Showing posts with label Whitepaper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Whitepaper. Show all posts

Sunday, May 18, 2014

DragonWave Whitepaper: Unlocking the Value of E-Band with Extended Reach

by Greg Friesen,
Vice President of Product Management at DragonWave

When first- and second-generation E-Band systems introduced Gigabit wireless systems to the market, they took advantage of the wide amount of spectrum available which is very low-cost, to be able to offer high capacity wireless links.  However, these systems did not focus on reach and were inhibited by the high amount of rain fade present in the 70/80 GHz frequency bands. As a result, current E-Band systems have been limited to about 1-3 Km reach, resulting in a limited application space that has been primarily last mile fiber extension in enterprise and campus environments.

With the next generation of E-Band systems, and a number of features targeted at extending reach, manufacturers are now effectively doubling previous link lengths and achieving up to 7 Km of reach. This increased reach is critical to expanding the application space of E-Band products. Now, with extended reach capabilities, 70/80 GHz can be used for the traditional cellular backhaul market. These E-band ranges are comparable to 38 GHz links ranges and can be used for many 23/26/28 GHz links as well.

Using the 70/80 GHz band as a spectrum alternative to traditional 23-42 GHz links has tremendous advantages. In the 23-42 GHz band, many countries issue a maximum channel size of 28 MHz channels, limiting link capacities to 200-250 Mbps. A few countries will issue channel sizes up to 56 MHz, still limiting capacities to about 500 Mbps.  However, 250 and 500 MHz channels are generally available in the 70/80 GHz band. Using these channels, today’s products can deliver 1-3 Gbps of capacity and provide operators with tremendous scalability to meet growing LTE requirements. In addition, E-Band systems offer significant total cost of ownership benefits by leveraging spectrum that costs about 1/10th as much as 23-42 GHz spectrum, as shown in Figure 1 below.



The benefits of E-Band versus 23-42 GHz are significant and offer 10 times the capacity with 1/10th of the recurring spectrum costs.  Nevertheless, in order to take advantage of these benefits, reach needs to be >4 Km, which is comparable to the 23-42 GHz bands.  First- and second-generation E-Band systems could not transmit this far and were typically limited to about 2-3 Km. of reach. Today, a number of new technologies are emerging to increase that reach twofold.
The first of these technologies is adaptive modulation, which monitors signal strength and shifts from the current modulation to a lower modulation during a fade event. Utilizing this technique, the system will shift from 64QAM all the way down to BPSK, resulting in a 15-20 dB link gain improvement.

The next area of reach improvement is adaptive waveform. Once the system has tried to compensate for path fade using adaptive modulation, it can then shift to smaller channel sizes, from a typical 250 or 500 MHz channel down to a 25 or 50 MHz channel. This adaptive waveform switching improves the receiver sensitivity, further increasing link budget by about 10 dB.
The last technique that can be used to extend the reach of an E-Band system is MIMO (multiple input, multiple output). In E-Band, MIMO can be used to transmit the same signal over two spatially separated antennas. This is different than traditional forms of MIMO which use spatial separation to achieve a doubling of capacity. In this case, spatial separation is used to get improved link budget by having 2X antenna and Receive side gain, thereby improving the total system gain by up to 9 dB. Due to the high frequency range of E-Band, the separation of the antennas required for MIMO can be very narrow, allowing them to be packaged into a single unit.

The combination of these three features can extend E-Band range to >6 Km. The graph below shows the impact of these features for a link designed at 99.99% availability in Europe.  Even at this high availability, link lengths close to 6Km are achievable.

Extending the range of E-Band is a very important step in extending the applicability of E-Band. Taking this extended range and mapping it across an existing mobile network in Europe allows one to determine how applicable E-Band could be as an alternative to 23-42 GHz microwave systems. In this case, the existing links were consuming 28 MHz channels and delivering 20 Mbps of capacity. It was found that 99% of the 38-42 GHz links could be replaced with E-Band, a further 70% of the 26-32 GHz links could be replaced, and 55% of the 23 GHz links could be replaced, which amounts to 75% of the full field population of 23-42 GHz links being viable for E-band deployment.

