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Inverse Multiplexing for ATM Technical Brief

Bridge the Bandwidth Gap Using Inverse Multiplexing for ATM (IMA) to Step Up Services From DS1/E1 to DS3/E3
Reduce operating costs by using available bandwidth more efficiently. Generate new revenue opportunities from customized bandwidth services with minimal incremental investment.
This technical brief describes how service providers can use the IMA support on their existing Lucent CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switches and PacketStar PSAX Multiservice Media Gateway devices to:
Generate new revenue opportunities by offering flexible bandwidth services Recoup costs and start generating profits in as little as three months Support converged services for users with both ATM and non-ATM interfaces Reduce transmission costs and relieve congestion in wireless and wireline network backbones

Document Abstract
This paper describes IMA, its implementation on Lucent multiservice switches and media gateways, and its potential network service and infrastructure applications. The paper also contains a cost-justification example illustrating how a single IMA module added to an existing Lucent switch or media gateway can generate enough new service revenues to recoup the total cost of ownership of the module and start generating profits in as little as three months. This paper is intended for network designers who are considering using IMA to increase service density, flexibility, and bandwidth efficiency on existing ATM networks.

Table of Contents
1. Introduction ...............................................................................................................................................4
Tried and true, maybe, but leased lines can only do so much...................................................................................4 Enter IMA .................................................................................................................................................................4 IMA Ensures Reliability .............................................................................................................................................4

2. Understanding the IMA specification...........................................................................................................5


Examining IMAs physical and logical architecture ...................................................................................................5 Maintaining ATM cell order ......................................................................................................................................6 Supporting ATM functions over multiple interfaces in the IMA group.....................................................................8

3. Understanding the Lucent solution............................................................................................................10


IMA support on the CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch ......................................................................................10 IMA support on the PacketStar PSAX Multiservice Media Gateways....................................................................12 Multivendor Interoperability ...................................................................................................................................14 Unified Navis network management .....................................................................................................................14

4. IMA applications .......................................................................................................................................15


Increasing the port density of existing DS1 or E1 services ......................................................................................15 Providing flexible bandwidth services to ATM users ...............................................................................................15 Providing flexible bandwidth services for non-ATM users ......................................................................................16 Supporting converged services with links below DS3 ............................................................................................17 Reducing the cost of network backhaul .................................................................................................................18

5. Conclusion................................................................................................................................................20 Appendix A: Acronyms..............................................................................................................................20

1. Introduction
The DS1/E1 and DS3/E3 leased line infrastructure installed over the last several decades has created large revenue streams for service providers and fundamentally changed how enterprises do business. There are many reasons for this success. As a digital system based on Time Division Multiplexing (TDM), leased lines provide extremely reliable transport at the highest quality of service (QoS) even when high QoS is not required. Leased lines support demanding real-time applications such as voice and video, as well as applications with less stringent QoS requirements, such as data traffic based on IP or frame relay. Tried and true, maybe, but leased lines can only do so much The leased line architecture has a significant shortcoming a huge bandwidth gap between entry-level leased lines (1.5 Mbps for a DS1, 2 Mbps for an E1) and second-tier leased lines (45 Mbps for a DS3, 34 Mbps for an E3). In addition, while DS1 and E1 lines have been deployed ubiquitously, more expensive DS3 and E3 leased lines are still not available in all locations. The result is that enterprises requiring more than 1.5 or 2 Mbps of bandwidth face awkward and expensive choices. Enterprises can either remain at their current DS1 or E1 level and take steps internally to reduce the amount of traffic sent over the leased line, or immediately jump to leasing a DS3 or E3 line and hope that business traffic eventually justifies the increase in cost. Today, some enterprises have sidestepped this problem by leasing one or more additional DS1 or E1 lines from their service provider and designating each line to carry a specific type of traffic (voice, video, or data) or to support specific applications. This incremental approach can be cost-effective for enterprises that require up to eight DS1 (12 Mbps) or nine E1 (18 Mbps) circuits, however, it is not efficient for service providers to offer. When service providers reserve circuits for specific applications or traffic types, they sacrifice the ability to use ATM to consolidate and efficiently manage diverse traffic types across those circuits. Enter IMA The ATM Forum (www.atmforum.com), the principal standards body governing ATM protocols, developed the Inverse Multiplexing for ATM (IMA) Version 1.1 specification to address this issue.1 With IMA, service providers can save money by using two or more parallel physical DS1 or E1 circuits as if they were a single logical interface creating interim bandwidth steps between entry level DS1 and E1 and the much more expensive DS3 and E3. All ATM QoS classes and traffic management functions continue to operate over the IMA-aggregated links. IMA can help service providers save money by using two or more parallel physical DS1 or E1 circuits as if they were a single logical interface creating customized bandwidth steps between entry-level DS1 and E1 and the much more expensive DS3 and E3. All ATM QoS classes and traffic management functions continue to operate over the IMA-aggregated links. IMA Ensures Reliability In addition, because an IMA group continues to transmit traffic as long as at least one of its constituent links is working, service providers can offer their customers additional protection against individual facility outages. When a link in an IMA group fails, IMA shifts the traffic automatically to the remaining links. Depending on their specific IMA equipment, service providers can use ATM QoS and priority schemes to ensure that the IMA group shifts higher priority traffic first increasing the reliability of higher value, QoS-sensitive services. This approach stands in stark contrast to a service-specific setup that uses separate links for voice, video, and data traffic. In a service-specific arrangement, if one link fails, the customer loses all traffic sent on that link. The Lucent CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch and PacketStar PSAX Multiservice Media Gateway devices offer comprehensive IMA support on a variety of interfaces.

