The complete automation of the management and control of Service
Providers transport networks (IP/MPLS, optical, and microwave
transport networks) is vital for meeting emerging demand for high-bandwidth use cases, including 5G and fiber connectivity services.
The Abstraction and Control of TE Networks (ACTN) architecture and
interfaces facilitate the automation and operation of complex optical
and IP/MPLS networks through standard interfaces and data models.
This allows a wide range of network services that can be requested by
the upper layers fulfilling almost any kind of service level
requirements from a network perspective (e.g. physical diversity,
latency, bandwidth, topology, etc.)¶
Packet Optical Integration (POI) is an advanced use case of traffic
engineering. In wide-area networks, a packet network based on the
Internet Protocol (IP), and often Multiprotocol Label Switching
(MPLS) or Segment Routing (SR), is typically realized on top of an
optical transport network that uses Dense Wavelength Division
Multiplexing (DWDM)(and optionally an Optical Transport Network
(OTN)layer).¶
In many existing network deployments, the packet and the optical
networks are engineered and operated independently. As a result,
there are technical differences between the technologies (e.g.,
routers compared to optical switches) and the corresponding network
engineering and planning methods (e.g., inter-domain peering
optimization in IP, versus dealing with physical impairments in DWDM,
or very different time scales). In addition, customers needs can be
different between a packet and an optical network, and it is not
uncommon to use other vendors in both domains. The operation of these
complex packet and optical networks is often siloed, as these
technology domains require specific skill sets.¶
The packet/optical network deployment and operation separation are
inefficient for many reasons. First, both capital expenditure (CAPEX)
and operational expenditure (OPEX) could be significantly reduced by
integrating the packet and the optical networks. Second, multi-technology
online topology insight can speed up troubleshooting (e.g., alarm
correlation) and network operation (e.g., coordination of maintenance
events), and multi-technology offline topology inventory can improve
service quality (e.g., detection of diversity constraint violations).
Third, multi-technology traffic engineering can use the available network
capacity more efficiently (e.g., coordination of restoration). In
addition, provisioning workflows can be simplified or automated
across layers (e.g., to achieve bandwidth-on-demand or to perform
activities during maintenance windows).¶
This document uses packet-based Traffic Engineered (TE) service
examples. These are described as "TE-path" in this document. Unless
otherwise stated, these TE services may be instantiated using RSVP-TE-based or SR-TE-based, forwarding plane mechanisms.¶
The ACTN framework enables the complete multi-technology and multi-vendor
integration of packet and optical networks through a Multi-Domain
Service Coordinator (MDSC), and packet and optical Provisioning
Network Controllers (PNCs).¶
This document describes critical scenarios for POI from the packet
service layer perspective and identifies the required coordination
between packet and optical layers to improve POI deployment and
operation. These scenarios focus on multi-domain packet networks
operated as a client of optical networks.¶
This document analyses the case where the packet networks support
multi-domain TE paths. The optical networks could be either a DWDM
network, an OTN network (without DWDM layer), or a multi-layer
OTN/DWDM network. Furthermore, DWDM networks could be either fixed-grid or flexible-grid.¶
Multi-technology and multi-domain scenarios, based on the reference
network described in Section 2 and very relevant for Service
Providers, are described in Section 4 and Section 5.¶
For each scenario, existing IETF protocols and data models,
identified in Section 3.1 and Section 3.2, are analyzed with a particular
focus on the MPI in the ACTN architecture.¶
For each multi-technology scenario, the document analyzes how to use the
interfaces and data models of the ACTN architecture.¶
A summary of the gaps identified in this analysis is provided in
Section 6.¶
Understanding the level of standardization and the possible gaps will
help assess the feasibility of integration between packet and optical
DWDM domains (and optionally OTN layer) in an end-to-end multi-vendor
service provisioning perspective.¶
This document uses the ACTN terminology defined in [RFC8453].¶
In addition, this document uses the following terminology.¶
- Customer service:
-
The end-to-end service from CE to CE.¶
- Network service:
-
The PE to PE configuration, including both the network service
layer (VRFs, RT import/export policies configuration) and the
network transport layer (e.g. RSVP-TE LSPs). This includes the
configuration (on the PE side) of the interface towards the CE
(e.g. VLAN, IP address, routing protocol etc.).¶
- Technology domain:
-
short for "switching technology domain", defined as "region" in [RFC5212], where the term "region" is applied to (GMPLS) control domains.¶
- PNC Domain:
-
part of the network under control of a single PNC instance. It is subject to the capabilities of the PNC which technology is controlled.¶
- Port:
-
The physical entity that transmits and receives physical signals.¶
- Interface:
-
A physical or logical entity that transmits and receives traffic.¶
- Link:
-
An association between two interfaces that can exchange traffic directly.¶
- Intra-domain link:
-
a link between two adjacent nodes that belong to the same PNC domain.¶
- Inter-domain link:
-
a link between two adjacent nodes that belong to different PNC domains.¶
- Ethernet link:
-
A link between two Ethernet interfaces.¶
- Single-technology Ethernet link:
-
An Ethernet link between two Ethernet interfaces on physically adjacent IP routers.¶
- Multi-technology Ethernet link:
-
An Ethernet link between between two Ethernet interfaces on logically adjacent IP routers, which is supported by an underlay tunnel in a different technology domain.¶
- Cross-technology Ethernet link:
-
An Ethernet link between an Ethernet interface on an IP router and an Ethernet interface on a physically adjacent optical node.¶
- Inter-domain Ethernet link:
-
An Ethernet link between between two Ethernet interfaces on physically adjacent IP routers that belong to different P-PNC domains.¶
- Single-technology intra-domain Ethernet link:
-
An Ethernet link between between two Ethernet interfaces on physically adjacent IP routers that belong to the same P-PNC domain.¶
- Multi-technology intra-domain Ethernet link:
-
An Ethernet link between between two Ethernet interfaces on logically adjacent IP routers that belong to the same P-PNC domain, which is supported by supported by two cross-technology Ethernet links and an optical tunnel in between.¶
- IP link:
-
A link between two IP interfaces.¶
- Single-technology intra-domain IP link:
-
An IP link supported by a single-technology intra-domain Ethernet link.¶
- Inter-domain IP link:
-
An IP link supported by an inter-domain Ethernet link.¶
- Multi-technology intra-domain IP link:
-
An IP link supported by a multi-technology intra-domain Ethernet link.¶