VLPLS-Virtual Private LAN Service - Global Service for Virtual Private Networks
The animated presentation can be found at: http://www.techtionary.com/podcasts/vpls/
I originally wrote about VPLS sometime ago. I was prompted to update the information with an announcement from Verizon (see below). In addition, I wanted to remind network planners to have both redundant (multiple) and diverse (separate cable routes and trenches) both wireless and wireline services.
CIO Version - Here is the translation of those acronyms into "no-tech" English. Virtual Private LAN Service allows customers to create VLANs-Virtual Local Area Networks in a metro network or global network using IP-Internet Protocol MPLS-Multi-Protocol Label Switching or VPNS-Virtual Private Network Service. In CEO talk, this means you can connect all the branches in the same city without costing a lot and cities elsewhere "almost" as easily. In the animated presentation, you will see the differences between VPLS and VPNS. There are many others including training, availability, diversity, DR-Disaster recovery, application such as hub-spoke versus mesh networking and others. Check with your provider as YMMV-your mileage may vary.
CTO Version - LAN switching is a Layer 2 (Datalink) concept of switching rather than routing which takes place at Layer 3 (Network). In LAN switching all packets are "flooded" to all locations until they find their destination. Nice idea if you have only a few sites. Originally known as TLS-Transparent LAN-local Area Network Service, Metro-Ethernet, Ethernet Private Line and now often called VPLS-Virtual Private LAN Service, here are some reasons why you should consider this service.
First, it is easy-to-implement with plug-and-play installation.
Next, LAN Switches are cheap.
Third, VPLS provides very flexible BOD-bandwidth on demand options.
Fourth, it is a great solution for same-city customers with many locations.
Here are some reasons against: First, it doesn't grow or scale well to tens of sites and hundreds of users. Second, faster bandwidth doesn't provide QoS or solve flooding of packets due to large applications.
In Layer 3 routing, only the packets that are destined for the other location are sent. That is, packets are routed based on the destination IP address.
Here are some reasons for routing: First, it scales or grows essentially infinitely for customers with domestic and global locations.
Second, routing supports all kinds of IT systems new or legacy.
Third routing provides higher security.
Reasons against routing: First, there is a high cost with routing and routing will always be more expensive than switching.
Second, routing is complex to manage.
Third, routing requires very knowledgeable and technical staff.
I didn't forget VPLS, just needed a minute to get through the basics. VPLS uses MPLS to provide the "seamless" connections for VPLS. Shown in the presentation is the IP-Internet Protocol packet before and with the MPLS "label" attached or "tagged" on as it was originally called. MPLS consists of four elements, label bits, experimental bits, a stack bit and TTL-Time-To-Live bits which indicate the number of Label Switch Routers passed. Shown here is the "multi-protocol" part of MPLS and how it works with the other major networking protocols such as ATM, Frame Relay, Ethernet and others.
As shown in the presentation MPLS is used to connect locations and VLANS together.
In the next slide are the three key access topologies - ethernet-line for two sites, ethernet-LAN for three or more sites and ethernet-access for VPN/internet. This makes implementation and configuration of VLANS really simple.
WHY VPLS - Summary Here are a few business reasons: - Extends LAN infrastructure easily - Expands metro-net to global-net - Migrates Frame Relay to MPLS - Utilizes "pseudowire" approach - Needs "mesh" connections - Connect call centers via SIP - Provide DR-Disaster Recovery for data centers - Seeks greater customer (less carrier) control - Has multi- and broadcast traffic - Building a CDN-Content Delivery Net - Building an overlay multi-carrier network.
VPLS-Virtual Private LAN Service is going to be a great solution for any customer with more than location.
Here's Verizon's Information - Verizon Business Takes Virtual Private LAN Service Global
The following was provided by Verizon - "With this global expansion, the reach of Verizon VPLS will extend beyond the U.S. to customers in 31 international locations, including the United Kingdom, France, Germany, India, Australia, Canada, Hong Kong, Singapore and South Korea. Verizon Business leverages its extensive network of interconnection agreements with other in-region Ethernet providers to offer this expansive coverage.
Verizon VPLS, an advanced MPLS-based layer 2 virtual private network delivered via Verizon Business' innovative global-provisioning Ethernet platform, is ideal for organizations seeking to link multiple sites in a flexible, operationally efficient model. VPLS is protocol-independent, supporting both IP and non-IP applications, which allows customers to retain complete control of their own routing. In addition, VPLS allows customers to access Verizon's extensive portfolio of Ethernet services and other data networking services offered by the company.
In a challenging economy, Verizon Business' global expansion of VPLS service and growth of its Ethernet portfolio is a good-news story," said Stan Hubbard, senior analyst with Heavy Reading. The company's global provisioning platform for enabling a seamless experience, long history delivering Ethernet services, broad portfolio and stability will certainly all appeal to multinational customers.
VPLS is an optimal platform for converged networking as it allows for prioritization of applications via multiple classes of services (CoS). An organization can customize prioritization to ensure that business-critical applications receive the highest priority across the network. Verizon Real-time CoS, for example, makes VPLS ideal for carrying latency-sensitive traffic such as voice-over-IP (VoIP) and digital video. VPLS also enables customers to provision their network bandwidth from 1 megabit per second to gigabit per second and beyond, enabling efficient and cost-effective transmission of voice and data traffic. And VPLS is backed by robust service level agreements (SLAs), which customers expect from a carrier-class wide area network service." END - There was no direct link in the Verizon Press Release for more information.



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