The complete IMA v1.1 specification is available at http://www.atmforum.com/standards/approved.html.

2. Understanding the IMA specification


This section describes IMAs physical and logical architecture and how IMA preserves ATM cell order and supports native ATM functions when splitting transmissions over multiple links. Examining IMAs physical and logical architecture As shown in Figure 1, at the physical level, an IMA deployment simply looks like a set of parallel DS1 or E1 lines. In the diagram, the multiservice switch uses IMA to provide various speed ATM User to Network Interface (UNI) connections to CPE devices at two customer sites and to a DSLAM at a third. Although IMA operates at a logical level to give these locations access to cumulative bandwidth that falls between DS1 and DS3, the IMA deployments are physically constructed using a group of parallel DS1 lines.
IMA Physical Layer
3 DS1s give 4.5 Mbps ATM UNI

Customer Premises CPE


Digital Cross-connect System (DCS)

Multiservice Switches
5 DS1s give 7.5 Mbps ATM UNI

Customer Premises
2 DS1s give 3 Mbps ATM UNI

CPE

DSLAM

DSL

Figure 1 Service providers can use IMA-enabled multiservice switches to create scalable ATM links in DS1 or E1 increments. Such links offer customizable ATM bandwidth that grows as end user needs grow.

At the logical level, IMA bundles the parallel physical DS1 (or E1) lines into a single logical ATM interface, known as the IMA group. The network operator associates the IMA group with a UNI or Network-to-Network Interface (NNI) inside the IMA-enabled devices at both ends of the virtual link just as the operator would associate both ends of a non-IMA link with either a UNI or NNI. Figure 2 shows the same network as Figure 1, but from the perspective of the higher-level ATM functions. From this perspective, IMA transforms each set of parallel physical DS1 lines into a single virtual link that has an aggregate bandwidth equal to the sum of the bandwidth of the individual links.

IMA Logical Layer


UNI with 4.5 Mbps virtual link Digital Cross-connect System (DCS)

Customer Premises CPE

Multiservice Switches

Customer Premises CPE

UNI with 7.5 Mbps virtual link

UNI with 3 Mbps virtual link

DSLAM

DSL

Figure 2 IMA enables a simplified logical view of parallel DS1 lines. A single UNI (or NNI) is associated with the IMA virtual link at both ends of the connection. Any configuration that is performed on non-IMA UNIs (or NNIs) can be performed on the UNI associated with the IMA virtual link.

