4-Introduction to IP
Transkript
Ip/MPLS Teknolojileri Giriş Murat AKIN [email protected] IPD Network Support Engineer QA&CC, SPS&Deployment Alcatel-Lucent Turkiye December 2009 Agenda 1. Alcatel-Lucent Teletaş Türkiye 2. Introduction to IP (Internet Protocol) 3. OSI Reference Model 4. Basics of Networking 5. Basics Routing 6. Ipv6 7. Sorular & Bilgilendirme © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved 1 Alcatel-Lucent Teletaş Türkiye 3 | Technical Sales Forum | May 2008 © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved Alcatel-Lucent Global Alcatel-Lucent’ın vizyonu dünyanın iletişim şeklini geliştirerek insanların hayatını zenginleştirmektir. Eşi olmayan çözümleri sunar, müşterilerle ilişkilerini geliştirir ve yeteneğiyle insanların yaşamlarını zenginleştirir. Alcatel, elektrik, elektronik, ulaştırma ve telekomünikasyon alanlarda faaliyet göstermek üzere kurulmuştur. Bugün sadece telekomünikasyon sektöründe çalışmaktadır. Çin’de tesis kuran ilk yabancı kuruluştur. 2000 yılında ATM’de dünya lideri olan Newbridge’i satın alır. 2006’da Nortel’in UMTS birimini satın alır, aynı yıl Alcatel ve Lucent Technologies firmaları birleşerek Alcatel-Lucent (ALU) ismini alır. 130 ülkede faaliyet göstermektedir. 100 farklı ulusa ait, 77.000 çalışanı bulunmaktadır. 16 milyar € yıllık geliri (2008), 2.5 milyar € ARGE bütçesi bulunmaktadır. 26.000’den fazla patente sahiptir. (2008 patenti, 2700’den fazla) 4 | EPC update for EMEA | March 2009 Copyright © Alcatel-Lucent 2009. All Rights Reserved. “ 5 | Presentation Title | Month 2008 - Alcatel-Lucent Global Copyright © Alcatel-Lucent 2009. All Rights Reserved. Alcatel-Lucent Teletaş Türkiye 1965 yılında, PTT bünyesinde ARGE laboratuvarı olarak kuruldu. 1984 senesinde Teletaş Telekomünikasyon Endüstri A.Ş. olarak Anonim Şirkete dönüştürüldü. Aynı yıl Alcatel Bell firmasından alınan lisans ile Sistem 12 sayısal santrallarının AR-GE ve üretim faaliyetleri başladı. 1988 yılında halka açılan ilk Türk şirketi olan Alcatel Teletaş, 1993 yılında telekomünikasyonda dünya devi Alcatel’in önemli bir üretim ve AR-GE birimi oldu. Alcatel Teletaş'ın %35' i halka açık olarak ĐMKB'de işlem görmektedir. Geri kalan % 65 ise Alcatel N.V.' ye aittir. IP (Service Routers) 400+ Mühendis Wireline Access (ISAM, GPON) Yurtiçi / Yurtdışı Destek Wireless (3G/4G, Femto, Wimax, LTE) TAC / TEC Centers - EMEA Converged Networks (NGN / IMS ) Tiger Teams !!! Optics (SDH, WDM, WT) Teknolojiyi sadece uygulayan değil, çözümler üreten global bir firma Application Development (SW) IPTV & IPTC Competence Centers 6 | EPC update for EMEA | March 2009 Dünyanın her yerinde farklı projelerde çalışma imkanı, farklı kıtaları ve kültürleri tanıma şansı Copyright © Alcatel-Lucent 2009. All Rights Reserved. Alcatel-Lucent Teletaş – Uluslarası Destek Merkezi – Avustralya 7 | Presentation Title | Month 2008 Copyright © Alcatel-Lucent 2009. All Rights Reserved. Alcatel-Lucent Teletaş – Uluslarası Destek Merkezi – Yeni Zelanda IP/MPLS Project 8 | Presentation Title | Month 2008 Copyright © Alcatel-Lucent 2009. All Rights Reserved. Alcatel-Lucent Teletaş – Uluslarası Destek Merkezi – Italya 9 | Presentation Title | Month 2008 Copyright © Alcatel-Lucent 2009. All Rights Reserved. Alcatel-Lucent Teletaş – Uluslarası Destek Merkezi – Burkina Faso 10 | Presentation Title | Month 2008 Copyright © Alcatel-Lucent 2009. All Rights Reserved. Alcatel-Lucent Teletaş – Uluslarası Destek Merkezi – Germany IP Devision MURAT AKIN Copyright © Alcatel-Lucent 2009. All Rights Reserved. Impsat, AT&T / USA FT, PSN, CEGETEL, Orange VTG, Monaco Telecom / France Teleonor / Norway KPN / Netherlands Telefonica / Spain Telmex, Avantel, Maxcom / Mexico Telecom Austria, H3G / Austria Belgacom / Belgium PT, Vodafone / Portugal BT, Isle of Man / England Lattelecom / Latvia TT, Telcom, Sabanci T., Doruknet, AtlasOnline, Eser T. / Turkey Slovak Telecom / Slovakia Net COLOGNE, EWETEL, MNET, TSI, Deutsche Telecom / Germany China Telecom / China HIPCC / India Combelga, USI / Russia PTK/Kosovo WIND / Italy Maroc Telecom, Maroc Connect / Morocco OND OPTICS – AND_DSL – IPD – CONV_FIX_NGN Globacom / Nigeria UTS / Caribbean Entel / Chile QualityNET / Kuwait CTE Telecom / El Salvador Brasil Telecom, Impsat / Brasil Jordan Telecom / Jordan Impsat / Peru Copaco / Paraguay Bezeq / Israel Titan / Australia Copyright © Alcatel-Lucent 2009. All Rights Reserved. Impsat, T2 / Argentina Antel / Uruguay Singtel, Telstra / Singapore TNZ / New Zealand 2 Introduction to IP (Internet Protocol) 13 | Technical Sales Forum | May 2008 © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved Why IP for Network Infrastructure for Services IP traffic continues to grow 50-100% each year due to continued growth in Web, peer-to-peer, IPTV and Internet video traffic Bandwidth per subscriber is climbing with HSI services shifting to 100M per subscriber from today’s typical 1–4M for Internet access Residential Worldwide IP MPLS VPN service and Ethernet service revenues will continue to grow from $25B in CY07 to $47B in CY11 Business With expanding portfolio of business services, Service Providers are looking to converge multiple services onto one network to contain costs Adoption of HSDPA along with availability of new 3G smart phones (e.g. BlackBerry, iPhone) is driving increasing traffic on wireless networks for mobile data/video/web applications LTE will support even more BW per subscriber putting further demand on wireless backhaul and core networks 14 | 7750 SR Overview © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved Mobility History of TCP/IP Protocols Developed in the 1970s by pioneering network engineers Vinton Cerf and Bob Kahn Intended to provide a common framework to allow the interworking of diverse network hardware and computer systems Included in early releases of the UNIX operating system During the 1980s, primarily used by U.S. universities and research institutions During the 1990s, increasingly adopted by commercial enterprises Provides the underlying technological framework of the Internet today Alcatel-Lucent Scalable IP Networks © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved Internet – US National Backbone for IP 16 | EPC for EMEA | March 2009 © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved Sadece Evlerimizde Değil, Mobil Dünyasında da Yüksek Hızlı Đletişim NGN + IMS 2G SMS 9.6240 kb/s 2.5/2.75G 128384 kb/s Web ATM 3G 2-14.4 Mb/s TV Yayını TDM IP/MPLS Omurga IP/Ethernet UMA 3G HSxPA 100+ Mb/s WiMAX 3G LTE Gerçek Zamanlı Multimedia Mobil Dünyasında Kablosuz Erişim Şebekesi Sabit ve Mobil iletişim dünyaları arasındaki kesişim Servis Tipleri IP Teknolojisinin Gelişimi © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved Tükiye – Erişim Hızları 2008 Türkiye’de Telekomünikasyon 1995 1980 1970 cartoon Yaş Yaşası asın !! Artı Artık evimizde internetimiz ve bir ee-mail hesabı hesabımız var Şehirlerarası ehirlerarası arama yapmak iç için saatlerce beklediğ beklediğimiz gü günler 33Kbps & 56Kbps High Speed DialDialUp Artik telefon sırası rası beklemiyoruz © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved Internete bağ bağlı olmanı olmanın ötesinde görüntü ntü ve dosya paylaşı mı paylaşım yapabildiğ yapabildiğimiz gü günlere geldik 2 Mbps – Yüksek Hı Hızlı zlı Đnternet IP Header 19 | EPC for EMEA | March 2009 © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved 3 OSI & TCP/IP Reference Model 20 | Technical Sales Forum | May 2008 © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved OSI — Interesting Facts Never intended for educational purposes Formed the basis of the OSI protocol suite, to create a widely adopted suite of protocols to be used by international networks The 7-layer model created by Bachman and Canepa was the only model submitted to the ISO subcommittee in March 1978 Introduced to compete with IBM’s SNA, due to the company‘s closed architecture Alcatel-Lucent Scalable IP Networks © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved OSI Model – 7 Layers OSI Application Presentation Upper Layers Session Transport Network Lower Layers Data Link Physical Alcatel-Lucent Scalable IP Networks © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved