Over the Horizon and Eliminating Layer 2? [Info on DEN]
By Susan Breidenbach Network World, 5/4/98
A lot of piloting is going on this year on similar projects, and analysts expect backbone upgrades to go into full swing in 1999. "In two to three years, the core of the network will be routing-switch based, not router based," says Forrester's Hannigan.
The new generation of products has pushed the envelope out enough that bandwidth and prices are not a big story anymore. "We're getting to the point where real value is not bigger and faster but more intelligent and more software-aware," says Fred McClimans, chairman and CEO of Current Analysis, Inc., a consultancy in Sterling, Va.
Instead, the focus should shift to incorporating services - directories and firewalls, for example - into the switches.
"The big emphasis will be on prioritization," McLean says. "Not for video or voice, but to make sure that your SAP traffic gets through no matter what else is going on."
Increasingly, management tools should be leveraging directory services. To date, network management has really been device management. "Now you can manage class of service and QoS and align management policies with the particular needs of your business environment," says Clint Ramsay, vice president of marketing for 3Com Corp.'s enterprise systems division in Boxborough, Mass.
In the Infonetics survey of high-speed LAN users, three-fourths of respondents said they would require QoS capabilities by 2000. However, most of them plan to provide it by over-provisioning their networks.
While QoS gets a lot of hype from vendors, it doesn't seem to be much more than a check-off item for users right now. "We're not looking at QoS, but rather at using policy-based management to control access to network resources," says Frank Bielecki, network manager at Sandia National Laboratories in Livermore, Calif.
A number of experts expect this functionality to be provided through Directory Enabled Networks (DEN). "This is a radical new approach to managing bandwidth," says Sam Alunni, a vice president at Sterling Research, Inc. in Sterling, Mass. Policies are established in a single directory that switches can access. The switches provision network resources based on profiles set up for users and applications.
"With DENs, you start to get the same degree of control over frame-based networks that you used to have to go to ATM to get," Alunni says.
Four nines
Networks should also get more reliable as functions are moved into silicon and there are fewer parts. After all, the network component that fails most often is the routing software.
"We will finally see high availability for the masses," says LANNET's Bendori. As this approaches the 99.99% availability requirement of the Bellcore Network Equipment-Building System standard, it will enable business-quality voice over IP and finally unlock the tremendous potential of computer-telephony integration.
Layer 3 intelligence will get more democratic as well. It is expected to spread to the wiring closets and even out to the edges as WAN links go beyond E-1 speeds.
"Intelligence is getting cheap, so put it in the closet," says Douglas Hill, co-founder of Xylan Corp. in Calabasas, Calif.
When desktops are attached to Layer 3 switches, all sorts of possibilities open up. These include user-authentication capabilities that enable the network
to reconfigure itself based on the identity of the user; end-to-end QoS; and much more granular directory-enabled networking and intelligent multicast distribution.
The Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) feature is being incorporated into Microsoft's Windows desktop and needs to talk directly to a Layer 3-aware device if it is to be useful. It is difficult to implement end-to-end QoS via RSVP if there is a Layer 2 device between the Windows machine and the rest of the network.
Eliminating Layer 2?
Vinod Bhardwaj, the inventor of the first Ethernet switch, can see carrying things even further by putting a router at every port and eliminating Layer 2 altogether. Assuming the world converges on IP and silicon prices continue to fall, he thinks it could happen in three to four years.
"Routing is a superset of switching, so it has everything the network requires," says Bhardwaj, now president and CEO of ControlNet, Inc., a high-speed networking start-up in Campbell, Calif. "You would just need a NIC and a router."
Bhardwaj's vision isn't out of the realm of possibility. In fact, it dovetails nicely with the TCP/IP protocol stack, in which Layer 2 is equivalent to OSI's Layer 3 and there is no separate data-link layer.
First, though, the routers will have to get a lot more intelligent, says Mary Petrosky, senior analyst at The Burton Group in Salt Lake City. Otherwise, the configuration and administration of all those routers would be prohibitive.
"In ATM, if you have a network with some 155M switches and you drop a new 622M bit/sec box into the core, they will all find each other and update their tables and learn the new topology," Petrosky says. "Routers don't do that at this point."
Self-configuring routers that can fit into a single switch port at an affordable price? They're not exactly on the horizon, but with the speed at which switching has progressed thus far, who would say it can't happen?
Intro and What's in a Name Prospects for ATM and Wrong Assumptions Winners & Losers and The next Cisco?
The entire report in a single file
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