IMA bundles the separate physical lines into a single logical interface, enabling flexibly-sized (and appropriately priced) access services, without sacrificing the ability to use ATMs QoS and traffic management functions to efficiently manage diverse traffic types across multiple circuits. Maintaining ATM cell order ATM networks must maintain cell order when transmitting data. A device receiving ATM cells assumes that it has received the cells in the same order in which they were originally transmitted. This assumption simplifies ATM transmission significantly while decreasing the need for cell header bits. ATMs approach contrasts with many other link layer and network layer protocols in which receiving devices must take additional steps to stitch together frames or packets in the correct order to reconstruct the data stream.
Preserving cell order in native ATM links

Figure 3 shows how the network preserves cell order when it transmits native ATM cells over a single DS1 link. As the diagram shows, there is a logical separation between the ATM layer and the physical layer framing. The ATM layer transmits cells through its associated UNI or NNI logical port at a rate that does not exceed the known rate of its logical port (1.5 Mbps in Figure 3). The ATM layer leaves all framing and other details to the lower level functions. The lower-level framing function preserves the ATM cell order as it packs the cells into DS1 frames for transmission through the DS1 WAN link. At the other end of the DS1 WAN link, the receiving device simply unpacks the ATM cells in the correct order.

ATM Transmission without IMA


ATM layer transmits cells through its associated UNI

UNI 1.5 Mbps logical port 4 ATM cells 3 2 1 ATM cell order is preserved inside DS1 frame Receiver simply unpacks cells in correct order

DS1 framing function packs cells in DS1 frame

DS1 WAN link

DS1 frame

Figure 3 When IMA is not in place, the DS1 framing function preserves the cell order within each DS1 frame. Preserving cell order when using IMA

With IMA, several individual DS1 links act as if they were a single logical link. Cells carrying data, voice, or video traffic are split across all of the links in the IMA group. However, the ATM network still requires that the cells arrive at the receiving device in the same order in which they were transmitted. To preserve cell order, the IMA specification uses a strict round-robin scheduling algorithm to distribute the cells over the bundled DS1 or E1 links. As Figure 4 shows, when the IMA round robin receives cells from the ATM layer, it distributes them sequentially among the individual physical links in the IMA group. The IMA round robin sends the first cell along the first DS1, the second cell through the second DS1, and the third cell through the third DS1. When it has distributed one cell to each link, the round robin starts the cycle over again, sending the fourth cell to the first DS1, the fifth cell to the second DS1, and so on.

ATM Transmission with IMA


ATM layer

UNI 4.5 Mbps logical port

4 ATM cells 3 2 1

ATM cell order is preserved by distributing cells in DS1 frames in strict round robin order Receiver simply unpacks cells in strict round robin mode to preserve cell order

DS1 framer

DS1 WAN link 1

DS1 frame IMA round robin DS1 framer 2 DS1 WAN link 2

DS1 frame DS1 framer 3 DS1 WAN link 3

DS1 frame

Figure 4 IMA preserves the ATM cell order with strict round robin cell distribution. Whether IMA is in place or not, the ATM layer has no need to know the details of physical framing.

This predictable round robin pattern enables the receiving IMA function to reliably reassemble the cell stream from multiple DS1 links. The ATM layer in the transmitting and receiving devices does not know that IMA is in place. Instead the ATM layer simply transmits cells as they become available up to the maximum rate of its associated UNI logical port in this case, 4.5 Mbps, the aggregate bandwidth of the three DS1 links in the IMA group. Supporting ATM functions over multiple interfaces in the IMA group IMAs ability to preserve ATM cell order is only part of the reason why ATM attributes such as traffic management and QoS control continue to function reliably over IMA links. The other key element is IMAs link management and framing capabilities. This section provides a conceptual overview of IMA framing and how IMA uses the cells within IMA frames to regulate cell transmission rates (and cell delay) while managing the IMA group and its constituent links.
Understanding IMA framing

