Lecture Introduction Network Management Maintenance Security Part 1
Lecture Introduction Network Management Maintenance Security Part 1
Defined Networks
EEET2294 / EEET2295
• This session is all about setting the context of why network management is import
for telecommunications networks.
– You need to understand the environment that ISPs have to work in.
– What are the requirements of network management systems
– Why do we need to manage telecommunications systems using integrated,
open, distributed, object-oriented management systems
• Terminology
– You need to understand some of the key terminology used.
– Understand and be able to provide examples of
• Extensibility, Scalability
• Reliability, Availability
• Maintainability, Maturity
• and many others
Awareness of:
• concepts & issues involved in the technical management of medium to large sized
telecommunication networks
• current technologies & techniques in addressing issues
• the context in which issues arise
Subject Philosophy:
• Emphasis is on generic concepts and techniques
– i.e. not on a particular implementation specific things come and go, but the
concepts remain the same
The context
– Political
– Social
– Technological
• High-bandwidth access
– xDSL, cable modems, 3G mobile, LTE mobile (4G), GPON etc ->
5G
• Rapid change
– product life cycles getting shorter
2. Gilder’s Law: proposed by George Gilder in 1997, prolific author and prophet of
the new technology age
– the total bandwidth of communication systems triples every twelve months for
the next 25 years.
– Bandwidth grows at least three times faster than computer power.
– While computer power doubles every eighteen months (Moore’s law),
communications power doubles every six months.
– The cost per communication bit will begin to sink farther than it has fallen
previously.
– Eventually the cost of a telephone call, or of a bit transmitted, will be “free.”
– New developments seem to confirm that bandwidth availability will continue
to expand at a rate that supports Gilder’s Law.
2. Gilder’s Law: proposed by George Gilder in 1997, prolific author and prophet of
the new technology age
• Computer networks
– evolved from around 1960’s onwards
– TCP/IP and the internet started bringing together LANs, MANs and WANs
– Very little regulation
– based on packet switching - share resources equally
– Huge markets, mass production
• Poorly managed historically
– if poor service, add more bandwidth, more switches etc. despite low
utilisation
• User expectation of service different
– Little or no QoS
difficult or impossible to reserve bandwidth
not designed for real-time traffic, so delay is a major problem
• Current IP technology
– Current IP technology cannot guarantee ANY of these requirements in very
large (telco-style) networks
• Industry trend
– The vast majority of telecommunications carriers (‘telcos’) are currently
scrapping the circuit switched core network built up over many decades and
replacing them with IP networks
Circuit switched systems will be gone eventually!
• Why?
– Why are telcos doing this when they know that current IP technology cannot
do what existing technology can?
– There are several reasons, but the biggest one is of course MONEY
– Most telcos are businesses whose sole purpose for existence is to return a
profit to their shareholders
• Convergence
– Telcos want one network that can provide all services for all users
– virtual circuit switched systems can deliver the required services
Connection oriented packet switching
Packet switching networks emulate circuit switched networks
• Rapid change
– IP networks give telcos the flexibility to rapidly introduce new services and
adapt to changing market conditions
– need to stay competitive
Eg. Give customers direct access to configuration, billing and
performance measurement information
• Security (Trust)
– Security is becoming one most important footstone for modern network
services.
– Creating trusted environments for the new service world will require:
mechanisms to monitor, display, and analyze information flows between
nodes participating in complex collaborations in order to detect and
assess security risk;
mechanisms to ensure trust and confidence in services created by end-
users themselves, i.e., built-in safeguards and guarantees so that others
trust the new services.
Peer-to-peer services today are mainly associated with activities of
doubtful legality, such as illegal trading of rights-protected content.
Technical and legal mechanisms should be found to bring about changes
in attitudes.
• Interoperability
– Service interoperability to provide the ability to integrate largely stand-alone
services with similar ones and with other services, for instance from the
business domain;
– semantic interoperability, so as to provide the (automated) understanding of
the information exchanged and ensure quality of service;
– interoperability of the service layer with network and application layers from
different providers.
• Context-awareness
– The growing importance of context-awareness, targeting enriched
experience, intuitive communications services fitting mobile lifestyle, and
mobilized workforce will in the future lead
intelligent services that are smart but invisible to users.
– The social and economic benefits of making ICT-based services in areas as
diverse as health, sustainable environment, safety, and transportation more
intelligent and adaptive are recognized as a new driver for network services.
RMIT University©2017 Network Management and Software Defined Networks 24
Where are we going?
• Automation
– We’ve all heard about telcos slashing their work forces
– IP networks will allow a huge automation of common telco tasks such as
faults, configuration, accounting, performance and security
– The labour has shifted from technicians to IP architects
• Network Management
– Network Management is one of the biggest challenges facing telcos as they
move to IP networks
– Part of the problem is managing the huge IP networks themselves, but
another part is managing a mix of technologies effectively
• Managing Change
– As the pace of technologies increases, we’re also having to operate
networks that have many ‘generations’ of technology in place
– Thus, even though we’re moving towards convergence, the process is
resulting in networks that are increasingly heterogeneous
• Autonomic computing
– Besides enhanced user experience for human-to-human or human-to-
machine interactions, autonomous machine-to-machine communication has
gained significant importance.