Packetized Data Transfer 5 1 23 IP & Routing Overview When an application needs to send data remotely it hands the data over to the Application Layer. The remote Application receives the original data, sent by the Source application. DATA DATA Application Application DATA Presentation Session DATA Presentation DATA Transport DATA Network Session DATA DATA Transport Network DATA DATA DATA Data Link DATA Data Link DATA DATA Physical Physical … 01010011000111000 … 7750 Service Router Alcatel-Lucent Services Implementation Course All Rights Reserved © Alcatel-Lucent 2007 Physical Wire The OSI and TCP/IP Model 5 1 24 IP & Routing Overview A layered network model allows: Simplifying complex procedures Vendor interoperability Better fault isolation A modular plug-and-play functionality The OSI Model The TCP/IP Model Application Presentation Application Session Transport Layer 3 versus Network Transport Internet Data Link Network Interfaces Physical 7750 Service Router Alcatel-Lucent Services Implementation Course All Rights Reserved © Alcatel-Lucent 2007 Layer 2 The Network Layer 5 1 25 IP & Routing Overview The OSI Model The TCP/IP Model Application Presentation Application Session Layer 3 Transport Transport Network Internet Layer 2 Data Link Network Interfaces Physical The Internet Protocol: • provides a globally unique addressing scheme • provides a standardized packet format to route the packets to their destinations 7750 Service Router Alcatel-Lucent Services Implementation Course All Rights Reserved © Alcatel-Lucent 2007 TCP/IP Suite vs. OSI OSI TCP/IP Suite Application Application Presentation Services Session Transport Transport Internet Network Protocol Data Link Network Interfaces Physical Alcatel-Lucent Scalable IP Networks © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved TCP/IP Layering — Application Layer TCP/IP Layers Application Services Application User interface to the network User Applications Transport E-mail Telnet FTP Internet WWW Protocol Network Interfaces Alcatel-Lucent Scalable IP Networks © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved TCP/IP Layering — Transport Layer TCP/IP Layers Application Services Transport Communication between applications Reliable data transfer Flow control Transport Sequencing of data Internet Protocol Network Interfaces Alcatel-Lucent Scalable IP Networks © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved TCP/IP Layering — Internet Protocol Layer TCP/IP Layers Application Services Internet Protocol Common services and addressing Unique network addressing scheme to identify hosts Transport Internet Routing protocols for path determination End-to-end forwarding of datagrams Protocol Network Interfaces Alcatel-Lucent Scalable IP Networks © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved TCP/IP Layering — Network Interfaces TCP/IP Layers Application Services Network Interfaces Physical transfer of data Ethernet Transport ATM Frame Relay PPP Internet Protocol Network Interfaces Alcatel-Lucent Scalable IP Networks © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved Application Encapsulation TCP/IP Layers From: [email protected] Application To: [email protected] Services Transport Internet Protocol Network Interfaces Alcatel-Lucent Scalable IP Networks © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved Message Body Transport Encapsulation TCP/IP Layers From: [email protected] Application Message Body To: [email protected] Services Source: Transport 1223 Header Destination: 25 Internet Protocol Network Interfaces Alcatel-Lucent Scalable IP Networks © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved Message Body Body IP Encapsulation TCP/IP Layers From: [email protected] Application Message Body To: [email protected] Services Source: Transport Internet Protocol 1223 Header Destination: 25 Source:138.120.191.122 Dest.: 197.199.45.12 Network Interfaces Alcatel-Lucent Scalable IP Networks Message Body Body © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved Header Header Body Data Link Encapsulation