Monday, January 19, 2015

Chapter 2: Connecting to the WAN Part 4


 


Private WAN Infrastructures


An overview of private WAN infrastructures: Leased Lines, Dial-up, ISDN, Frame Relay, ATM, MPLS, Ethernet WANs, and VSAT.

 

Leased Lines

  • Dedicated permanent connections
  • Point-to-Point link
  • Pre-established WAN path
  • Usually leased from service providers
  • Also known as: Leased Circuits, Serial line, Point-to-Point link, and T1/E1 or T3/E3 links.
  • Available at different speeds
  • Price based on bandwidth and distance between points
  • Usually uses layer two protocols HDLC or PPP
  • America uses the T-Carrier system an Europe uses the E-Carrier system to define the digital capacity of a serial copper link.
  • Optical Carrier (OC) is used to define the digital capacity of a Fiber-Optic link.

These are charts of the T/E-Carrier speeds and OC speeds

 The Good

  • Simple point-to-point lines require minimal expertise to install and maintain
  • High quality links (with adequate bandwidth) removes latency/jitter
  • Always on dedicated connection good for applications that require high availability.

 

The Bad

  • Generally the most expensive. Not only the price of the connection, but each line needs it’s own interface on the end devices;p increasing hardware costs.
  • Fixed capacity requires the ISP to send people to adjust. (Limited flexibility)
©2014 Cisco Press, Connecting Networks Companion Guide



Dial-up

  • Used when there is no other option
  • Provides low-capacity dedicated switched connections
  • Uses copper cable on the local loop
  • Can be used for voice/data
  • Needs Modem for data transfers
  • Speed limited to <56kbps
  • Charges more during peak hours
  • Good for intermittent, low-volume data transfers
  • Most enterprises do not support dial-up
©2014 Cisco Press, Connecting Networks Companion Guide

ISDN

  • Circuit-Switching technology that allows PSTN to carry digital signals.
  • Higher-capacity than PSTN
  • Uses Time Division Multiplexing (TDM)
  • Uses 64kbps bearer channels (B) for data/voice
  • Uses 16kbps signaling channels (D) for call setup
  • Two types of interfaces Basic Rate Interface (BRI) and Primary Rate Interface (PRI)
  • Can be used to add capacity to a Leased Line
  • Can be used as a back up should a leased line fail.
  • Costs are per B channel
  • Known for being expensive
ISDN is becoming less popular because of DSL and cable internet is cheaper and faster

©2014 Cisco Press, Connecting Networks Companion Guide

 

TDM

  • Allows two or more signals on a single channel
  • Signals appear simultaneous but are actually taking turns on the channel

 

BRI

  • For use in homes/ small enterprise
  • Provides two B channels and one D channel
  • May only use one B channel and later activate the second
  • Top speed of 144kbps. 128kbps for data 16kbps for overhead
  • Has a connection set up time of <1second
  • May require a terminal adapter (TA) to connect to a router
  • Can not handle video but can handle multiple simultaneous voice/data transfers
©2014 Cisco Press, Connecting Networks Companion Guide

 

PRI

  • For use in larger organizations
  • North American PRI has twenty-three  B channels and one D channel giving it a top speed of 1.544mbps including the 16kbps for overhead.
  • Europe, Australia, and other countries PRI has thirty B channels and one D channel giving it a top speed of 2.048mbps including the 16kbps overhead.
  • Allows video conferencing and high-bandwidth data with no latency
©2014 Cisco Press, Connecting Networks Companion Guide

 

 

Frame Relay

  • Layer 2 non broadcast multi-access (NBMA) WAN technology.
  • Single router interface can connect to multiple sites using Private Virtual Circuits (PVCs)
  • PVCs carry voice/data traffic
  • Can support 4mbps or more
  • only leasing line to service provider edge, making it cheaper.
  • PVCs are Identified by DLCIs this enables bidirectional communications
©2014 Cisco Press, Connecting Networks Companion Guide

 

 

 

Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM)

  • Capable of transferring voice/video/data through private or public networks
  • Uses Cell-Based instead of Frame-Based architecture
  • Calls have a fixed length of 53bytes
  • Cells have a 5byte header leaving 48bytes of payload
  • The smaller data cells removes the delay and allows video/voice to travel without delay.
  • Higher overhead from reassembling data packets
  • Typical ATM links require 20% more bandwidth to carry the same volume of traffic as Frame Relay
  • Designed to be scalable T1/E1-OC12 and up
  • Offers both PVC and SVC, PVC being more common.
  • Allows multiple VCs on a signal leased line connection to the network edge.

 

©2014 Cisco Press, Connecting Networks Companion Guide

 

 

Ethernet WAN

Ethernet was designed for LANs and was unusable for WANs because of maximum length restrictions (1km). Newer Ethernet WANs use Fiber. The IEEE 1000Base-LX supports fiber lengths of 5km and IEE 1000Base-GX supports length of 70km.
  • Known as: Metropolitan Ethernet (MetroE), Ethernet over MPLS (EoMPLS) and Virtual Private LAN Service (VPLS)
  • Provides a switched, high-bandwidth, layer 2 network
  • Capable of handling data/voice/video on a converged network
  • No additional hardware/data conversion needed
  • Inexpensively connect to multiple sites and the internet, in a metropolitan area
  • Cheaper, than other technologies, to connect to an existing Ethernet LAN
  • Easier, than TDM/Frame Relay, to host/use VOIP/stream/broadcast video


Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS)

  • A multiprotocol high-performance WAN technology
  • Ability to handle any payload (IPv4/IPv6/Ethernet/ATM/DSL/Frame Relay) *protocols*
  • Supports a range of WAN links (T/E-Carrier/Ethernet/ATM/Frame Relay/DSL) *physical links*
  • Uses short-Path labels instead of IP addresses
  • Labels identify paths between routers not endpoints
  • Routes IPv4/IPv6 and switches the others
  • MPLS is primarily a service provider WAN technology
This is why Ethernet WANs work. The Ethernet connection is encapsulated with the MPLS label than is transferred, over fiber, to the other side. The encapsulation is removed and leaves the Ethernet signal.

©2014 Cisco Press, Connecting Networks Companion Guide


Very Small Aperture Terminal (VSAT)

  • Uses satellite communications
  • Can be used where there is no service provider locations
  • Creates a private WAN while providing connectivity to remote locations
  • A router connects to a satellite dish that communicates with a satellite in geosynchronous orbit (22,236 Miles). The satellite then sent the signal back town to the end location.
*The book doesn't say, but this is expensive and slow*

©2014 Cisco Press, Connecting Networks Companion Guide


 This chapter will be continued in Part 5.

No comments :

Post a Comment