Sprint Carrier Ethernet Roadmap © 2013 Sprint. This information is subject to Sprint policies regarding use and is the property of Sprint and/or its relevant affiliates and may contain restricted, confidential or privileged materials intended for the sole use of the intended recipient. Any review, use, distribution or disclosure is prohibited without authorization. Converged Network Solution Ethernet Access, High Speed Ethernet Private Line, and Carrier Ethernet Agenda • MEF Ethernet • Ethernet Access • High Speed Ethernet Private Line • Switched Carrier Ethernet • Roadmap • Appendix © 2013 Sprint. This information is subject to Sprint policies regarding use and is the property of Sprint and/or its relevant affiliates and may contain restricted, confidential or privileged materials intended for the sole use of the intended recipient. Any review, use, distribution or disclosure is prohibited without authorization. 2 Carrier Ethernet Defined The MEF has defined Carrier Ethernet as A ubiquitous, standardized, carrier-class Service and Network defined by five attributes that distinguish it from familiar LAN based Ethernet Carrier Ethernet is often referred to in Enterprise circles as Ethernet Business Services. The MEF is the industry’s defining body for Carrier Ethernet. What are Sprint Ethernet Services? Existing Sprint Provided Access – Ethernet (SPA-E) • Layer 2 Ethernet Access to Layer 3 Network Core • MPLS VPN • Dedicated Internet Access (DIA) New Sprint PL and Carrier Ethernet Services (CES) • • High Speed Ethernet Private Line (HSEPL)—Phase 1 Carrier Ethernet (CE)- Layer 2 Network Core—Phase 2 • Ethernet Private Line (E-LINE) • Ethernet LAN Services (E-LAN) • Ethernet Tree (E-Tree) • Local Access (E-Access)/SPA-E © 2013 Sprint. This information is subject to Sprint policies regarding use and is the property of Sprint and/or its relevant affiliates and may contain restricted, confidential or privileged materials intended for the sole use of the intended recipient. Any review, use, distribution or disclosure is prohibited without authorization. 4 U.S. Markets for Sprint Ethernet Access MARKET NAME • 147 total markets now in 2013 • Partnerships with LECs and multiple AAVs in each market • Dedicated and Aggregated Access • NNIs established for Aggregated (this is MEF 2.0 eAccess) Akron Albany Albuquerque Altoona Amarillo Asheville Atlanta Augusta Austin Bakersfield Baltimore Billings Birmingham Bloomington, IL Bloomington, IN Boise Boston Fargo, ND Bristol Buffalo Cedar Rapids Charleston Charlotte Charlottesville Chattanooga Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Colorado Springs Columbia, MO Columbia, SC Columbus Concord STATE \\ OH NY NM PA TX NC GA GA TX CA MD MT AL IL IN ID MA MN TN NY IA SC NC VA TN WY IL OH OH CO MO SC OH NH MARKET NAME Dallas/Fort Worth Dayton Daytona Beach Denver Des Moines Detroit Duluth Eau Claire Erie Eugene Evansville Fayetteville Fredericksburg Fresno Ft. Meyers Ft. Wayne Gainesville Grand Rapids Greenbay Greenville Harrisburg Harrisonburg Hartford Honolulu Houston Huntsville Indianapolis Jacksonville Kansas City Knoxville Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Little Rock STATE TX OH FL CO IA MI MN WI PA OR IN NC VA CA FL IN FL MI WI SC PA VA CT HI TX AL IN FL MO TN MI NV KY AR MARKET NAME Los Angeles/Irvine Louisville Lynchburg Macon Madison Mansfield Martinsburg Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis/St. Paul Montgomery Montpelier Myrtle Beach Nashville New Orleans New York City Northern NJ/Newark Norfolk/Newport News Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Pennsauken/Central NJ Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Pleasantville/Southern NJ Portland Poughkeepsie Providence Raleigh/Durham Reston Richmond Roanoke STATE CA KY VA GA WI OH WV TN FL WI MN AL VT SC TN LA NY NJ VA OK NE FL NJ PA AZ PA NJ OR NY RI NC VA VA VA © 2013 Sprint. This information is subject to Sprint policies regarding use and is the property of