TCP/IP Layers From: [email protected] Application Message Body To: [email protected] Services Source: Transport Internet Protocol 1223 Header Message Body Body Destination: 25 Source:138.120.191.122 Header Header Dest.: 197.199.45.12 Body Network Interfaces DA: 00-D0-F6-A4-26-5C SA: 00-20-60-37-BB-5F Alcatel-Lucent Scalable IP Networks © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved Hdr Hdr Hdr Body F C S The Internet Protocol – IP Addressing 5 1 35 IP & Routing Overview Public address range* Private address range Multicast address range Scientific address range Loopback address range Default address range Class A: 1.H.H.H 126.H.H.H Class B: 128.N.H.H 191.N.H.H Class C: 192.N.N.H 223.N.N.H Class A: 10.H.H.H Class B: 169.254.H.H Class B: 172.16.H.H 172.31.H.H Class C: 192.168.N.H Class D: 224.H.H.H 239.H.H.H Class E: 240.H.H.H 255. H.H.H 127.H.H.H 0.H.H.H *Minus the Private address ranges 7750 Service Router Alcatel-Lucent Services Implementation Course All Rights Reserved © Alcatel-Lucent 2007 The Internet Protocol – IP packet header structure 5 1 36 IP & Routing Overview 4 0 Version 16 8 IHL Type of Service Identification Time To Live 31 19 Total Length Flags Protocol Fragment Offset Header Checksum Source IP Address Destination IP Address Options 7750 Service Router Alcatel-Lucent Services Implementation Course All Rights Reserved © Alcatel-Lucent 2007 Padding 4 Basics of Networking 37 | Technical Sales Forum | May 2008 © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved Network Devices — Examples Switch Router Repeater Hub Module 1 | 38 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent Layer 1 Devices A repeater retransmits the Ethernet signal down a wire and amplifies it to be used again. The repeater extends the reach of Ethernet in a LAN. A hub works exactly like a repeater, with the exception that it functions less as a distance extender and more like a port concentrator of several hosts in one physical area. Repeater Hub Module 1 | 39 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent Layer 1 Devices — Repeater Repeater Connects network segments Retimes and regenerates signals to proper amplitudes Disadvantage — propagation delay due to broadcasting Disadvantage — physical limit to the number of repeaters used Module 1 | 40 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent Layer 1 Devices — Hub Hub A single Ethernet segment device that can operate at 10/100/1000 Mb Can act as a repeater Disadvantage — Same as repeater Used in small home networks or isolated segments in larger networks Module 1 | 41 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent AT6 Bridging and Bridges Bridging is a layer 2 (L2) concept. Bridging is primarily associated with Ethernet. A bridge (or switch) operates at L2 of the OSI model. A bridge is an intelligent device that does an L2 address lookup. Application Presentation Session OSI Model L2 Network Device Transport Network Data Link Bridge Bridge Physical Module 1 | 42 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent Slide 42 AT6 did some rewording anandt, 21/06/2006 AT7 Switches L2 Network Device Switch A switch is a multiple Ethernet segment device that can have dedicated 10/100/1000 Mb ports. Traffic in isolated segments is “switched” via a high-speed, bandwidth-dedicated backplane called a “fabric”. The majority of modern switches function in store/forward. Module 1 | 43 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent Slide 43 AT7 this is the original slide, I do not like this since it really doesnt explain the difference between a bridge and a switch. It also assumes that a switch is ethernet based anandt, 21/06/2006 L3 Devices — Routers Routing A router, unlike a bridge, operates up to L3 of the OSI model. A router connects two different network segments. L3 Network Device Application Presentation OSI Model • Examine the IP header of the incoming packet for the destination IP address • Look up this address in its routing table • Determine the best path to the destination IP address • Determine the egress interface