– More and more business transactions and processes will be automated and
will take place based on autonomous decisions without any human
intervention.
– These will be often based on or influenced by context information obtained
from the physical world, without the requirement of human input to describe
the situation.
– Enabling environment where real-world physical phenomena are
electronically sampled and influenced by heterogeneous sensors and
sensor/actuator islands and are at the fingertips of applications and
humans alike, thus linking the physical world with the future networks.
– Consequently, human environment can be adjusted to human needs, or we
can adjust our behavior following environmental changes.
• Integration
– The network will become increasingly integrated with phones, televisions
sets, home appliances, portable digital assistants, and a range of other small
hardware devices, providing an unprecedented, nearly uniform level of
integrated data communications.
– Users will be able to access, status, and control this connected infrastructure
from anywhere on the network.
• Expanded Services
– Services (not only those for the end Users but also network services) are
likely to be comprised of a variety of components, provided by a variety of
Players (e.g., ASP, Prosumers) and running over a decentralized hosting
(low-cost) infrastructure (including end-user devices, PC, servers, storage,
computing and networking/forwarding resources, etc.).
• Expanded Services
– This vision is expected to pave the way for a deep integration of service and
network frameworks for network convergence thus allowing broad federations
of Players (e.g., Network and Service Providers and Application Service
Providers) according to new business models.
– Openness, broad federations of Players, and do-it-yourself innovative
services and knowledge management will allow people to be the true center
of Information Society.
• What is it?
– The network operation must also ensure that
network resources are used effectively under
normal as well as under problem conditions.
– Traffic controls are necessary to ensure the
smooth flow of information through the
network.
– Network management functions includes:
Monitoring the performance of the
network,
Detecting and recovering from faults,
Configuring the network resources,
Maintaining accounting information for
cost and billing purposes,
Providing security by controlling access
to the information flows in the network.
• What is it?
– For users:
Ensuring that users of the network get access to a variety of services:
when they want (on-demand)
how they want (specified quality of service, reliability) & pay
accordingly
– For network operators:
Ensuring that services can be reliably provided in a timely and
professional manner
Ability to rapidly change services or characteristics
Minimise cost / maximise profit
Remain competitive in the marketplace
• What is it important?
– For telecommunications vendors:
A way to make a lot of money, as operators will pay huge dollars for
effective network management tools
A headache, because they can’t find enough people with the right skills
to employ for development and implementation of network management
tools
• Why is it important ?
– To remain competitive in the marketplace, operators must:
provide services in a professional manner (certain quality of service)
be able to deploy new services and manage these alongside their
existing infrastructure & within their operating environment
minimise operating costs (labour!)
– Scale:
Networks are getting bigger
Need an efficient way of managing very large and complex,
heterogeneous networks
Automated or semi-automated network management is one possibility
• Why is it important ?
– Complexity:
Desire to make network management tools intelligent enough to allow
non-technical people to manage networks
Also desire to implement certain business tools within a network
management framework
Eg. Give all residential customers a 50% discount for calls longer
than 20 minutes for the next 4 Sundays
• Fault
• Accounting
• Configuration
• Performance
• Security
Fault Management Overview
• When fault occurs
Determine where
Isolate rest of network so it can continue to function
Reconfigure or modify network to minimize impact of operation without
failed components
Repair or replace failed components
• Fault is abnormal condition that requires action to repair
Errors (e.g. single bit error on line) occur and are not faults
Fault Management User Requirements
• Monitoring
Tracks activities
What is the level of capacity
utilization?
Is there excessive traffic?
Has throughput been reduced to
unacceptable levels?
Are there bottlenecks?
Is response time increasing?
• Controlling
Make adjustments to improve
performance
• Identify resources to be monitored
Metrics and values for resources
Performance Management User Requirements
• Scalable
– must work well for managing 10 devices, or 10 million devices
• Inter-operable
– Must inter-work with devices and management systems from multiple
vendors - conform to standards
• Inter-technology capable
– Must work for new and old devices
• Flexible
– Able to be adapted to provide for future needs
• Cost-effective
– Meet certain performance requirements
• Simple, configurable interface
– Usually a GUI
• Complete Solutions
– Operators want to be able to buy a complete solution to their management
needs in the one product
– Must be flexible to adapt to changing, future needs
• Why open?
– No single supplier can give all the telcos worldwide what they need in the
next decade
– Telcos have often been ‘burnt’ in the past by proprietary systems
– We don’t want another Microsoft!
– Telcos systems are going to need to interact with each other