Next Generation Transport Networks Data, Management, and Control Planes provides a tutorial and reference information for next generation telecommunication network technologies. This insightful and accessible overview includes key technologies that comprise the backbone of the networking infrastructure, such as access, metro and long-haul segments. Written by industry veterans, this work uniquely balances and blends three key perspectives on high-speed networks fundamental to understanding transport mechanisms for potential implementation: the data, management, and control planes. Readers will readily learn how transport networks function, how they are used, how layers are managed, and how standards guide developing technologies.
Included in this volume:
Industry standards from the ITU-T (G- and M-series), ANSI/ATIS, and IEEE
Future data plane trends in terms of mapping Ethernet frames/streams or IP packets into PoS and GFP for WAN transport; virtual concatenation with LCAS of SONET, DS1/DS3/E1/E3, and OTN signals; optical transport including G.709 OTN; and MAN/WAN data access through IEEE 802.17 RPR
Switching: High speed circuit and packet switching using multi-stage Clos as well as multi-dimensional distributed switching approaches
Control Plane - SS7, ATM PNNI, Automatic Switched Optical/Transport Network Architecture (G.ASON/G.ASTN) and protocols for routing and signaling- GMPLS, RSVP-TE, OSPF-TE
Transport Network architectures for access, metro and long-haul segments
Self-healing: perspectives on protection and restoration across ring and mesh topologies; discussion of new and emerging approaches for restoration such as p-cycle, SBPP, PWCE
Transport Network Management- TMN layers, transport network management requirements, technologies - SNMP, SOAP/XML, TL1, and OSMINE
The depth and breadth of coverage coupled with carefully chosen illustration, e.g. of the complex-frame formats, and summary tables for quick reference, make Next Generation Transport Networks Data, Management, and Control Planes valuable for telecommunications professionals as well as a handy reference for network researchers.