for the above path • Forward the data out of this egress interface Transport Network Data Link Physical Router Basic router functions: Session Router Module 1 | 44 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent AT8 L2 Encapsulations DATA TCP/UDP DATA DATA Ethernet TCP/UDP IP DATA POS TCP/UDP TCP/UDP IP IP ETHERNET ETHERNET PPP IP 4 2 1 PPP 5 3 6 DATA DATA TCP/UDP Ethernet/ ATM TCP/UDP IP IP ATM ETHERNET 10 7 8 DATA 9 TCP/UDP IP ETHERNET Module 1 | 45 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent Slide 45 AT8 Details on packet encapsulations, showing how the L2 headers and exchanged and where they are not relevant anandt, 21/06/2006 Switches & Routers - products positioning Routers (7750SR): Core routing Edge routing Enterprise & campus routing Switches (ALU 7210 SAS): Home / Enterprise network Business CPE Business aggregation 5620 SAM / 5650 CPAM Network Management 7210 SAS 7210 SAS 7210 SAS 7450 ESS Ring Topology 7750 SR 7210 SAS 7210 SAS Star Topology IPD Team Event –Dublin Nov4-6 2008 14 |Focus Alcatel –Lucent 7210 Service Access Switch R1.0 | September 2008 © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved 5 Basics Routing 47 | Technical Sales Forum | May 2008 © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved Routing Protocols Static Explicitly define next Dynamic IGP EGP hop on every router/ Define default route Distance Vector RIPv1 and RIPv2 Link State Path Vector OSPF BGP IS-IS Alcatel-Lucent Scalable IP Networks Module 5 | 48 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent The Routing Protocols AS 1 Interior Routing Protocol Distance Vector: RIPv1 & RIPv2 Link State: OSPF & IS-IS AS 2 Exterior Routing Protocol Path Vector: BGPv4 Module 5 | 49 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent Routing - Movement of Data IP – 1.1.1.2 IP – 2.2.2.2 MAC = A MAC = D Gateway = 1.1.1.1 - B IP – 2.2.2.1 MAC = C IP – 1.1.1.1 MAC = B IP – 3.3.3.2 IP – 3.3.3.1 Source Dest. S D 1.1.1.2 2.2.2.2 A B ARP Cache 2.2.2.2 = D F C Data S Source Dest. WAN 1.1.1.2 2.2.2.2 PPP F C Data S Source Dest. S D 1.1.1.2 2.2.2.2 C D F C Data S Alcatel-Lucent Scalable IP Networks Module 5 | 50 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent Static Routing 192.168.11.0/30 192.168.11.1 192.168.22.0/30 A Node1 10.12.1.0/29 Node2 B B 10.12.1.1 10.12.1.2 Routing Table: Routing Table: 192.168.11.0/30 – Direct via interface A 10.12.1.0/29 – Direct via interface B 192.168.22.0/30 – static via 10.12.1.2 A 192.168.22.1 192.168.22.0/30 – Direct via interface A 10.12.1.0/29 – Direct via interface B 192.168.11.0/30 – static via 10.12.1.1 The Administrator must configure the static routes manually: Node1>config>router# static-route 192.168.22.0/30 next-hop 10.12.1.2 Node2>config>router# static-route 192.168.11.0/30 next-hop 10.12.1.1 Module 5 | 51 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent Default Routing A Stub is a network segment with only one exit point Network Cloud 192.168.22.0/30 192.168.11.0/30 A Node1 Node2 10.12.1.0/29 B B 10.12.1.1 10.12.1.2 Routing Table: Routing Table: 192.168.11.0/30 – Direct via interface A 10.12.1.0/29 – Direct via interface B 192.168.22.0/30 – static via 10.12.1.2 x.x.x.x/x – static or dynamic via interface A A 192.168.22.1 192.168.22.0/30 – Direct via interface A 10.12.1.0/29 – Direct via interface B 0.0.0.0/0 – static via 10.12.1.1 The Administrator must configure the default route (0.0.0.0/0) manually: Node1>config>router# static-route 192.168.22.0/30 next-hop 10.12.1.2 Node2>config>router# static-route 0.0.0.0/0 next-hop 10.12.1.1 Module 5 | 52 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent Routing Protocol Basics Network A How does Network A send data to Network B? ? ? ? ? Network B Alcatel-Lucent Scalable IP Networks Module 5 | 53 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent Path Determination Network A Network A can reach Network B via Path 1 or Path 2. Which one is preferred? 