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August 9, 1999 High-Speed Bandwidth: Terabit Safety Net
ISPs are installing high-end devices that one day will reach terabit speeds. Does corporate America really need all that bandwidth? Not this year.
By PAUL KORZENIOWSKI
With corporate bandwidth usage doubling every three months, carriers are mapping out plans to boost the capacity of their core networks-the place where data is funneled and shipped over high-speed, long distance lines. To keep pace with the demand, carriers are installing routers that can support multiple Gbps transmissions, with an eye toward installing switches that can support terabits-per-second (Tbps) speeds.
Why should corporate network managers care? Delivery of high-end routers could lead to a bandwidth glut that will drive down prices on services, making it easier for enterprises to afford bandwidth-intensive applications.
Also, the technology used to support the new high-speed transmissions will eventually make its way into enterprise networks. Of course, a few years will pass before that transition is complete, since companies are just now trying to determine how to fill up Gigabit Ethernet connections.
The business case for building a terabit safety net is based on the assumption that Internet bandwidth growth will continue unabated over the next few years. Whether or not that will happen is uncertain. Since e-mail and spreadsheet transmissions will not fill up such large pipes, the expectation is that businesses and consumers will deploy new apps to use the bandwidth-although no one seems quite sure what those apps will be.
Mark Lefebure, vice president of data service engineering at carrier IXC Communications Inc., points to three emerging high-bandwidth applications. He says consumers will be interested in infotainment services like video-on-demand; corporations will continue to deploy new e-commerce systems; and companies will replace private network connections with virtual private networks. Another driver: Companies will outsource application maintenance to ISPs, which also will increase Internet bandwidth requirements.
The First Wave Carriers are now installing routers that offer speed greater than 10 Gbps in their network core. Argon Networks, Cisco, Juniper Networks, NetCore Systems and Torrent Networking Technologies all offer such devices.
MCI Worldcom has deployed these routers in two locations: in the Internet backbone of Uunet and a network that supports a research project sponsored by the National Science Foundation. Uunet, which has an equity investment in Juniper Networks Inc., has been at the forefront of moving to OC-48 (2.4 Gbps) speed at its network core. At the beginning of the year, the company used Juniper switches to support connections among hubs located in New York City; Washington, D.C.; and Atlanta, and plans to expand to coast-to-coast links by the end of this summer. MCI Worldcom also chose Juniper routers for its research network and installed them in February. "The Juniper switches have proven to be reliable and provide us with enough bandwidth so the lines are no longer close to full utilization,' says Rick Wilder, director of advanced Internet engineering at MCI Worldcom.
MetaWire Inc. is another carrier that requires multiple gigabit connections at its core. The 5-year-old company handles high-quality video and voice transmissions for numerous Hollywood production companies. To service these users, the firm has four data centers in the Los Angeles area that support server farms running on a mix of PC and Unix machines.
In the spring of 1998, MetaWire started to look for higher-speed routers to replace the Cisco 7500 systems operating at its core. Impressed with Torrent Networking Technologies Corp.'s IP9000 router, the carrier installed the product last summer. "Once we got the routers running, we had enough bandwidth in place to help our customers with services such as cybertelecasts,' says company president Byron Wagner.
Verio Inc. began a similar evaluation in the summer of 1998. It needed routers that would support OC-3 (155 Mbps) and OC-12 (622 Mbps) transmissions. After examining Cisco's Gigabit Switch Router (GSR) 1200 and Juniper's M40 routers, Verio selected the latter because of its higher-speed backplane and better throughput.
The carrier installed the product in October 1998 and ran the Juniper network in parallel with its existing backbone for a couple of months before cutting over completely. "These high-end routers are still in an early stage of development, so a carrier has to make sure they are working properly before using them to support production traffic,' says Chris DeMarche, Verio's chief technology officer.
GST Telecommunications Corp. operates a network that services customers mainly in the western United States. The company relied on Cisco 7000 series routers to support its 622-Mbps connections, but replaced them with Juniper routers in its Chicago; Vienna, Va.; and Houston locations earlier this year.
