T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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648.1 | ATM's coming, but it's not all bad | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | I am not making this up | Tue Jul 21 1992 10:31 | 52 |
| We are "thinking" (not to mention "doing", but we shouldn't talk about
unannounced products here, should we?) about making ATM and FDDI play
together.
In the outside world, ATM has started acquiring the "big mo" and taking
it from FDDI. There are, in short, three main reasons why this is
happening:
1) ATM may be more cost-effective in the long term. Because it
doesn't use shared media but switched media, and can mix
medium types and speeds, it may be more flexible and extensible
than FDDI while not much costlier, if any. (It's not a likely
low-end candidate, though.)
2) It promises multimedia. That is, it supports more services
than FDDI. While connection-oriented, ATM supports both
asynchronous (packet) and reasonably-well-emulated isochronous
connections, at a very wide range of speeds.
3) LAN/WAN integration. Because ATM began as a WAN (telco)
technology, it has no visible LAN/WAN boundary. A
transcontinental connection is as easy as one down the hall,
once the network's built. From the network designer
viewpoint, it's even more complicated than the phone system
(not trivial; that's what I do for a living), but from the
end user viewpoint, the phone system's pretty appealing.
The CCITT has already finished a (preliminary) set of standards, and is
adding more. In fact, I just sent in my ANSI letter ballot on the
dPANS for the ATM Layer spec. And the ATM Forum has finished Issue 1
of its implementation agreement. None of these are, like the FDDI
spec, a complete roadmap to a workable network. There are many tricks,
traps, traumas and tribulations that you go through to get a working
ATM system. It's bleeding edge technology today, with a few systems
built and many in the trial stage. But its problems are not insoluble.
It's important not to panic. A natural DECreaction is to blast ATM as
evil, wicked, mean and nasty, because it's harming our investment in
FDDI. That's bad. The key is to position the two as working together.
FDDI works today, is bulletproof and deliverable. ATM is an
evolutionary course, not a point product.
I do have a little paper on the topic of ATM-as-a-LAN, in plaintext,
which can be copied from
CARAFE::USER1:[GOLDSTEIN.DOC]ATMLAN.TXT
If I get around to it, I'll finish up a rather longer paper on how ATM
networks are leading to a major paradigm shift in networking, which
will require us to refocus our LANcentric thinking and for that matter
organization. Summary: LANs and WANs merge into switched nets; ATM is
simply the first popular protocol for building them.
fred
|
648.2 | Thanks | LARVAE::HARVEY | Baldly going into the unknown... | Wed Jul 22 1992 05:52 | 12 |
| Thanks Fred for an excellent "summary" resonse, this is just the kind of
answer I was looking for. I shall copy your paper for more information.
Is there a notesfile or other forum specific to these emerging technologies
and/or the associated changes we all face as "designers/implementers" of
networks ?
Yet more study/learning to be done..... will it never end ? ;^)
Regards
Rog
|
648.3 | ATM TOPIC? | BAHTAT::ANDERSON_E | its going to happen in kololi | Thu Aug 27 1992 12:51 | 7 |
| Fred, I would also like to say thanks for the 'summary'. Believe you me
it took awhile to find anything on ATM hidden amongst FDDI!! How about
you starting an ATM TOPIC and keeping us up to date on whats going on. My
customers are basically universities and you know how these 'whizzos' are
with leading-edge-technology.
Eddie
|
648.4 | More industry info on ATM | SCAACT::HILDEBRAND | Help find the VUPsuckers! | Tue Sep 01 1992 15:24 | 8 |
| As another person who is trying to learn all I can about ATM, I can suggest
the following two articles:
"High-performance networks challenge Ethernet", Computer Design
magazine, July 1992
"ATM becomes part of the LANscape", Electronic Engineering Times,
July 20, 1992
|
648.5 | ATM and FDDI | ERLANG::JAIN | | Wed Sep 23 1992 19:56 | 8 |
| Last week, I was a member of a panel discussion on ATM vs FDDI at
Local Computer Networking Conference, Minneapolis, MN. My pro-FDDI
views, which may be helpful to some of you who are trying to sell
FDDI, are available on-line:
FILES::net$arch:[papers]ATM_VS_FDDI_SLIDES.PS
-Raj Jain
|
648.6 | What about PRO-ATM? | WLW::SEITZ | The system is a Network | Thu Sep 24 1992 10:30 | 9 |
| I read over the slides identified in -.1. I found them interesting and
definitely PRO-FDDI. Would it be possible to obtain the notes that went
with these slides? I'd be interested in seeing the oppositions slides
as well.
Is there a way to obtain copies of the PRO-ATM slides and notes?