Sprint and/or its relevant affiliates and may contain restricted, confidential or privileged materials intended for the sole use of the intended recipient. Any review, use, distribution or disclosure is prohibited without authorization. MARKET NAME Rochester Rochester Rockford Rocky Mount Sacramento Saginaw Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco/Oakland San Jose Santa Barbara Sarasota Savannah Scranton Seattle/Tacoma South Bend Spokane Springfield St. Cloud St. Louis Stamford/New Haven Sterling Stockton Syracuse Tallahassee Tampa Terre Haute Tucson Tulsa Washington DC Wilmington Winston-Salem Youngstown STATE MN NY IL NC CA MI UT TX CA CA CA CA FL GA PA WA IN WA MA MN MO CT IL CA NY FL FL IN AZ OK DC NC NC OH 5 Sprint Ethernet Access 2013 © 2013 Sprint. This information is subject to Sprint policies regarding use and is the property of Sprint and/or its relevant affiliates and may contain restricted, confidential or privileged materials intended for the sole use of the intended recipient. Any review, use, distribution or disclosure is prohibited without authorization. 6 Carrier Ethernet Builds on Network Vision To Vancouver, BC Via New Westminster Blaine Everett East Wenatchee Spokane TACOMA SEATTLE Montreal,Montreal, QC QC (UNITEL)(Stentor) Helena Coeur d' Alene Alburg Springs Bismarck Portland Portland Essex Jct. Fargo Iron Mountain Billings Woburn Manchester North Chelsford Salem Worcester Framingham SPRINGFIELD St. Cloud Eau Claire Eugene Bandon Cable Head Saginaw Medford Owatonna Madison CHEYENNE Reno Jct. Chico OROVILLE Grand Island Peoria Colorado Springs PENNSAUKEN Tuckerton Pleasant Hill Martinsburg WASHINGTON Chillicothe Cincinnati Sciotoville Manassas Charleston Fredericksburg Charlottesville Richmond Lynchburg Newport News Roanoke Evansville Carbondale Warrensburg Jefferson City Bakersfield HarrisburgPhiladelphia NEW YORK Newark Edison Manasquan Trenton Manahawkin RELAY Lawrenceville Vincennes Lexington Louisville St. Louis Fresno Hackensack Sparta Franklin Morristown Wilmington Hagerstown Baltimore Ashland Huntington KANSAS CITY Topeka Pittsburgh Worthington Columbus Dayton ROACHDALE Springfield Champaign Terre Haute Modesto AKRON Wapole Green Hill Cable Head New London Bridgeport Stamford White Plains Shirley Cable Head Wallingford New Haven Scranton Erie Mansfield Fostoria Lafayette Indianapolis Bloomington Lincoln Denver Salinas Cable Head San Luis Opbispo Santa Maria South BendToledo Auburn Hammond Albany Binghamton Cleveland Youngstown OMAHA Salt Lake City SAN JOSE Windsor, ON DETROIT CHICAGO Cedar Rapids Dekalb ClintonSterling Reno Sacramento Rancho Cordova Walnut Creek San Ramon Oakland STOCKTON San Francisco Burlingame Palo Alto Des Moines Sioux City BUFFALO Grand Rapids Flint Milwaukee Lansing Pontiac Kalazamoo Sioux Falls Redding Boston Mansfield Syracuse Ft. Erie, ON Niagara Falls, ON (UniTel) (Stentor) Niagara Falls Rochester Appleton ST. PAUL Madisonville Franklinton Wichita Winston-Salem Las Vegas Santa Barbara BURBANK Ventura Camarillo Adelanto Van Nuys Covina Los Angeles RIALTO Los Angeles Palm Springs Downey ANAHEIM Santa Ana Mission Viejo Oceanside Solana Beach Claremont San Diego Greeneville NASHVILLE Knoxville Tulsa Van Buren Okarche Albuquerque Huntsville Smyrna Memphis Augusta FAIRFAX Lubbock Nogales, AZ Nogales, MX Dallas Irving Atmore Midland HAMMONDJct. Existing RDC 2011 WDC 2012 WDC Montgomery Jackson Longview Shreveport FT. WORTH Abilene Juarex, MX Waco Hearne Bryan Austin SATSUMA Biloxi Mobile Madison Chipley Tallahassee Pensacola Jacksonville (WTG) Jacksonville Daytona Beach Houston Lafayette Baton Rouge NEW ORLEANS Orlando (2 sites) Tampa (2 sites) San Antonio 2013 WDC Shared Tenant Facility Charleston Savannah Plano El Paso Columbia Birmingham Wichita Falls Bowie Las Cruces Cheraw Spartanburg Atlanta Tucson Hamlet ATLANTA Pine Bluff PHOENIX Southern Pines Charlotte Asheville Chattanooga Little Rock Oklahoma City Amarillo Raleigh ORLANDO Kissimmee Fort Meyers West Palm Beach (2 sites) Cable Head Ft. Lauderdale (2 sites) MIAMI (2 sites) Corpus Christi Mc Allen Reynosa, MX Network Vision Footprint © 2013 Sprint. This information is subject to Sprint policies regarding use and is the property of Sprint and/or its relevant affiliates and may contain restricted, confidential or privileged materials intended for the sole use of the intended recipient. Any review, use, distribution or disclosure is prohibited without authorization. 