172.16.1.0/24 172.16.3.1/30 Router 2 172.16.3.2/30 172.16.3.13/30 172.16.3.14/30 Path 1 Path 2 172.16.3.5/30 172.16.3.6/30 Router 4 172.16.3.10/30 Router 3 Network B 172.16.3.9/30 172.16.2.0/24 Alcatel-Lucent Scalable IP Networks Module 5 | 54 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent Network A 172.16.1.0/24 Router 1 to Router 3 Alcatel-Lucent Scalable IP Networks to Router 2 Metrics Network 172.16.3.0/30 172.16.3.0/30 172.16.3.12/30 172.16.3.12/30 172.16.1.0/24 172.16.3.4/30 172.16.3.4/30 172.16.3.8/30 172.16.3.8/30 172.16.2.0/24 172.16.2.0/24 Next-hop router to Router 2 172.16.3.14 to Router 3 172.16.3.2 to Net A 172.16.3.2 172.16.3.14 172.16.3.14 172.16.3.2 172.16.3.2 172.16.3.14 Module 5 | 55 Metric 0 3 0 3 0 1 2 1 2 2 2 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent Routing Principles 5 1 56 IP & Routing Overview Int B Int A IP packet IP packet 1. Check Routing Table Destination Address 10.0.0.1 2. Change TTL 3. Change Checksum IP Address Egress Interface 2.0.0.0/8 10.0.0.0/8 Int A Int B 7750 Service Router Alcatel-Lucent Services Implementation Course All Rights Reserved © Alcatel-Lucent 2007 4. Send out the correct interface The Full Routing Cycle 5 1 57 IP & Routing Overview The Router Route Table Ethernet DA: 00-12-79-22-22-22 Ethernet SA: 00-12-79-11-11-11 Type: 0x800 (IP) Destination Address Next Hop 192.168.22.0/30 192.168.11.0/30 Interface B Interface A IP SA: 192.168.11.2 IP DA DATA 00-12-79-44-44-44 Ethernet SA: 00-12-79-33-33-33 Type: 0x800 (IP) ARP Cache IP DA: 192.168.22.2 Ethernet DA: IP Address Eth Address 192.168.22.2 192.168.11.2 00-12-79-44-44-44 00-12-79-11-11-11 IP SA: 192.168.11.2 IP DA: 192.168.22.2 DATA Interface A MAC Address: Interface B IP DA 00-12-79-22-22-22 MAC Address: 00-12-79-33-33-33 FCS ARP Request ICMP unreachable 7750 Service Router Alcatel-Lucent Services Implementation Course All Rights Reserved © Alcatel-Lucent 2007 FCS Other Protocols – ARP 5 1 58 IP & Routing Overview MAC: 00-12-79-11-11-11 Who has IP address 10.0.0.1? Destination Address: FF-FF-FF-FF-FFFF (broadcast) Source Address: 00-12-79-11-1111 Type code for ARP 0x0806 ARP data: IP: 10.0.0.1 Type: request (code 1) The Ethernet ARP request Frame Broadcast an ARP request Hey, I have IP address 10.0.0.1! Send out an ARP reply Destination Address: 00-12-79-11-1111 Source Address: 00-12-79-22-2222 The Ethernet ARP reply 7750 Service Router Alcatel-Lucent Services Implementation Course Type code ARP data: for IP: 10.0.0.1 Type: reply ARP (code 2) 0x080 6 Frame All Rights Reserved © Alcatel-Lucent 2007 MAC: 00-12-79-22-22-22 6 IPv6 59 | Technical Sales Forum | May 2008 All Rights Reserved © Alcatel-Lucent January 2009 Module Objectives • After successful completion of this module, you should be able to: Summarize the major differences between IPv4 and IPv6 Describe IPv6 addressing Explain the different IPv6 address types Describe the changes required in OSPF and IS-IS to support IPv6 Module 5 | 60 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent Section Objectives • This section will discuss the basic concepts of IPv6: Main features of IPv6 IPv6 addressing OSPF and IS-IS for IPv6 networks ICMPv6 Module 5 | 61 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent IPv6 Features Provides a huge address space More than 3.4x10e38 addresses Hierarchical address allocation provides efficient routing Small routing table Supports anycast addresses and eliminates broadcast addresses Efficient IP header: 40-byte header with 8 fields Fewer fields and simpler forwarding Built-in security: IPsec implemented in IPv6 Authentication header and encapsulation security payload Better QoS support Flexible extension header Daisy chain of next headers Module 5 | 62 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent IPv6 Header IPv6 header 8 fields, 40 bytes Version Traffic class Flow label Payload length Next header Hop limit Source address Destination address Module 5 | 63 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent IPv6 Header (continued) IPv4 vs IPv6 header IPv4 header: 12 fields, 20 bytes IPv6 header: 8 fields, 40 bytes Version IHL Type of service Identification Time to live Total length Flags Protocol Fragment offset Version Traffic