Mike
|
648.7 | a more neutral (me?) counterpoint | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | I am not making this up | Thu Oct 08 1992 11:45 | 127 |
| Yes, Raj's slides are definitely pro-FDDI. But they tend to go a bit
overboard in bashing ATM for what it isn't. It only works on its own
terms, which are definitely not FDDI's. Here are my comments on the
topic:
These are my comments on the slides "ATM and FDDI" by Raj Jain, reflecting
my understanding of FDDI and ATM issues.
fred
(No changes to "Problems with FDDI" and "Impediments to FDDI" pages.)
Impediments to ATM
>1. Standards delayed.
**should be:
1. Standardization based at CCITT
Heavy international involvement
->Longer standardization delays.
**note: CCITT is a slow process; ATM is actually happening there
**_too_ quickly, because it's standardizing things before they're tested.
2. Too many options too soon
Many independent forums
-> People energy divided
>3. Cost: Higher
**"Probably higher than FDDI" is more accurate, since there is a school of
**thought that ATM can be made cheaper or the same as FDDI or
**switched-FDDI. This makes sense if you approach the problem correctly.
>4. Low adapter performance:
> Performance easier to achieve with larger cells
** True in today's adapters (Fore) but not necessarily with new
** silicon, like AToM-3.
5. Inefficient hosts/software
** Today.
6. Insufficient applications. Only long-haul backbone will succeed.
** 1990 thinking no longer current. High-performance LAN is a likely
** success.
Good points of ATM/BISDN
>1. Cell size is fixed
> ->Easier to handle/store/forward
>2. Easier to count and bill.
>3. Slotted system
> ->Better scalability in terms of distance-bandwidth product.
>4. Complexity moved to edges. No hop-by-hop retransmission.
>5. Distributed-media shared-switch topology.
**That page is okay. But I'd add two more that the market cares about:
6. Same protocol works in LAN and WAN environment
-> potential for simpler interworking
7. Support for high-speed isochronous channel emulation.
> Myth of Scalability
** I don't really understand this argument. Maybe I had to be there.
** ATM's scalability is based on the switched nature of the topology.
** If you provision bandwidth, an arbitrary mesh will get you there.
** Model: Telephone network. It's scalable because demand can be
** forecast.
> Problems with ATM
>1. Key issues such as flow/congestion not resolved.
** True, though it's more accurate to say:
1. Key issues such as efficient flow and congestion control are
not resolved.
Problem pushed to users.
Rate-based operation unnatural for data
>2. Inefficient broadcast/multicast
>3. Inefficient for large transfers
** Unclear. Small-packet transfers have more waste. Better to say:
3. Inefficient use of bandwidth.
often 40% and greater overhead
>4. Connection-oriented
** because this isn't purely "bad" but religious, add:
More difficult to integrate with connectionless
networks, LANs.
Connection management not yet resolved
>5. Large initial cost.
>6. 48 bytes suitable for voice at low speed.
> Non-optimal at higher speeds.
> Highly unsuitable for video.
**That's too generous! It's mediocre for voice. It's too short
** for efficient data. Video issues are unresolved; it could be
** made to fit if cell-based coding were used.
>7. Scalability is a myth.
** Huh again?
>Another Technical Mistake (like ISDN)
** ISDN is NOT really a technical mistake, though it is of course
** imperfect.. It has been a terrible Marketing
** mistake in the US, because the RBOCs positioned it against LANs
** (the old "versus" instead of "complementary" problem) instead of
** against modems and analog lines. ATM's problem is that it's an
** interesting set of ideas assembled by a committee, so the
** resultant protocol details are a mess, requiring lots of work-arounds
** and careful navigation amongst the options.
> ATM and FDDI
** No changes to the page per se, but it seems a bit strange to praise
** FDDI on its video merits and say that ATM has to succeed on data
** alone.
|
648.8 | My "Webster's" needs to updated | TERPS::KMOORE | Kevin Moore - Defense Agencies Group | Mon Oct 19 1992 09:43 | 15 |
| Re: .1
>>> While connection-oriented, ATM supports both
>>> asynchronous (packet) and reasonably-well-emulated isochronous
>>> connections, at a very wide range of speeds.
Ok, I bite.
What does "isochronous" mean? I've seen this term in multiple engineering
articles re: ATM but I have yet to find out what it means.
thanks,
kevin
|
648.9 | | MIPSBX::thomas | The Code Warrior | Mon Oct 19 1992 09:54 | 1 |
| constant rate. (ie like a phone conversation at 8KB each and every second).
|
648.10 | | CSC32::B_GOODWIN | Time is an illusion... | Mon Oct 19 1992 09:56 | 17 |
| CCITT RED BOOK Vol X Fascicle X.1 Terms & Definitions
ISOCHRONOUS:
"The essential characteristic of a time scale or a signal such that the
intervals between consecutive significant instants either have the same
duration or durations that are integral mulipules of the shortest
duration
NOTE: In parctice, variations in the time intervals are constrained
within specified limits"
Aren't you glad you asked! If I remember right, this is how a T1 span keeps sync
thoughout the network with all the repeaters. The T1 span must keep "Bit Density"
which must be 3 ones in 24 bits, no more than 15 consecutive zero's. This is
done to extract a clock from the data to keep the repeaters all in sync. It's been
awhile, I hope this is correct.
|
648.11 | Self-clocking | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | I am not making this up | Mon Oct 19 1992 11:09 | 28 |
| Or to try another explanation: "Isochronous" means "self-clocking
synchronous".