No Moore Traditionally, a core network overhaul would provide a carrier with three to five years of extra capacity, depending on network growth. However, that is not the case with the Internet. "The Internet is blowing away Moore's Law, which says companies can assimilate new technology every 12 to 18 months,' explains Andrew Greenfield, product manager for optical internetworking at Cisco. "With the Internet, consumption is doubling every three to six months.'
Even though MCI's core connections are not close to being full, the company has already begun looking at higher-speed alternatives. "We think the Juniper system could scale up to 20 Gbps but would need a bigger bus to carry more traffic,' says MCI Worldcom's Wilder.
Ripping out core network equipment every 12 to 18 months represents an ongoing root canal for carriers. "Problems in the core can impact everything that their network touches, so carriers desire to make as few changes there as possible,' notes Mukesh Chatter, CEO at router vendor Nexabit Networks Inc.
New products geared toward making the upgrade process simpler are coming from start-up suppliers, such as Avici Systems, IronBridge Networks, Nexabit and Pluris. These routers were designed to scale from gigabit to multiple terabit speeds through software changes and new interfaces, rather than through the deployment of a new switch. Such system designs would make it simpler for ISPs to keep pace with rapid core bandwidth increases.
Even though vendors have created a lot of buzz about their terabit router products, they have not yet backed up their claims. "At the moment, there is a 'vaporwarish' feel to the terabit router market,' says Lisa Alloca, a director at market research company Renaissance Worldwide Inc.
Indeed, the early users talk more about what they plan to do with the devices than about what they have done. Cisco routers and a couple of Juniper systems now support Frontier Global Center's core network, which operates at OC-48. "Because we are seeing 500 percent growth in network usage annually, we want to get to OC-192 as soon as possible,' says Alan Hannan, director of network architecture. In the spring, the company evaluated terabit products and selected Nexabit Networks Inc.'s NX64000 Multi-Terabit Core Switch/Router. "Nexabit was the first supplier with a design that seems capable of supporting terabit throughput,' says Hannan. He also says the system is resilient and features a robust software design. The carrier has been tinkering with the system in its lab and expects to put the box in production in August.
While Frontier has made its terabit router selection, most other carriers are sitting on the sidelines. "No vendor has delivered a true terabit-class device yet,' points out GST's Tom Niewulis, engineering technology advisor at the company.
So, carriers are examining the systems in test labs and are beginning their own trials. GST installed Avici Systems Inc.'s Terabit Switch/Router (TSR) between its Los Angeles and Oakland locations in May. The devices will support a research network funded by the Defense Advanced Projects Research Agency and the National Transparent Optical Network Consortium. Keep in mind that while vendors tout architectures that can support multi-Tbps transmissions, the initial products operate more in the 10-Gbps range. To convince carriers to purchase their products, suppliers will need to deliver products with more throughput. Reliability is another issue. Carriers want better self-healing features and more fault tolerance in the high-end routers.
The vendors have time to address the problems. "The terabit router suppliers have taken longer than anticipated to get their products out the door, but that hasn't been a big deal because no carrier now has enough traffic to fill up a 1-Tbps pipe,' says Joseph Skorupa, director of switching and routing services at market research company Ryan Hankin Kent Inc.
The new routers will help carriers keep pace with-maybe even get a bit ahead of-growing bandwidth demands. More bandwidth means enterprises may be able to deploy high-bandwidth apps at better prices. So, if router vendors deliver on their promises, carriers should build that terabit safety net sometime next year.
Paul Korzeniowski is a Sudbury, Mass.-based writer. He can be reached at paulkorzen@aol.com.
Link to related article:
Terabit Premium
Links to previous In Depth stories:
Call Center Breakthrough
Management Frameworks: Look Beyond The Enterprise
Web Applications: Middle-Tier Migration
Transaction Processing: Think Big Picture
Data Warehousing: Unleash The Treasure Trove
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