + colored interfaces)
– Mature: existing standards, existing products – Timely: IP-optical interconnect and alien wavelength support are increasing
business requirements – Very strong market drivers: interop has to happen sooner or later, for IP-optical
interactions and alien wavelength use cases. – Standalone issue: not dependent on other work in progress – OIF has the required skills and legitimacy – Lowest hanging fruit (yet a serious piece of work)
• There is a real need from the market to open up optical networks
– Once this first OIF certification is launched on control plane UNI, it may be followed by others, e.g., NNI, SDN API, data plane or management plane.
UNI Certification Deliverables and Timeline
Q2/16 Q3/16 Q4/16 Q1/17 Q2/17 Q3/17
Project approval
Selection of test lab
Drafting of test specification Straw ballot
Beta testing
1st certified products
Stakeholders surveys
UNH labs open to vendors products
Final spec
Value to the industry
• Means for operators to obtain and differentiate interoperable commercial products
• Market advantage to manufacturers’ products which pass certification • Reduced repetitive testing for vendors and operators. Time to market. • Enhanced implementations, better competition, more innovation.
Operators: make sure to mandate the OIF certification in all your upcoming RFPs! Vendors: get involved in the OIF program and be first to ship certified products!
To participate in the specification of the certification tests, contact: Andi Kosich, OIF ([email protected]) To participate in beta testing and certify your products, contact: Timothy Winters, UNH-IOL ([email protected])
SDN Transport API Demo Executive Readout
The OIF and Transport SDN � Goal: accelerate commercial deployment by defining, testing and assuring
interoperability of key network functions and interfaces � Work to date:
� Use cases and reference architecture � Carrier requirements and framework � 2014 interop demo – partnered with ONF, tested pre-standard ONF
OpenFlow extensions and APIs, led to ONF T-API specs
� 2016: OIF SDN Transport API Interoperability Demo • Validate specs in multi-layer, multi-domain environments in carrier labs • Communicate findings – whitepaper, read-out events, liaisons
• Next: T-API (2.0) work items, certification?
It ’s all about interoperability
OIF 2016 SDN Transport API Interoperability Demonstration
Demo Findings � Testing successfully demonstrated that T-API enables real-time
orchestration of on-demand connectivity set-up, control and monitoring across multi-layer, multi-vendor and multi-carrier networks
� Some functional and protocol issues and gaps were identified � The experiences of the testing will be shared across the industry to help
develop critical implementation agreements and specifications � Detailed findings are reported in the technical white paper
SDN Transport API Interop Demo Resources • Press release, 14 February, 2017 • Technical white paper – download at www.oiforum.com
• Light Reading webinar, 15 March: OIF SDN T-API Interop Demonstration Results – Executive summary paper available to webinar registrants
• Public read-out: OIF Interop – The Key to Unlocking the Benefits of SDN – OFC, Los Angeles Tuesday, 21 March
Conclusion
• Interoperability is technically feasible, as demonstrated, but still needs to get into commercial products
• The OIF helps the industry unlock the benefits of SDN for optical networks, through three interrelated programs:
– Implementation Agreements, that document the use of industry standards; – Interop demonstrations, hosted by participating operators leveraging key interfaces such as the
Transport API to bind together multi-layer and multi-domain carrier networks; – Certification, to address the gap between paper specification or early implementation and products
that carriers can deploy.
Thank You! www.oiforum.com
UNI on black & white interfaces Multi-layer interactions using black & white client interfaces • Client nodes may include IP/MPLS routers, L2 switches, OTN cross-connects • Transponders reside in WDM/ROADM transmission network element (not in client node) • Control plane interactions take place at black & white Ethernet/OTN interfaces
Interoperability of the optical control plane for a black & white UNI is the most basic and the most urgent issue to address: • Existing set of IETF RFCs and OIF IAs • Existing product implementations • Interoperability is a must-have for deploying IP-optical interconnect with multi-layer interactions.
Optical networkPacket node Packet node
Db Db
DWDMNetwork element
coloredinterface
DWDMNetwork element
coloredinterface
Multi-layer interactions using colored client interfaces (a.k.a. Alien wavelength) • Client nodes may include IP/MPLS routers, L2 switches, OTN cross-connects • Transponders are moved into the client nodes (out of WDM/ROADM transmission network elements) • Control plane interactions take place at a colored client interface
Optical Network
Packet Node
ColoredInterfaceColored
InterfaceColored
InterfaceColored
Interface
DWDM Network Element
Packet Node DWDM Network Element
UNI on colored interfaces
Interoperability of GMPLS control plane for a colored UNI is slightly more complex, but an increasingly urgent issue to address: • Existing set of IETF RFCs • Existing product implementations • Interoperability is a must-have for the support of “alien wavelength” deployments,
where transponders are made independent from ROADMs.
Supportive quotes Vendor #1: “A universal set of requirements and certifications gives us the ability for interop of components where certifications in the past used best guesses as to what parameters or metrics were important and which ones were actually tested.” Vendor #2: “OIF certification can help broaden and accelerate the market for optical products by assuring multi-vendor/-product interoperability and thereby reducing the time to get products qualified and accepted. This reduces the sales cycle for system vendors and lessens the testing and qualification burden on service providers.” Carrier #1: “The OIF certification will greatly facilitate integrating our IP and optical networks together. We need a control plane open to multiple vendors and multiple layers. The OIF certification will avoid the fear of vendors lock-in. On the longer term, the advent of interoperability in optical networks will increase agility and innovation, at lower costs, for the benefits of the entire industry.” Carrier #2: “An OIF certification will enable us to guarantee the devices we buy are compatible with the latest Multi-layer interoperability features. We believe that a correct management of GMPLS-UNI interaction is the key to transport SDN at its maximum level.”