RFC 2340 (rfc2340) - Page 2 of 14
Nortel's Virtual Network Switching (VNS) Overview
Alternative Format: Original Text Document
RFC 2340 Nortel's Virtual Network Switching (VNS) May 1998
8.1 Equal Cost Multipaths .................................. 10
8.2 Trunk Load Spreading ................................... 10
9 Class of Service ........................................ 11
10 VNS Migration Strategies ................................ 11
11 Summary ................................................. 11
12 Security Considerations ................................. 12
13 Acknowledgments ......................................... 12
14 Authors' Addresses ...................................... 13
15 Full Copyright Statement ................................ 14
1. Introduction
There are several key problem areas with today's wide area backbone
networks that carry LAN traffic: scalability, service
differentiation, redundancy, administration, and traffic containment.
First, scalability is becoming a major concern because of the rapid
growth in bandwidth demand and geographical reach. As the size of the
WAN network grows traditional point-to-point and NBMA topologies or
network models lose their performance.
Second, the need to provide several Classes of Service (CoS) has
never been greater. The days of a single "best effort" service are
over and service providers demand ways to differentiate the quality
of the service offered to their clients based on several policies.
Third, the WAN is often carrying mission-critical traffic and loss of
service is not acceptable. So far, path redundancy has been addressed
inefficiently by requiring additional links or VCs.
Fourth, network operators demand easy and simplified network
administration. Large NBMA topologies require extensive PVC
provisioning until SVC deployment becomes more ubiquitous. For
Point-to-point models, IP address space may be used inefficiently and
non-trivial network schemas are required to contain reserved address
space.
Finally, proper segregation of traffic is becoming a must. This
requirement is being addressed today by adding leased lines or VCs
used to separate traffic flows based on regions or interest or
protocol.
Nortel's Virtual Network Switching (VNS) is a technology that
provides efficient solutions to these challenges.
Jamoussi, et. al. Informational