Further analysis compares three deployment scenarios from a cost perspective. The first scenario replaces the link with an E-Band link, increasing the capacity to 2.5 Gbps, but incurring CAPEX and install cost. The second scenario leaves the current 23-42 GHz links in the field, but not being able to scale beyond 200 Mbps and continuing to incur the high spectrum lease costs. The third scenario expands the existing microwave system to 56 MHz and adds a second XPIC channel in the 23-42 GHz range. This scenario incurs CAPEX and install costs, but scales to 1 Gbps, although it will result in costly recurring spectrum charges. In addition, the third scenario may not always be deployable, as it is often not possible to acquire 2X 56 MHz channels. All three scenarios are compared for 7 years, and shown in the graph below.



As shown in the graph above, the E-Band scenario offers slight cost savings over leaving the existing system in the field and provides greater than 10X scale. It also is by far the lowest cost option for providing any scalability beyond 200 Mbps.

It’s clear that E-Band systems have evolved tremendously over the past five years. In doing so, the reach and corresponding addressable market has expanded significantly.  With new reach capabilities of >5 Km, E-Band systems are now a viable alternative for enhancing mobile backhaul networks. For operators, the new E-band solution is something that should be highly considered, as it provides a viable means to deliver >1 Gbps, while also achieving major spectrum cost savings.

About the Author

Greg Friesen is the Vice President of Product Management at DragonWave, responsible for global product management responsibilities across DragonWave’s complete portfolio of products. This role includes regular interaction with customers to understand their evolving network requirements. Greg has 13 years experience in senior product management roles, network design, planning, and engineering, at a number of communications firms, including his current role at DragonWave and previous roles at Nortel Networks, Innovance Networks, and Fundy Telecom. As Senior Product Manager at Innovance Networks he was responsible for all product definition, architecture, and network design. He has been involved in the planning and engineering of over 10 nationwide network deployments. His experience ranges from operations and Capex modeling to network architecture design to site and link engineering. Greg holds B.Sc. in Electrical Engineering from University of Saskatchewan.

About DragonWave
DragonWave(R) is a leading provider of high-capacity packet microwave solutions that drive next-generation IP networks. DragonWave'scarrier-grade point-to-point packet microwave systems transmit broadband voice, video and data, enabling service providers, government agencies, enterprises and other organizations to meet their increasing bandwidth requirements rapidly and affordably. The principal application of DragonWave's portfolio is wireless network backhaul, including a range of products ideally suited to support the emergence of underlying small cell networks. Additional solutions include leased line replacement, last mile fiber extension and enterprise networks. DragonWave's corporate headquarters is located in Ottawa, Ontario, with sales locations in EuropeAsia, the Middle East and North America
For more information, visit http://www.dragonwaveinc.com

Friday, May 14, 2010

Whitepaper -- Aricent













LTE: Beyond the Numbers


Much has been written about the
numbers pertaining to Long Term Evolution (LTE). The fourth generation
of wireless technology... millions of subscribers... billions in equipment
spend... billions in R&D spend required... and so on. It is an established
fact that while LTE represents a huge market with an unprecedented
uptake rate, the nature of its complexity makes product development very
expensive.


Additionally, LTE needs to co-exist
with multiple legacy and contemporary technologies for a long time to
come, and hence, wide interoperability is a must the touted numbers hold
significant implications for equipment vendors who seek to optimize
their scarce resources to best align investments with operator schedules
for LTE deployment.


LTE: Beyond the Numbers --the market
report- looks beyond these analyst forecasts to gain an insight into the
implications of these for LTE infrastructure development and service
deployment, as well as to evaluate their impact on equipment vendors.
Utilizing these different numbers in isolation provides only a partial
view of the situation at hand and how best to approach it. This market
report aims to view these numbers collectively and in a holistic manner
to draw insights and outline implications for LTE equipment vendors.


