Nokia Mobile Packet Backbone Network White Paper
Nokia Mobile Packet Backbone Network White Paper
Nokia Mobile Packet Backbone Network White Paper
Executive summary
The mobile communications market is evolving at a furious pace.
Growing competition, eroding prices, and emerging technologies
are driving down mobile voice ARPU. To make up for shrinking
margins, operators need to exploit new mobile technologies, develop
unprecedented data services, and transport exploding traffic more
cost-effectively.
This white paper discusses ways in which the operator can leverage
an IP backbone and multi-service capability to cost-efficiently
accommodate and capitalize on this exponential growth in bandwidth.
It outlines a solution that can help operators tackle the bandwidth
and traffic challenge. Called Multiservice IP Backbone, this solution
is built on a platform of best-of-breed Cisco and Juniper products
and delivered by a top IP solution integrator, Nokia Networks. Its
architecture is mapped for multiple use cases, the most prominent of
which is the Mobile Packet Backbone Network, or MPBN for short. This
document explains the MPBN, and makes a case for converting TDM
and packet backbones into a single efficient IP backbone.
1.Introduction
Nokia Networks expects some five billion people to be connected by
2015, with about four billion (80%) enjoying broadband access, and
wireless outnumbering wireline broadband connections.
Both todays and tomorrows technology HSPA (High-Speed Packet
Access) and LTE (Long-Term Evolution), respectively are geared to
drive traffic growth and attract even more users, for example, by
cutting per-gigabyte costs and vastly improving the mobile data user
experience.
Efficient new radio technologies and more and more users add up to
exponential traffic growth. Projections call for as much as a 100-fold
increase in the years ahead. Operators transport infrastructure will
be hard-pressed to keep pace. Scaling legacy TDM, ATM, and Frame
Relay networks up to accommodate such massive growth presents
a daunting engineering challenge, and even more so when costs are
factored into the equation. One technology has what it takes to create
a common backbone IP/MPLS.
Further challenges await once an IP/MPLS backbone is in place to
handle all traffic: Multi-vendor, QoS, resilience and interworking
capabilities will become ever more important, especially as
backbone networks converge and extend out further to the access
and aggregation layer in LTE, branching into other domains and
encountering other vendors equipment.
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So Nokia Networks set out to ensure QoS and resilience in multivendor environments, helping operators make the transition to IP and
handle business-critical traffic such as voice or signaling via IP. To this
end, the company integrated best-of-breed products from Cisco and
Juniper, the IP/MPLS market leaders with a huge embedded base,
into its offering.
Nokia Networks, acting as a solution integrator, leverages its considerable
IP and mobile skills, as well as the assets of Cisco and Juniper to deliver
a remarkably affordable solution. Cost-effective and scalable, the MPBN
is an IP/MPLS-based backbone that puts operators in the drivers seat
for mobile broadband. It provides the transport power and performance
capability operators need to satisfy skyrocketing demand for data
services, grow as they go, and sustain their business for the long haul.
networks.nokia.com
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BSC site
Core site
Edge
Edge
MME
SGSN
GGSN
MSS
SAE-GW
HLR
BSC
IP/MPLS
Core
Controller site
BSC
RNC
MGW
IMS site
Edge
MGW
MGCF
CSCF
HSS
Edge
PCRF
networks.nokia.com
QoS policy and smart traffic engineering minimize latency, variance, and
packet loss for time-critical traffic. A properly configured MPBN will not
drop a phone call even in the event of a failure, as rigorous tests of highavailability features with Cisco and Juniper routers have confirmed.
Router features such as line rate packet filtering, unicast Reverse
Forwarding Path (uRPF), flow monitoring, and IPSec VPNs, in combination
with the operating systems modular design, ensure service remains
available and routers accessible even during a denial of service attack.
Nokia Networks designed the MPBN to satisfy the SLA requirements of
3GPP Release 4 and subsequent releases, ensuring the network is robust
enough for any mobile network application. Soon the packet-switched
domain will need more capacity and its topology must be made to
support meshed communications. This solution provides the means to
do this, as well as the scalability to incorporate radio sites.
This solution also offers secure traffic isolation and a reliable transport
network for charging, subscriber provisioning, and O&M connections. Any
or all traffic in these different domains may be encrypted on demand.
The MPBN provides a launch platform for next-generation services while
protecting investments in ATM, Frame Relay, and TDM networks. Routers
scale from E1 interfaces to Gigabit Ethernet interfaces within the same
chassis to make the most of earlier investments in hardware. And
the MPBN is easily IPv6-enabled with a software license no upgrade
required.
This solution provides the underpinning for converged multiservice
networks and makes mixed Cisco-and-Juniper environments work. Multivendor backbones benefit from Nokia Networks design, testing, and
certification efforts because the Mobile Packet Backbone ensures highest
QoS and resilience across the entire IP backbone. And operators benefit
because they can take advantage of multi-vendor backbones created in
response to network mergers and pricing policies.
Nokia Networks network management system NetAct now addresses
Cisco and Juniper edge and core routers. This enables operators to
configure the entire IP/MPLS network from end to end using the same
management system as for the radio network, which simplifies network
management. Fault and performance management for Cisco and
Juniper components has also been integrated.
5.Summary
Nokia Networks is the market leader in next-generation mobile networks
and packet core deployments. The company is well-versed in delivering
mobile packet core solutions, and the IP solution integrator of choice
for operators seeking to accommodate a 100-fold increase in traffic.
Featuring routers made by the leaders in the global IP/MPLS market,
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6.Abbreviations
3GPP
Third Generation Partnership Project
ARPU
Average Revenue per User
ATM
Asynchronous Transfer Mode
BSC
Base Station Controller
CAPEX
Capital Expenditure
CSCF
Call Session Control Function
DSL
Digital Subscriber Line
DWDM Dense Wavelength Division
Multiplexing
E1
E-carrier level 1
EDGE Enhanced Data Rates for GSM
Evolution
GGSN
Gateway GPRS Support Node
GPRS
General Packet Radio Service
HLR
Home Location Register
HSS
Home Subscriber Server
IP/MPLS Internet Protocol/Multiprotocol
Label Switching
IPSec
Internet Protocol Security
IPv6
Internet Protocol Version 6
MGCF
Media Gateway Control Function
MGW
Media Gateway
MME
Mobility Management Entity
MPBN
Mobile Packet Backbone Network
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MPLS
Multiprotocol Label Switching
MSC
Mobile Switching Center
MSS
Mobile Switching Server
OPEX
Operational Expenditure
O&M
Operation and Maintenance
PCRF
Policy Charging and Rules Function
QoS
Quality of Service
RAN
Radio Access Network
ResIP
Resilient IP
RNC
Radio Network Controller
ResIP
Resilient Internet Protocol
SAE-GW System Architecture Evolution
Gateway
SDH
Synchronous Digital Hierarchy
SGSN
Serving GPRS Support Node
SLA
Service Level Agreement
SONET
Synchronous Optical Network
TDM
Time-Division Multiplexing
USB
Universal Serial Bus
VoIP
Voice over IP
VPN
Virtual Private Network
WCDMA Wideband Code Division Multiple
Access
WLAN
Wireless Local Area Network
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Public
Nokia is a registered trademark of Nokia Corporation. Other product and company names mentioned herein may be trademarks or trade names of their
respective owners.
Nokia
Nokia Solutions and Networks Oy
P.O. Box 1
FI-02022
Finland
Visiting address:
Karaportti 3,
ESPOO,
Finland
Switchboard +358 71 400 4000
Product code C401-01028-WP-201407-1-EN
Nokia Solutions and Networks 2014
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