Sprint Carrier Ethernet Roadmap

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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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