Download
the full whitepaper here:


http://info.aricent.com/LTE-Whitepaper_ConvergedDigest.html

http://info.aricent.com/Android_whitepaper-convergeddigest.html

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Whitepaper -- Aricent









5
Steps to Elevating the Android Experience


Android is a true game-changer for the
mobile space, more effectively addressing the two fundamental shifts in
consumer electronics - all things connected, and exponential growth in
consumer expectations on innovation and improved usability. This is the
era of open operating systems and the growing market adoption of the
Android OS on multiple devices and the emergence of an ecosystem of
active application vendors creating new, innovative solutions clearly
underline the trend.


In order to deliver highly
differentiated Android based offerings, there is a clear need to address
the "experience gaps". In this technical report, we have outlined 5
key Steps to Elevating the Android Experience
-- areas that device
ODMs, CE Manufacturers and Service Providers need to address in order to
deliver compelling end user experiences on Android.  


Download
the full whitepaper here:


http://info.aricent.com/Android_whitepaper-convergeddigest.html

http://info.aricent.com/Android_whitepaper-convergeddigest.html

Monday, February 15, 2010

Scaling Network Security Application Performance using Software Pattern Matching
















Network security
performance challenges





Application driven data continues to grow on a massive
scale, as does the importance of that data to its users. At
the same time, the task of protecting that is becoming
increasingly complex and challenging. Threats today come in
many varieties and seek to infiltrate systems through any
means possible. The entire network operation is vulnerable,
including the infrastructure, applications, data, and all of
the traffic that comes through. In a report issued on
February 2nd 2010, the Director of US National Intelligence
reported that cyber activity is occurring on an
unprecedented scale with extraordinary sophistication1. As
such, equipment vendors need to ensure their platforms and
applications are engineered accordingly to address these
challenges.


At the heart of most security applications, and a growing
number of networking applications, is pattern matching.
Often interpreted as deep packet inspection or content
inspection, pattern matching is the process of checking
(inspecting) data (packets) for the presence of the elements
of a given pattern. In the security world, patterns are
typically a set of signatures intended for the
identification of specific malware threats. While many
pattern matchers in the industry today are implemented with
simple sequential approaches, or as pieces of specialized
hardware, developers can now take advantage of powerful
software-based tools, such as those provided by Sensory
Networks that run on single or multi-core CPU (Central
Processing Units) architectures, to cost-effectively drive
and scale performance. As a result security processing power
can be significantly increased with minimal software change.


For resource-intensive applications, requiring high
performance, general-purpose multi-core processors, such as
the Quad-Core Intel® Xeon® processor 5500 provide a highly
cost-effective solution, in meeting these fast-growing
requirements for scaling throughput and enabling more
sophisticated network security applications. These
processors are delivering much greater computing performance
with comparable power consumption and a similar form factor
to previous-generation single-core processors. Combining
these powerful processors with standards-based hardware and
software components, security and networking vendors are
developing solutions that obviate the need for specialized
hardware.


This paper describes Sensory Networks' HyperScan software
pattern matching solution and details the benchmarked
content scanning performance and scalability, when HyperScan
is used conjunction with a variety of tier-1 Vendors' IPS
(Intrusion Prevention Sub-system) signature databases
running on an Intel® Xeon® processor 5500 platform. Packet
processing solutions such as these are aimed primarily at
simplifying the designs and reducing the tools needed for
developing new products, while by helping programmers and
developers to migrate from single-core to multiprocessing
environments.