7 What Customers Want Enterprise Requirements • Service offer from Service Provider (Carrier) • Geography / coverage • Service uptime • Restoration time • Single and multi-failure • Latency • Packet Delivery Rate • Jitter • Vertical value-adds - encryption Source: Vertical Systems Group - ENS © 2013 Sprint. This information is subject to Sprint policies regarding use and is the property of Sprint and/or its relevant affiliates and may contain restricted, confidential or privileged materials intended for the sole use of the intended recipient. Any review, use, distribution or disclosure is prohibited without authorization. 8 Billions Source: Complied data across multiple analysts reports for services revenues including Infonetics, Ovum, Vertical, Insight, IDC, HeavyReading, Frost & Sullivan and Ciena Market Intelligence © 2013 Sprint. This information is subject to Sprint policies regarding use and is the property of Sprint and/or its relevant affiliates and may contain restricted, confidential or privileged materials intended for the sole use of the intended recipient. Any review, use, distribution or disclosure is prohibited without authorization. 9 Roadmap Carrier Ethernet Services Target 3Q High Speed Ethernet Private Line (HSEPL) Topology Target 2H 2014 Ethernet Private Line (EPL) Ethernet Virtual Private Line (EVPL) Ethernet LAN (E-LAN) P2P P2P P2MP & P2P MP2MP Resembles Direct Wavelength Service Private Line Frame Relay or Private Line LAN or MPLS Access Dedicated Ethernet access or CH, POP/ Switch, Ethernet Exchange, CPA Dedicated Access Above FastE Sprint Ethernet Access below 100M Sprint Ethernet Access Sprint Ethernet Access Initially 10G, 40G, 100G 2Mb to 1G Steps are TBD 2Mb to 1G Steps are TBD 2Mb to 10G Steps are TBD Class of Service No CoS--Full Bandwidth No CoS--Full Bandwidth with Dedicated Access •Real Time 99.9xx CIR •Business 99.x •Basic 98.x •Real Time 99.9xx CIR •Business 99.x •Basic 98.x Targeted SLAs Avail/ Low Latency/MTTR Avail/ Low Latency/MTTR Avail/Latency/ Jitter/DDR Avail//Latency/ Jitter/DDR Bandwidth/ Speeds © 2013 Sprint. This information is subject to Sprint policies regarding use and is the property of Sprint and/or its relevant affiliates and may contain restricted, confidential or privileged materials intended for the sole use of the intended recipient. Any review, use, distribution or disclosure is prohibited without authorization. 10 10 Converged Network Solution Sprint High-Speed Ethernet Private Line 2H2013 launch – 76 markets targeted with expansion continuing through 2014 • Akron, OH • Dallas, TX • Jackson, MS • New York, NY • Rialto, CA • Anaheim, CA • Des Moines, IA • Jacksonville, FL • Newark, NJ • Roachdale, IN • Atlanta, GA • Detroit, MI • Jefferson City, MO • Oakland, CA • Rochester, NY • Atmore (mobile), AL • Elkridge, MD • Kansas City, KS • Omaha, NE • Sacramento, CA • Baltimore, MD • Erie, PA • Lansing, MI • Orlando, FL • Salt Lake City, UT • Bellwood, IL • Fairfax, VA • Lee's Summit, MO • Oroville, CA • San Francisco, CA • Bloomington, IL • Ft. Lauderdale, FL • Los Angeles, CA • Pembroke Park, FL • San Jose, CA • Boston, MA • Fostoria, OH • Los Osos, CA • Pennsauken, NJ • Springfield, IL • Bowie, TX • Fresno, CA • Lubbock, TX • Philadelphia, PA • Springfield, MA • Buffalo, NY • Glenmont, NY • Martinsburg, WV • Phoenix, AZ • St. Louis, MO • Burbank, CA • Harrison, PA • Madison, FL • Pittsburgh, PA • Stockton, CA • Cedar rapids, IA • Hartford, CT • Miami, FL • Plano, TX • Syracuse, NY • Cheyenne, WY • Independence, MO • Montgomery, AL • Providence, RI • Tampa, FL • Chicago, IL • Indianapolis, IN • New Haven, CT • Rancho Cordova, CA • Van Nuys, CA • Cleveland, OH • Irving, TX • New Orleans, LA • Reno, NV • Westbury, NY • Clinton, MO Yellow Box = Carrier Hotel Locations © 2013 Sprint. This information is subject to Sprint policies regarding use and is the property of Sprint and/or its relevant affiliates and may contain restricted, confidential or privileged materials intended for the sole use of the intended recipient. Any review, use, distribution or disclosure is prohibited without authorization. 6 E-Line and E-LAN Services Definitions E-Line Service type • E-Line Service used to create – Ethernet Private Lines (EPL) P2P – Virtual Private Lines (EVPL) P2MP like Frame Relay (not shown) – High Speed Ethernet Private Line (HSEPL) – Customer Applications: Access, bulk data transfer, back-up, BCDR, SANs, data centers Point-to-Point EVC UNI UNI CE CE Carrier Ethernet Network E-LAN Service type • E-LAN CE Service used to create – – – – Multi-point to Multi-point MP2MP Multipoint L2 VPNs Transparent LAN Service Foundation for IPTV and Multicast networks etc. – Cloud computing, high growth UNI Carrier Ethernet Network MEF certified Carrier Ethernet products UNI: User Network Interface CE: Customer Equipment EVC: Ethernet Virtual Connection UNI CE Multipoint-to-Multipoint EVC © 2013 Sprint. This information is subject to Sprint policies regarding use and is the property of Sprint and/or its relevant affiliates and may contain restricted, confidential or privileged materials intended for the sole use of the intended recipient. Any review, use, distribution or disclosure is prohibited without authorization. 12 Converged Network Solution Sprint Carrier Ethernet Services Roadmap Phase 1: • Sprint HighSpeed Ethernet Private Line • Dedicated, point-to-point high-speed service • Supports 10G, 40G and 100G speeds • On Wavelength • Ciena 6500 platform (state of the art) • Ethernet private line services • Builds on foundation of Phase 1 reliable, high-speed core transport • Ethernet virtual private line services • Includes comprehensive Layer 2 switched Ethernet with point-to-point, point-tomultipoint and multipoint-to-multipoint services, with speeds 1G and below • Ethernet LAN services Targeting 3Q2013 Approved implementing Phase 2: Targeting 3Q2014 Pending Approval • E-Tree services • Known as “switched Ethernet” or true MEF Carrier Ethernet long haul services • Projected to use SPA-E access (could share same NNI) © 2013 Sprint. This information is subject to Sprint policies regarding use and is the property of Sprint and/or its relevant affiliates and may contain restricted, confidential or privileged materials intended for the sole use of the intended recipient. Any review, use, distribution or disclosure is prohibited without authorization. 13 Appendix © 2013 Sprint. This information is subject to Sprint policies regarding use and is the property of Sprint and/or its relevant affiliates and may contain restricted, confidential or privileged materials intended for the sole use of the intended recipient. Any review, use, distribution or disclosure is prohibited without authorization. Converged Network Solution Sprint Next Generation Architecture Sprint Next Generation WAN enables the provisioning of both wireless and wireline services, ideal for existing and emerging hosted and cloud services. Sprint will utilize Ciena 6500 hardware which provides: • High reliability • Improved performance and increased flexibility • Longer distances between regeneration points reduces hardware requirements and decreases latency • Ethernet over Wavelength Optical Service © 2013 Sprint. This information is subject to Sprint policies regarding use and is the property of Sprint and/or its relevant affiliates and may contain restricted, confidential or privileged materials intended for the sole use of the intended recipient. Any review, use, distribution or disclosure is prohibited without authorization. 