class Flow label Payload length Next header Hop limit Header checksum Source address Source address Destination address Options Padding Destination address Module 5 | 64 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent IPv6 Header (continued) Next header: Same as the IPv4 protocol field 8-bit field Points to the next extension header Extension headers are not usually examined by the intermediate router. The hop-by-hop option header carries information that must be examined by every node along the path. Example Version Traffic class Payload length Flow label Next header Hop limit IPv6 header NH = 43 Source address Destination address Next header Routing header Extension header•1 NH = 44 Next header Fragment header Extension header•2 NH = 6 Upper layer header and payload Module 5 | 65 TCP data All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent IPv6 Header (continued) Source and destination address: Each address is128 bits. Version Traffic class Flow label Payload length Next header Hop limit Source address Destination address Module 5 | 66 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent IPv6 Addressing Defined in RFC 3513 Represented by colon-hexadecimal format 2001:0211:0000:0000:ab01:0000:0000:0011 Compressed representation: Leading-zero compression 2001:211:0:0:ab01:0:0:11 Multiple successive zero fields can be compressed (only once). 2001:211::ab01:0:0:11 Types of addressing: Unicast addressing Multicast addressing Anycast addressing Module 5 | 67 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent IPv6 Prefixes Unicast addressing: Link-local FE80::/10 Site-local FEC0::/10 (deprecated by IETF) Aggregatable global 2000::/3 IPv4-compatible ::/96 Unspecified address ::/128 IPv6 loopback address ::1/128 Module 5 | 68 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent IPv6 Prefixes (continued) Aggregatable global IPv6 address: Globally routable and reachable IPv6 address IANA-assigned aggregatable address: 2000::/3 IPv6 addresses are currently being allocated by IANA in this range. Multiple-level hierarchy allows efficient routing aggregation: — Provider topology, site topology, host topology Global routing prefix Site 48 bits 16 bits IPv 6 interface ID 64 bits Module 5 | 69 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent Anycast Addressing Assigned to multiple interfaces of multiple nodes A packet destined to an anycast address is routed to the nearest one. Unicast addresses with host bits set to zero Can be used, for example, to select the nearest server and provide redundancy Module 5 | 70 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent Multicast Addressing Assigned FF00::/8 Flag indicates a permanently assigned or transient multicast address Scope is used to limit the multicast group No broadcast addressing Larger number of multicast groups 1111 1111 8 bits Flags Scope 4bits 4bits Group ID 112 bits Module 5 | 71 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent Multicast Addressing (continued) Solicited-node multicast address: Provides efficient querying for ICMPv6 Each unicast address has a corresponding solicited-node multicast address. Multicast messages can be sent to the solicited-node multicast address group to reduce the number of receivers. Format: FF02::1:FFxx:xxxx/104 (xx:xxxx from the last 24 bits of the unicast address) Example: Unicast address 2001:1000:10:C2B4:FFFF:FE01:0203 Solicited-node: address FF02::1:FF01:0203 The multicast packet is then sent to Ethernet multicast address 33.33.FF.01.02.03. Replaces ARP from IPv4 Module 5 | 72 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent Multicast Addressing (continued) Well-known multicast addresses: FF02::1 All-nodes address FF02::2 All-routers address FF02::5 All-OSPF routers address FF02::6 All-OSPF DRs address FF02::1:FFxx:xxxx/104 Solicited-node address used in ICMPv6 Multicast address over Ethernet: Multicast MAC 33:33:dst13:dst14:dst15:dst16 (last 4 digits of multicast address) Module 5 | 73 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent IPv6 Routing Protocols IPv6 