A "sync" interface such as V.35 has separate clock and data leads. An
"async" interface has a start bit and a predetermined clock rate. An
isochronous interface has neither. Instead, the rate must be
predetermined within fairly tight tolerances, and the receive clock
adjusts within these tolerances to the actual received rate. Thus the
"1's density" requirement, since on T1, a 1 is a pulse and a 0 is no
pulse.
In the ATM world, isochronous service is emulated. ATM Adaptation
Layer Type 1 is one such protocol. The network delivers the cells at a
constant-over-time rate. But ATM adds jitter and can lose cells, so
the received flow is definitely not smooth! So in AAL1, each cell has
one octet of header which includes a 3-bit sequence number. This
enables dropouts to be detected and "filled in" (with 376 bits). The
receiving end uses buildout buffers to ensure no "cell starvation"; the
output delay is thus at least as long as the maximum delay variance.
Just for grins and chuckles, there's also "plesiochronous", but it's
not an ATM term. (It means "nearly synchronous", and refers to the
T1/T1/T3 and related hierarchies, in which the payload consists of
multiplexed isochronous payloads, each of which may be clocked
separately. I've also labeled "plesiochronous" cell transfer as a
variant on ATM in which cells are loosely slotted into an allocation
frame.)
fred
|
648.12 | | KONING::KONING | Paul Koning, A-13683 | Mon Oct 19 1992 12:41 | 23 |
| ...Caution, possibly inflammatory opinions follow...
"reasonably well emulated isochronous" is an oxymoron.
"isochronous" is a well-defined concept. For networking it's not
particularly interesting, since the major user is traditional telephone
digitized voice, without any compression or silence suppression.
Once you do any processing on what started out as a constant-rate
stream (voice or video; for example compression) it becomes variable
rate, and you need buffering for the reverse processing at the
destination. Given that processing, you no longer have any need for
the "no jitter" service that isochronous transmission gives you.
Instead, you then need a transmission service that has bounded jitter;
the bound can often be quite high. (For example, with compressed
video, the jitter bounds are at least equal to the frame time, i.e.,
30 ms) This is why FDDI-2 makes no sense. (I guess it also explains
why "well emulated isochronous" service is useable, though the only
reason for using the word "isochronous" in there that I can see is to
get past the preconceived notions of those who still believe that
isochronous service has a place in networking.)
paul
|
648.13 | Isochronous is very, very important | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | I am not making this up | Tue Oct 20 1992 14:58 | 25 |
| RE: -.1
Well no. "Reasonably-well idoschronous" makes lots of sense. ATM will
carry pure, unadulterated, uncompressed telephony (PCM, ADPCM), video
(PictureTel, H.261, etc.), data (SNA, DDCMP, IPX, Airline code, etc.),
inter-nodal-processor link (StrataCom, NET, Newbridge, Typmplex, etc.),
and whatever else today _expects_ to see a "T1" or similar channel.
Indeed one of the initial applications for ATM WANs will be links
between nodal processors. And the ATM standards folks are working on a
"bearer service description" for a "T1 bearer service", which is a
constant bit rate stream that emulates isochronous 1.544 Mbps.
That's the whole point of ATM: It can emulate non-packet as well as
packet. It's transparent to embedded systems and end users. It can
also do its "native" thing, which is a variable-bit-rate flow.
The reason that ATM is not a perfect equivalent to isochronous is that
true isochronous channels tend to have one and two bit errors, while
ATM will have these as well as 376-to-384 bit clustered errors caused
by cell dropouts. Also ATM has more delay due to the need for buildout
(jitter buffer). But it's good enough for many applications.
It is well beyond the subject of this topic to explain why telephony
does not want to be treated as packet-mode variable-rate data. Suffice
to say that it's a given.
fred
|
648.14 | ATM for the Compleat Idiot? | THEBAY::CHABANED | Spasticus Dyslexicus | Wed Oct 20 1993 20:51 | 7 |
|
Can anyone recommend a source of info on ATM basics?
Thanks!
-Ed
|
648.15 | NOTED::ATM? | NETRIX::thomas | The Code Warrior | Wed Oct 20 1993 21:24 | 1 |
|
|
648.16 | | CSC32::B_GOODWIN | | Thu Oct 21 1993 12:07 | 6 |
| There is a course offered in the Colorado Springs training center on
ATM and Frame Relay. It's called something like "Broadband
Technologies: Understanding ATM and Frame Relay". I went to it and it
is a pretty good course. If you send mail to GENRAL::ETA_TRAINING (I
think), you probably could get a course out line.
|