Title: LSout to IETF on the Optical Cloud Networks (OCN)
Submission Date: 2024-11-05
URL of the IETF Web page: https://datatracker.ietf.org/liaison/1963/
Please reply by 2025-02-25
From: =?utf-8?q?Mirja_K=C3=BChlewind?= <[email protected]>
To: Fatai Zhang <[email protected]>,Luis Contreras 
<[email protected]>,Daniele Ceccarelli 
<[email protected]>,Dhruv Dhody <[email protected]>,Julien Meuric 
<[email protected]>,Andrew Stone <[email protected]>,Vishnu Beeram 
<[email protected]>,Lou Berger <[email protected]>,Oscar de Dios 
<[email protected]>,John Scudder <[email protected]>,Jim 
Guichard <[email protected]>,Gunter Van de Velde 
<[email protected]>
Cc: Fatai Zhang <[email protected]>,Traffic Engineering Architecture and 
Signaling Discussion List <[email protected]>,Jim Guichard 
<[email protected]>,John Scudder <[email protected]>,Vishnu Beeram 
<[email protected]>,Daniele Ceccarelli <[email protected]>,Common Control 
and Measurement Plane Discussion List <[email protected]>,Oscar de Dios 
<[email protected]>,Julien Meuric 
<[email protected]>,Path Computation Element Discussion List 
<[email protected]>,Dhruv Dhody <[email protected]>,Gunter Van de Velde 
<[email protected]>,The IETF Chair <[email protected]>,Luis Contreras 
<[email protected]>
Response Contacts: 
Technical Contacts: 
Purpose: For action

Body: 1. Overall description:

Background of ETSI ISG F5G Advanced architecture [1]

The next generation of fixed network needs support the growing number of cloud 
services requiring high bandwidth and/or low latency connections. Built on 
previous generations of fixed networks, the 5th generation is being defined by 
ETSI Industry Specification Group (ISG) F5G to provide the evolution required 
to match and further enhance fixed networking services. ETSI ISG F5G fixed 
networks will play an essential role in the evolution of the “fibre to 
everything” vision. Fixed networks have always offered the highest bandwidths 
and availability. The development of a full fibre solution will help to support 
the most demanding applications.

The F5G Advanced Architecture [1] has been specified to improve and evolve the 
E2E optical fixed network architecture. The improvement and evolution include:
1) Network technologies such as Wi-Fi® 7; FTTR, 50G-PON, fgOTN, 800G OTN. 
2) Computing for enhancing networks and services.
3) Coordinated slice management. 
4) Northbound interface to support Network as a Service (NaaS). 
5) Service-aware Fibre networks by the addition of Optical Cloud Network (OCN) 
features including E2E service management, premium private line services, and 
mission critical cloud services.

The Optical Cloud Network (OCN) Architecture [2]

ETSI GR F5G-0018 F5G Optical Cloud Networks Architecture describes the 
architecture and the technical requirements of the Optical Cloud Network (OCN), 
including its underlay Optical Transport Network (OTN) (new standards in OTN 
including fine grain OTN (fgOTN), ETSI ISG F5G refers to this as (fg)OTN) 
infrastructure and the control interfaces used to control the optical services 
and connections. It also specifies the key functions of the Optical Service 
Protocols (OSP) which are running on the OCN control interfaces.

The emerging trends in the F5G Advanced architecture is the support of cloud 
services:

a. The majority of F5G-A services are deployed in the Cloud Data Centres, 
taking full advantage of shared cloud infrastructure. In the OCN Architecture 
provides the network infrastructure enabling efficient, guaranteed, reliable 
cloud service networking.
b. The F5G Advanced network requirements of these cloud services cover a wide 
range of network characteristic including supporting the highest quality 
service experience.

In general, network access to cloud services can be categorized into the 
following:
• Optical Access network for both residential and SME broadband users.
• Access networks for large enterprises need a variety of bandwidths. OTN has 
been enhanced with a wider bandwidth range for these applications. On the lower 
end of the range, fain grain network services 10Mbps to 1.25Gbps supported by 
fgOTN and on the higher end with the support of 800Gbps and beyond network 
services.
ETSI ISG F5G has developed the OCN architecture to support the connectivity 
access to the above-mentioned cloud services. 

The OCN architecture supports the following network features:
1. Using network automation technologies via control protocols to automatically 
select the Cloud Data Centre and the service connection provisioning.
2. Different cloud application services may require different bandwidths ranges 
from Mbps to Gbps. User may have different bandwidth needs, so the OCN 
architecture supports flexible (fg)OTN containers with hitless bandwidth 
adjustment.
3. OCN supports the service traffic isolation, which isolates user traffic from 
each other, so no degradation in service quality.
4. The OCN architecture provides scalable connection control and management, to 
support the increasing number of service connections.
5. The OCN architecture supports at least 99,999 % service availability.
6. The OCN architecture minimizes the number of network layers, interfaces and 
protocols.

The OCN architecture uses Optical Service Protocol(s) (OSP) to support two 
functions:
• OSP connection control: Used for automatic creation, modification (including 
hitless bandwidth adjustment) and deletion of (fg)OTN connections, as well as 
fast (fg)OTN connection recovery from a network failure to satisfy the service 
recovery performance requirements.
• OSP service control: Use to govern the service traffic between two OTN edge 
nodes, where the service traffics are mapped into or de-mapped from (fg)OTN 
connection(s). The OSP service control is to collect necessary service layer 
address information (e.g. IP addresses), and to configure the (fg)OTN edge 
nodes, so that the service traffic efficiently reaches the respective service 
destinations with the needed service quality.

For the full details of the OCN architecture and the required protocol 
functionality please refer to [2].

2. Actions:

It is not the intention of ETSI ISG F5G to develop the above-mentioned 
protocol(s). The ETSI ISG F5G thinks the IETF is the most natural standards 
organization to define those protocols. Therefore, the ETSI ISG F5G would like 
the IETF to consider defining these protocols, which can then be referenced to 
by future versions of the ETSI ISG F5G OCN architecture. Existing protocols 
defined by IETF could be reused and extended to support the OSP connection and 
service control functions. The ETSI ISG F5G is willing to cooperate on the 
topic and is looking forward for the IETF’s reply. 

3. Date of next meetings of the originator:

F5G-F2F#20, Nov 12-14, 2024, Jingdezhen, Jiangxi Province, China
F5G-F2F#21, Feb 25-28, 2025, Sophia-Antipolis, FR
Attachments:

No document has been attached


_______________________________________________
Pce mailing list -- [email protected]
To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]

Reply via email to