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Capacity Dimensioning Based on Traffic Measurement in the Internet

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Title: Capacity Dimensioning Based on Traffic Measurement in the Internet


1
Capacity Dimensioning Based on Traffic
Measurement in the Internet
APT-HRD Collaborative research Program for
Exchange of Researcher/Engineers
  • Dr. Mahmood Ashraf Khan
  • Institute of Communication Technologies,
  • Pakistan Telecommunication Company Limited
  • Islamabad, Pakistan

2
Collaborative Institutes
  • Multimedia Network Architecture Lab. Osaka
    University, Osaka, Japan
  • Institute of Communication Technologies,
    Islamabad, Pakistan.
  • Regional Telecom Centre, Islamabad, Pakistan
  • Information Technology Infrastructure (ITI)
    Department, PTCL, Pakistan

3
Contents
  • QoS in Telecommunications?
  • Traffic Measurement Approaches
  • Pakistan Internet Exchange (PIE) Network
  • Conclusion
  • Recommendations

4
QoS in Telecommunications?
  • Target applications in telecommunications?
  • Real-time Applications Voice and Video
  • Require bandwidth guarantees, and thats all
  • Past statistics
  • Traffic characteristics is well known
  • Single carrier, single network
  • Erlang loss formula
  • Robust (allowing Poisson arrivals and general
    service times)
  • QoS measurement call blocking prob.
  • Can be easily measured by carrier

5
What is QoS in Data Applications?
  • The current Internet provides
  • QoS guarantee mechanisms for real-time
    applications by int-serv
  • QoS discriminations for aggregated flow by
    diff-serv
  • No QoS guarantees for data (even in the future)
  • For real-time applications, bandwidth guarantee
    with RSVP can be engineered by Erlang loss
    formula
  • But RSVP has a scalability problem in the of
    flows/intermediate routers
  • Distribution service for real-time multimedia
    (streaming)
  • playout control can improve QoS
  • How about data?
  • Data is essentially greedy for bandwidth
  • Some ISP offers the bandwidth-guaranteed service
    to end users
  • No guarantee in the backbone

6
Fundamental Principles for Data Application QoS
  • Data applications always try to use the bandwidth
    as much as possible. This is now supported by
  • High-performance end systems
  • High-speed access lines
  • Neither bandwidth nor delay guarantees should be
    expected.
  • Packet level metrics (e.g., packet loss prob. and
    packet delay) are never QoS metrics for data
    applications.
  • It is inherently impossible to guarantee
    performance metrics in data networks.
  • Network provider can never measure QoS
  • Competed bandwidth should be fairly shared among
    active users.
  • Transport layer protocols (TCP and UDP) is not
    fair.
  • Network support is necessary by, e.g., active
    queue management at routers.

7
Fundamental Theory for the Internet?
  • Queueing Theory is Useful?
  • Only provides packet queueing delay and loss
    probabilities at the node (routers buffer at
    one output port)
  • In Erlang loss formula,call blocking probability
    is just a user
  • level QoS
  • Behavior at the Router?
  • Data application utilizes TCP of which congestion
    control performed.
  • TCP is inherently a feedback system
  • Input to the queue (i.e. to the router) must be
    affected by the feedback.
  • Streaming media using UDP/RTP has its proprietary
    rate.
  • User level QoS for Data?
  • Application level QoS such as Web document
    transfer time.
  • We need to develop a new fundamental theory in
    Networking research.
  • Control theoretic approach seems to be promising
    to get the system stability and transient
    behaviors.

8
Challenges for Network Provisioning
  • New problems we have no experiences in data
    networks
  • What is QoS?
  • How can we measure QoS?
  • How can we charge for the service?
  • Can we predict the traffic characteristics in the
    era of information technology?
  • End-to-end performance can be known only by end
    users
  • QoS prediction at least at the network
    provisioning level

9
Traffic Measurement Approaches
  • Passive Measurements (OC3MON, OC12MON,,,)
  • Only provides point observations
  • Actual traffic demands cannot be known
  • QoS at the user level cannot be known
  • Active Measurements (Pchar, Netperf, bprobe,,,)
  • Provides end-to-end performance
  • Measurement itself may affect the results
  • Not directly related to network dimensioning (The
    Internet is connectionless!)
  • How can we pick up meaningful statistics?
  • Routing instability due to routing control
  • Segment retransmissions due to TCP error control
  • Rate adaptation by streaming media
  • Low utilization is because of
  • Congestion control?
  • Limited access speed of end users?
  • Low-power end host?

10
Spiral Approach for Network Dimensioning
  • Incremental network dimensioning by feedback loop
    is an only way to meet QoS requirements of users

No means to predict the future traffic demand
Traffic Measurement
Provides confidence on results
Statistical Analysis
Capacity Dimensioning
Flexible bandwidth allocation is mandatory (ATM,
WDM network)
11
Pakistan Internet Exchange Network
  • The PIE network was designed due to the
    following
  • There was no inter-exchange of Internet traffic
    domestically between the ISPs. All inter ISP
    traffic of Pakistan was first routed to the
    Internet backbone and routed back to Pakistan,
    resulting in wastage of International bandwidth,
    slow Internet response and little or no backup in
    case of loss of connectivity.
  • Achieve economy of scales by aggregation of
    traffic.
  • Foster PTCL business interest in the field of
    Data Communication.
  • Develop a Network Infrastructure for convergence
    of Voice, Video and Data networks.
  • Facilitate Law full intercept and monitoring
    facilities.

12
Existing PIE Structure
13
Proposed PIE
  • Point of presence is being expanded from 13 POPs
    to 35 POPs.
  • The present two155Mbps International would be
    upgraded to 2x622Mbps (2xSTM4) through SMW-4,
    which will make more than 1200mbps of Internet
    connectivity to the backbone available to PIE.
  • PIE PoPs in the three cities, Rawalpindi, Lahore
    and Karachi are being expanded by adding two high
    capacity core routers at each site.
  • 6 main routers and 26 distribution routers will
    be installed in the rest of the POPs.
  • The links between the POPs will be at the level
    of E3/STM1.

14
Proposed PIE Structure
15
Conclusion
  • Internet has become the backbone of all the
    activities in the World including education,
    business and research.
  • Network Dimensioning is important in order to
    provide QoS to the customer on Internet and is
    crucial to keep the Internet link for best
    utilization
  • Bottleneck Identification for traffic measurement
    is the prime factor.
  • Experimental results have shown that measurement
    method can provide an accurate estimate of the
    link utilization.

16
Result /Output of the Project
  • Good experience to work in collaboration with
    Japanese researchers.
  • The present infrastructure for Internet was
    studies and analyzed.
  • Based on the analysis new network dimensioning
    was proposed
  • A design framework for Pakistan Internet Exchange
    (PIE) network has been proposed and changes have
    been made for the adequate link capacity on the
    basis of end-to-end measurement in the
    infrastructure of PIE network.
  • The performance of the PIE network has been
    improved.

17
Recommendations
  • The research Program was very valuable and this
    must be sustained.
  • More involvement of Japanese side is required as
    those researchers have much knowledge and the
    developing countries can benefit from their rich
    research experience.
  • A pool of Japanese Universities may be identified
    where such collaborative research program shall
    be conducted.
  • An awareness of this ICT-HRD collaborative
    research program may be given to all the
    Universities at Japan so that they may
    collaborate in this program.

18
Thank you
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