[155128] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: Rate shaping in Active E FTTx networks
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Erik Muller)
Thu Jul 26 23:22:13 2012
Date: Thu, 26 Jul 2012 20:21:21 -0700
From: Erik Muller <erikm@buh.org>
To: nanog@nanog.org
In-Reply-To: <E13755D5-359A-41D0-A539-7B402BEE3BA7@lixfeld.ca>
Errors-To: nanog-bounces+nanog.discuss=bloom-picayune.mit.edu@nanog.org
On 7/26/12 12:45 , Jason Lixfeld wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I'm trying to gauge what operators are doing to handle per-subscriber
> Internet access PIR bandwidth in Active E FTTx networks.
>
> I presume operators would want to limit the each subscriber to a
> certain PIR, but within that limit, do things like perform preferential
> treatment of interactive services like steaming video or Skype, etc.,
> ahead of non-interactive services like FTP.
>
> My impression is that a subscriber's physical access in these networks
> is exponentially larger than their allocated amount of Internet access.
> This would leave ample room on the physical access access for other
> services like Voice and IPTV that might run on separate VLANs than the
> Internet access VLAN. That said, I doubt there's really that much of a
> concern about allocating PIR on these other service VLANs.
>
> So in terms of PIR for Internet access, is there some magic box that
> sits between the various subscriber aggregation points and the core,
> which takes care of shaping the subscriber's Internet access PIR, while
> making sure that the any preferential treatment of interactive services
> is performed.
>
> Is that a lot to ask for one box? The ridiculously deep buffers
> required in order to shape to PIR vs. police to it (because policing to
> a PIR is just plain ugly) and the requirements to perform any sort of
> preferential packet treatment above and beyond that seem like quite a
> lot to ask of one box. Am I wrong?
>
> Who might make a box like this, if it exists? And if not, what are
> folks using the achieve these results?
>
> Thanks in advance for any insights..
I've seen a few deployments using Packeteer's (now BlueCoat) PacketShaper
for this purpose; the only downside I've heard with that platform is cost.
Sandvine and Fortinet are a couple other options that have different
approaches, but have a lot of this functionality rolled in alongside their
broader security services.
-e