by Chris Hellberg (Author), Dylan Greene (Contributor), Truman Boyes (Contributor)
Network professionals who are looking to deploy triple-play service provider networks will find this book a useful tool.
-Michael Newbery, IP Architect, TelstraClear Limited
This book provides a wealth of information on current and future broadband architectures, services, and deployments. It will serve both experienced technical experts needing a comprehensive reference, as well as those needing a concise explanation of broadband access architectures and multi-play services.
-Sanjay Wadhwa, Product Line Manager, IP Edge Products, Juniper Networks
This book is a thorough guide for anyone involved with triple-play networks. Its multivendor approach and references to the latest standards from the DSL Forum and the IETF makes it a must-have for anyone involved in broadband access networks.
-Andrea Lasagna, Data & Video Services Manager, FASTWEB
Service providers are increasingly focused on delivering triple-play bundles that incorporate Internet, video, and VoIP services-as well as multi-play bundles containing even more advanced services. Broadband Network Architectures is the first comprehensive guide to designing, implementing, and managing the networks that make triple-play services possible.
Hellberg, Greene, and Boyes present their field-tested industry best practices and objectively evaluate the tradeoffs associated with key up-front architectural decisions that balance the complexities of bundled services and sophisticated traffic policies. Broadband Network Architectures not only documents what is possible on this rapidly changing field of networking, but it also details how to divide Internet access into these more sophisticated services with specialized Quality of Service handling.
Coverage includes
* An in-depth introduction to next-generation triple-play services: components, integration, and business connectivity
* Triple-play backbone design: MPLS, Layer 3 VPNs, and Broadband Network Gateways (BNGs)/Broadband Remote Access Servers (B-RAS)
* Protocols and strategies for integrating BNGs into robust triple-play networks
* Triple-play access network design: DSLAM architectures, aggregation networks, transport, and Layer 2 tunneling
* VLAN-per-customer versus service-per-VLAN architectures: advantages and disadvantages
* PPP or DHCP: choosing the right access protocol
* Issues associated with operating in wholesale, unbundled environments
* IP addressing and subscriber session management
* Broadband network security, including Denial of Service attacks and VoIP privacy
* The future of wireless broadband: IMS, SIP, and non-SIP based fixed mobile convergence and wireless video
Contents
Foreword
Preface
About the Authors
Chapter 1 A History of Broadband Networks
Chapter 2 Next Generation Triple-Play Services
Chapter 3 Designing a Triple-Play Backbone
Chapter 4 Designing a Triple-Play Access Network
Chapter 5 Choosing the Right Access Protocol
Chapter 6 Evolutions in Last Mile Broadband Access
Chapter 7 Wholesale Broadband Networks
Chapter 8 Deploying Quality of Service
Chapter 9 The Future of Wireless Broadband
Chapter 10 Managing IP Addressing
Chapter 11 Dynamic User Session Control
Chapter 12 Security in Broadband Networks
Appendix A Glossary of Acronyms and Key Terms
Appendix B Glossary of Packet Diagrams
Index
Format: Paperback
Pages: 600
Edition: 1
Publisher: Prentice Hall
Published: 01 May 2007
ISBN 10: 0132300575
ISBN 13: 9780132300575
Book Overview: As the boundaries of the traditional enterprise continue to expand, demand for secure mobile workforce solutions is growing at a strong pace. This demand is being addressed with a multitude of solutions - those that deliver the highest levels of productivity, security and IT control will set the pace for the marketplace. Enterprises accomplish this kind of network growth in a cost efficient and reliable way through the introduction of Broadband Remote Access Services. Broadband Network Architectures succinctly describes B-RAS (Broadband Remote Access Server/Services) and its associated technologies (PPP, L2TP). Chapters are structured to provide enough information for people looking to learn and then being to implement. By including design architectures with the explanations, as well as covering the emerging and recent advancements of the technology, this title covers a relatively new concept. Yet the book covers it in such a way that it teaches not to current models but to strategies and practices that apply across any equipment, giving the book a longer term value to the reader. The book also approaches the topics with a vendor-neutrality , offering both Cisco and Juniper configurations and policies side-by-side as the reader progresses through the book.
Chris Hellberg has been working in the data communications industry for the last seven years for both telcos and vendors. He has design and operational experience with providers in Asia-Pacific and the EMEA region. He is currently a Professional Services Consultant for Juniper Networks in the EMEA region, specializing in BRAS and core platforms. His role with Juniper is to assist customers with the design, test, build, and deployment phases of broadband access and backbone networks of all sizes. He lives in the United Kingdom, although he most often can be found in one of Europe's many airports.
Dylan Greene is a consultant with the Juniper Networks Professional Services group. He has more than a decade of technical networking experience, having worked in a variety of environments from Tier 1 carriers, greenfield providers, financial enterprise networks, and mobile carriers to aerospace and defense projects. His primary expertise is in designing and deploying IP and MPLS networks, with a subfocus on network security. Prior to Juniper Networks, his work included academic computing, helping to establish an early competitive regional ISP/DSL provider, a managed IDC/hosting provider, and working on large, multinational financial networks. He has been based in Asia-Pacific, Europe, and North America, and currently resides in Boston with his wife, Luciana.
Truman Boyes has designed and implemented large-scale carrier networks for the past ten years. He is a Professional Services Consultant for Juniper Networks in Asia-Pacific, where he is implementing next-generation networks that cater to larger subscriber growth and provide resiliency. He has designed networks all over the world that specialize in MPLS, Quality of Service, and advances in traffic engineering. He is active in numerous Internet and security-related technical forums. He lives with his partner in Wellington, New Zealand.