Mobile Networks Evolving to all-IP backbone / 2nd edition
March 15, 2010
Author: C. Mylonas
Published: March 2010
Pages: 27
Pricing:
Single-user License: $ 495 USD
Company-wide License: $ 1,295 USD
Team License (Up to 5 Users): $ 865 USD
Mobile IP, LTE, IP Migration, MPLS, IGP, IP Traffic Engineering, VoIP
Overview:
Mobile operators have made substantial investments in legacy protocols. Third generation (3G) data networking have brought carriers into the IP world and fourth generation (4G) data will require an all-IP backbone. Though a considerable amount of knowledge about IP has been accumulated within mobile operators, their IP investment is relatively young when compared to both IP itself and their respective legacy protocols and infrastructure.
This report targets primarily network design teams within mobile operators and assumes that the reader has a good understanding of IP protocols and related technologies; it addresses most, if not all, of the problems and questions that such teams will face while evolving a legacy backbone into an all-IP one.
More specifically, the following subjects are addressed:
Optimizing an IP network for use as a backbone for a mobile operator: Not all IP networks can deliver either the functionality or the critical level of performance that a mobile backbone requires. This section focuses on the elements that should be fine-tuned and modified so as to produce the desired behavior.
MPLS Traffic Engineering as a method to maximize the ROI and effectively utilize all available resources within the network. The benefits that pseudo-wires (PWE3) introduced.
OSS/NMS enhancements to support the new functionality
VoIP - migrating from a circuit switched voice transport into VoIP transport:
Pre-requisites imposed on the IP backbone.
The effect of codecs on the service and how their parameters should match each network
How to calculate the VoIP bandwidth (hidden overheads) starting from the traffic on the legacy network
Mobile backhaul: How to use the IP backbone to backhaul 3G and 2G traffic
- LTE and IP issues and challenges
The report also presents vendor-specific solutions. For the executive level readers of the report; we also present how each choice affects and impacts budgets and operating expenses and evaluate the companies and the services they offer. The vendors evaluated in the report are: Alcatel-Lucent, Cisco Systems, Juniper and Tellabs.
The second edition of this report adds the following:
- Industry update:
- Juniper Networks focused approach to mobile operators
- Cisco Systems acquisition of Starent Networks
Tellabs acquisition of WiChorus
Market insight: How to make an end to end evaluation of a network from an investor's point of view
- Evaluation about how an investor can evaluate a mobile network
Audience:
Mobile operators
Network Design teams working their way from legacy protocols into IP
Executive Level individuals wanting a concise view of their choices and how these choices could affect their companies
Vendors
Infrastructure suppliers seeking to better understand the future of IP for mobile operators
- Software developers seeking opportunities for IP based OSS and application software
Questions Answered in Report
Which are the most important VoIP details
What is the approach of specific vendors (Alcatel-Lucent, Juniper Networks, Tellabs, Cisco Systems)
How each vendor is measured against the same metrics and how choosing each one would affect budget and operations
- What is a mobile backhaul solution (drivers, technical specification, synchronization and clocking, migrating from a legacy solution)
- How to prepare and optimize an IP/MPLS network to act as a core network for a mobile operator (IGP tuning, MPLS-TE, MPLS VPNs, OSS/NMS, other important details)
Table of Contents:
1 Table of Contents. 2
1. Executive Summary. 3
2 Preparing and Optimising the network. 4
2.1 IGP. 4
2.2 MPLS. 5
2.3 Other. 6
3 Traffic Engineering. 6
4 OSS/NMS support 7
5 VoIP. 8
5.1 QoS. 8
5.2 Bandwidth Calculations. 9
5.3 QoS Misconcept 11
6 Mobile Backhaul 12
6.1 Drivers. 12
6.2 Technical Specification. 13
6.3 Reference Model 13
6.4 Sync and Clocking. 14
6.5 Migration. 15
6.6 LTE and IP. 15
7 Vendors' approaches. 16
7.1 Alcatel-Lucent 16
7.2 Cisco Systems. 18
7.3 Juniper Networks. 20
7.4 Tellabs. 21
8 Investing in Mobile Networks. 22
9 Conclussions. 23
10 Closing note. 23
11 ANNEX I - References. 24
12 ANNEX II - List of figures. 24
13 ANNEX III - List of Tables. 24
14 ANNEX IV - ABBREVIATIONS. 25
15 ANNEX V - About the author