Sensory Networks' HyperScanTM:
Software Pattern Matching



HyperScan is a high-speed L4-L7 pattern matching software
library that fully supports regular expressions (‘Regex')
and enables performance tuning for even the most unique
pattern sets and largest databases. It comes with a simple
API (Application Programming Interface) and is highly
portable, running on x86, MIPS and PowerPC architectures and
on Linux, FreeBSD, VxWorks and Windows OS (Operating
Systems). The product is designed for easy integration into
platforms such as appliances, routers, servers and switches.
By virtue of it being a software library, HyperScan's
performance, scalability and flexibility directly translate
into substantial gains in packet processing intelligence,
price/performance and time-to-market advantage for
networking and security equipment vendors. The product is
provided under a simple license framework that is not only
cost-effective compared to alternative solutions, but also
allows equipment vendors to leverage the technology across
multiple product lines with just one integration cycle.




HyperScan scales throughput performance linearly, and in
some cases, super-linearly with the number of CPU cores, to
provide a pattern matching solution that leverages cache
memory to scan tens of thousands of patterns simultaneously.
HyperScan's patented algorithms go beyond the DFA
(Deterministic Finite state machine Automaton) and NFA
(Non-deterministic Finite state machine Automaton)
implementations typically used in the industry for pattern
matching, avoiding state blow-out and performance problems
each suffer. This is one of the reasons why running
HyperScan, software performance (in many cases) exceeds the
performance of equivalent customer hardware and silicon
solutions. HyperScan delivers full support for capturing
sub-expressions with the same semantics as libpcre (Perl
Compatible Regular Expression library), a capacity vital for
SIEM (Security Information and Event Management), log
management and advanced search applications. The software
can select among hundreds of regular expression-based rules
and capture important data fields as sub-expressions, at
well over 50,000 log events per second. Also for DLP (Data
Loss Prevention) and associated applications such as
fingerprinting, HyperScan delivers high-speed processing of
hundreds of thousands of literal data fragments. We are also
continuing to push performance and expand our regular
expression matching and capture facilities to support many
other powerful new features, including scanning UTF-8 and
UTF-16 (8- bit and 16-bit UCS /Unicode Transformation
Formats respectively), even in corrupted forms, as well as
approximate matching with edit distances, and efficient and
standardized detection of many obfuscation techniques.


Given a set of
patterns (signatures), HyperScan compiles them into an
optimized database that is able to efficiently match them
against data passed to it in large discrete buffers or as
packetized data streams. This facilitates a natural
integration into products that process streams of network
packets as well as those that have access to the complete
object to be scanned. All regular expressions in the
signature set are scanned for simultaneously, and matches
are returned to the application as they are found.



 




 
Benefits
of Software-based pattern matching





--       

Compared to hardware/co-processor
solutions, throughput performance is a lot more scalable and
linear/near-linear, per core/thread, in most cases.





--       

Highly portable and easier to integrate,
with OS and CPU architecture independence; provides
opportunity to upgrade units already installed in the field.





--       

Data is processed directly on the CPU: to
scan the data, simply execute some instructions, in the
address space, in the CPU thread.





--       

Low overhead: 





        

Compile time is typically less than 1sec





        

Bytecode size is typically 100K -- 1MB





        

Stream state size, memory usage





        

Low latency



Pattern Matching
Benchmarking Setup



For the purpose
of performance benchmarking the latest Intel® Xeon® 5500
processor, the HyperScan pattern matching software library
and a small benchmarking application were installed on a
dual-socket (8-core) Intel platform (Table 1) and run
against HTTP-based test traffic and using a complete set of
IPS signatures sourced from a leading (Tier-1) security
equipment vendor. 




 



The benchmarking
application used for these tests passed captured HTTP
traffic (from a PCAP capture file) through HyperScan,
recording the time spent actually matching traffic against
the signature database.  This data was scanned
packet-by-packet, simulating the behavior of a real network
application such as an IPS or a web proxy appliance. Data
was matched in ‘streaming mode' for cases where the threats
might be spread across multiple packets (streaming mode
allows detection of threats distributed across multiple
packets while keeping only a small fixed-size stream state),
and in ‘non-streaming mode' for threats that would be
contained within a single chunk of data such as URI (which
will typically need to be normalized, so that streaming mode
is unnecessary).