15 Ethernet Terms Defined/UNI/ENNI Note that provider edge (UNI-N) devices are wholly within the provider Carrier Ethernet Network—Ciena 6500 and Juniper MX__ Ethernet Switch for Sprint LEC or AAV Access Provider Should be shown on the left also No LEC or AAV if meeting in Shared Tenant Site or Carrier Hotel EVC End User Subscriber Headquarters UNI Sprint LEC or AAV Provider ENNI Carrier Ethernet Network CE Carrier Ethernet Network ENNI-N UNI End User Subscriber Branch Site CE UNI-N UNI-C UNI Notes EVC: UNI: ENNI: Internet Hosted Applications Ethernet Virtual Connection User Network Interface. the physical demarcation point between the responsibility of the Service Provider and the responsibility of the Subscriber External Network to Network Interface; the physical demarcation point between the responsibility of the two Service Providers “In a Carrier Ethernet network, data is transported across Point-to-Point and Multipoint-to-Multipoint Ethernet Virtual Connections according to the attributes and definitions of the E-Line, E-LAN, and E-Tree services” 16 Services Using E-Line Service Type Ethernet High Speed Private Line (EPL)—Phase 1 Carrier Ethernet • Replaces a TDM Private line • Port-based service with single service (EVC) across dedicated UNIs providing site-to-site connectivity • Often delivered over SONET/SDH (Over Ciena 6500 Wave at Sprint) • Most popular with new providers due to its simplicity • Example shows two CEs devices each with dedicated port on Network equipment UNI Separate Hosted Ports CE Application or • 10G/40G/100G UNIs Branch Office CE Carrier Ethernet Network ISP POP CE Point-to-Point UNI CE Internet Services Using E-Line Service Type Ethernet Private Line (EPL)—Phase 2 Carrier Ethernet • Replaces a TDM Private line • Port-based service with single service (EVC) across dedicated UNIs providing site-to-site connectivity • Often delivered over SONET/SDH (Over Juniper MX Ethernet switch) • Most popular with new providers due to its simplicity • Example shows two CEs devices each with dedicated port on Network equipment • 2 Mbps to GigE Separate UNI Hosted Ports CE Application or • SPA-E increments UNIs Branch Office CE Carrier Ethernet Network ISP POP CE Point-to-Point UNI CE Internet Services Using E-Line Service Type Ethernet Virtual Private Line (EVPL)—Ph 2 Carrier Ethernet • More than just replacement of Frame Relay or ATM Layer 2 VPN services • Enables multiple virtual services connections each with multiple classes of service, delivered over single physical connection (UNI) to customer premises • Most efficient service and becoming the most popular – Optimizes use of bandwidth and ports • Supports “hub & spoke” connectivity via Service Multiplexed UNI at hub site Service Multiplexed Ethernet UNI UNI Internet UNI CE Carrier Ethernet Network CE UNI Point-to-Point CE Services Using E-LAN Service Type EP-LAN UNI Ethernet Private LAN-Phase 2 • Port-Based • Each UNI is dedicated to the EP-LAN service • Example use: Transparent LAN UNI CE CE UNI CE Multipoint-to-Multipoint EVP-LAN Ethernet Virtual Private LANPhase 2 • VLAN-Aware • Service Multiplexing allowed at UNI • Example use : Internet access and corporate VPN via one UNI ISP POP Internet CE UNI UNI Point-to-Point CE CE CE UNI Multipoint-to-Multipoint UNI 20 Services Using E-Tree Service Type EP-Tree Ethernet Private Tree (EV-Tree)-Phase 2 • Allow root-root and root-leaf communication Rooted-Multipoint (but not leaf-leaf) • Provides traffic segregation for cloud services, Root CE franchise applications, etc. UNI • Requires dedication of the UNIs to the single EP-Tree service Ethernet Virtual Private Tree (EVP-Tree)-Ph 2 UNI Leaf Leaf Leaf EVP-Tree • Allows each UNI to support multiple simultaneous Rooted-Multipoint services • Multiple Roots are supported for resiliency • Leaf for one service may be root for another service UNI CE Root Multipoint to Multipoint UNI CE 21