routing protocols: OSPFv3 MP-BGP IS-IS for IPv6 Static routes The IPv6 routing table is different from IPv4 routing tables: Same route-selection mechanism Longest prefix match The router ID should be configured before IPv6 protocols are enabled. Module 5 | 74 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent IPv6 over IPv4 IPv6 and IPv4 will coexist for a long time. There are many ways to run IPv6 over IPv4: Dual stack (router runs IPv4 and IPv6 stacks) Tunneling: —IPv6 over IPv4 tunnels (RFC 2893) —6PE —IPv6 over GRE tunnel —IPv6 over MPLS TE tunnel The 7750 SR implementation of IPv6 over IPv4 is in several phases. Module 5 | 75 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent IPv6 over IPv4 using Static Routing Phase 1 only allow IPv6 over IPv4 through static routing (RFC 2893) IPv6 over IPv4 packet encapsulation uses IP protocol id 41 Source / destination IP address uses the system IP address Module 5 | 76 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent 7 Alcatel-Lucent 7x50 Service Router Portfolio Module 5 | 77 | Technical Sales Forum | May 2008 77 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent The Alcatel-Lucent 7750 SR Family Slot MDA 1 2 3 4 5 A B 6 7 8 9 10 1 IOM SF/CPM 1 MDA SFP MDA 2 Slot 1 2 3 4 5 A B 2 SR-7 SR-12 MDA 1 A 1 2 SR-1 • Three chassis options – 1, 7, and 12 slots • Carrier-class reliability combined with high density in a small footprint • System capacities scalable from 20 Gbps to 200 Gbps (400 Gbps in future) • Modular design – removable IOM, SF/CPM, and MDAs • Common operating system Module 5 | 78 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent The SR-12 Shelf • SR-12 features: Slots for up to ten 20 Gbps IOM cards Two hot-swappable SF/CPM card slots; 200 Gbps or 400 Gbps SF/CPM cards available; 400 Gbps cards have capacity to handle future 40 Gbps IOM cards Up to twenty hot-swappable MDAs Hot-swappable cooling fans Switch fabric/control redundancy when two SF/CPMs installed Power redundancy when two DC power sources connected Module 5 | 79 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent The SR-12 Front and Rear 1 1 2 6 2 3 7 5 4 6 2 1 8 9 7 4 5 80 8 3 Module 5 | All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent Alcatel-Lucent 7750 SR SF/CPM Cards Redundant SF/CPMs are supported on the SR-7 and SR-12 Module 5 | 81 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent Alcatel-Lucent 7750 Service Router 3RD WAVE – SERVICE ROUTING Alcatel Lucent 7750 SR 2Terabit Multiservice Edge Router Purpose built for Service Providers and Enterprises seeking carrier-class equipment Suitable for applications including: Residential Broadband (HSI and 3Play) Business L2 and L3 VPN services Mobile backhaul and core transport Legacy BRAS evolution (BNG) Taking the Lead in Service Routing Evolution Industry leading FP2 100Gpbs Silicon Terabit capacity, performance, scale Comprehensive multiservice support Service Routing Specialization Over 30,000 units shipped to date Module 5 | 82 | 7750 SR Overview 82 All rights reserved © 2006–2007 Alcatel-Lucent Teşekkürler... [email protected] All Rights Reserved © Alcatel-Lucent January 2009 Staj & Đş Başvuruları & & Tez Programları için: http://www.alcatel-lucent.com.tr http://www.kariyer.net © Alcatel-Lucent 2009 All Rights Reserved
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Üstyapı için CAN ara birimi - Scania Technical Information Library (TIL)
Automatic neutral request
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Automatic neutral requested
Reserved
Not available
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Aşağıdakilerden hangisi bir arama motoru adresi değildir
(A) ipfw add 80 fwd 127.0.0.1,3128 tcp from any to any 80 via fxp0
(B) ipfw add 80 fwd 3128 udp from any to any 80
(C) ipfw add 3128 fwd tcp from any to any 80 via fxp0
(D) ipfw add 3128 fwd 127.0....
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PHP Strict Standards: Creating default object from empty value in C:\inetpub\wwwroot\Aventura\gtranslate\translate.php
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