Given the
resource-intensive nature of intrusion prevention (IPS)
applications, patterns (signatures), sourced from a tier-1
IPS network security equipment vendor were used for the
benchmarking, and provided multiple variants of both
‘to-client'/‘to-server' and URI (Uniform Resource
Identifier) signatures. The entire signature set was
compiled into their runtime database within 4 seconds.  




Performance Results


Using Sensory's HyperScan
software, the Intel® Xeon® Processor 5500 Series (Nehalem)
platform was benchmarked with a throughput performance that
scales from 9Gbps to over 73Gbps depending on the IPS
signature workload (see Table 2 for more details). It was
also recorded that the Intel® Xeon® Processor 5500 Series
performs 22% faster clock-for-clock than the Intel® Xeon®
5400 Processor Series (Harperton).








It should be
noted that the throughput performance numbers published, in
Table 2 and Figure 4, above represent CPU packet
processing/throughput performance against commercial IPS
signatures. These numbers should not be interpreted as
end-end network IPS throughput performance.


As shown in Table 3 below,
HyperScan achieves near-linear scalability across the entire
thread count, especially from 1-8 threads being almost
perfect. 







Conclusion



Networking and
security equipment vendors are under pressure to speed up
development cycles and spin new products that address
emerging threats and the growing demand for performance.
They are looking for agile platforms that cost-effectively
provide predictable performance, scalability and high levels
of flexibility, especially seamless upgradability. This is
possible by adopting software-only solutions, such as
HyperScanTM from Sensory Networks that, are easy
to integrate and accelerate platform and application
performance. In contrast to custom silicon/co-processors and
alternative hardware-based acceleration solutions, a
high-speed software engine running directly on the main
platform CPU footprint creates a highly-simplified  solution
that, is not only more cost-effective, but is also easier to
manage.




References



1.      
Annual Threat
Assessment of the US Intelligence Community for the Senate
Select Committee on Intelligence, Dennis C. Blair, Director
of National Intelligence, February 2, 2010.



2.      
Intel® and Xeon®
are registered trademarks of Intel Corporation.











For More Information





For more
information on please visit our website


www.sensorynetworks.com
, or
contact Sab Gosal at


sgosal@sensorynetworks.com
.




About
Sensory Networks















Sensory
Networks is a leading OEM provider of high performance network
security acceleration technology. The company's NodalCore®
hardware acceleration products include a broad range of
chipsets, accelerated software libraries, PCI acceleration cards
and appliance platforms for Antivirus, Antispam, Antispyware,
Content Filtering, Firewalls and Intrusion Detection/Prevention
systems. Sensory's products allow application developers and
network equipment vendors to build higher performance, more
accurate, broader coverage network security products without the
substantial cost and risk associated with development of
specialized hardware. Headquartered in Palo Alto, Calif.,
Sensory Networks has regional offices in London, Sydney and
Beijing.






 


http://www.sensorynetworks.com

Sunday, June 8, 2008

Facing the Challenges of Developing 100 Gbps Platforms

The communications infrastructure across the globe is being transformed to deliver any service, any where, at any time.

Consequently, services are being expanded, and the method for controlling these services is changing as the bandwidth required to deliver them is exploding due to ever-increasing video content.. Aging broadcast-based cable structures and circuit-based telecom structures are being systematically replaced with packet-based networks (IP and Ethernet). In addition, wireless access is presenting new complexity to the way consumers and businesses are accessing these networks


This paper will address the challenges of scaling packet networks from the current state-of-the-art, 10 Gbps limited packet-aware, to next generation 100 Gbps all packet-aware, any-to-any networks. The areas covered will include optical/electrical interfaces, interface adaptation, data plane processing, control plane processing, as well as switching, system power and printed circuit board requirements. These challenges apply to platforms that aggregate lower speed interfaces, up to 100 Gbps, as well as platforms with pure 100 Gbps interfaces.http://www.roadto100g.org/whitepaper.php