An IMA process resides at each end of an IMA link. The two IMA processes communicate using IMA frames to control data flow and manage the logical IMA group as well as its constituent DS1 (or E1) physical links. Each IMA frame contains a fixed number of ATM cells. There are typically 128 cells in each IMA frame, although operators can also set the frame size to 32, 64, or 256 cells, depending on the specific IMA implementation. As the ATM layer hands cells to the IMA process for transmission over the WAN, the IMA process distributes them in round robin fashion among the constituent links, counting them, and grouping them into IMA frames that span all of the constituent DS1 or E1 links. When the IMA process reaches the IMA frame size limit, it begins creating a new IMA frame. Figure 5 illustrates this process for an IMA group of three DS1 links. 8

IMA frame 2 in the making

IMA frame 1 ready for transmission, containing cells 1 to 128

126

4 ICP

DS1 WAN link 1


Three DS1 frames ready for transmission

IMA round robin

2 ICP 3

127

2 ICP

DS1 WAN link 2

128 ICP

DS1 WAN link 3

Note: The ATM layer, the UNI, and the DS1 framers shown in Figures 3 and 4 have been removed from this diagram for clarity.

Figure 5 The two IMA processes associated with this IMA group communicate using IMA frames that span across the three DS1 lines used to create the virtual 4.5 Mbps connection. Regulating cell transmission rates and cell delay

Each IMA frame contains ATM data cells, ATM idle cells, and a few ATM cells marked as IMA Control Protocol (ICP) cells. When an IMA process receives a frame, it hands off the ATM data cells to the ATM layer. The IMA process uses the ICP cells, which are identified by a special code in the cell header, to communicate with each other, control data flow, and manage both the IMA group and its constituent links. Each IMA frame contains primarily ATM data cells. IMA frames include ATM idle cells only when there are no ATM cells ready to transmit that is, when the cell rate offered by the ATM layer for transmission over the WAN is less than the virtual link cell rate. This use of idle cells is known as cell rate decoupling. Because the WAN transmits cells at full speed even when the real ATM cell traffic is at a lower speed, the two rates are decoupled. Each IMA frame also contains one ICP cell per constituent DS1 or E1 link. The ICP cells are always transmitted in the same location on a given DS1 or E1 link; however, the ICP cells can be transmitted in different locations on different links. For example, one constituent link may always transmit the ICP cell as the fourth cell in the IMA frame, while another link in the same IMA group may always transmit its ICP cell as the twelfth cell in the IMA frame. In Figure 5, the DS1 WAN link 1 always transmits its ICP cell in the second cell of the IMA frame, while DS1 WAN link 2 transmits its ICP cell in the first cell of the IMA frame, and DS1 WAN link 3 transmits its ICP cell in the last cell of the IMA frame. (Figure 5 shows the ICP cells as highlighted cell boxes.) Because it inserts one ICP cell on each DS1 link per frame, the IMA process can introduce some delay into the cell flow. However, the standard includes smoothing buffers that remove the delay and support virtual circuits of all QoS classes, including those requiring minimal cell delay and predictable cell delay variation. In addition, the IMA standard includes bit stuffing and other techniques that allow predictable cell delay variation even when the different DS1 links use different clocks and have different delay variations.
Managing individual links

The IMA specification relies on ICP cells to monitor the status of the links in the IMA group and dynamically adjust the bandwidth available on the IMA link. This function is critical to IMAs ability to bundle multiple DS1 or E1 links into a persistent virtual connection that can transmit ATM cells in both directions.

During normal operations, individual links in the IMA group can be added, removed from service, or simply fail affecting the amount of bandwidth available for the IMA group. The IMA specification requires the IMA group to dynamically adjust to these changing conditions without requiring operators to stop and restart the overall traffic flow. The two IMA processes use ICP cells to communicate the status of the constituent links as well as the IMA group as a whole. The IMA processes use the ICP cells to remove failed links from the IMA group, and to restore recovered links to the IMA group. This dynamic response to changing network conditions improves the fault tolerance on the IMA link. If one constituent link in the IMA group fails, the throughput on the link will drop, but the IMA group will automatically shift the traffic to the remaining links. The IMA group continues to transmit traffic as long as at least one of its constituent links remains operational. Similarly, if an operator restores a failed link to the IMA group or adds a new link, the IMA processes automatically adjust to the IMA groups new maximum bandwidth rate again without interrupting the existing traffic flow.

3. Understanding the Lucent solution


The Lucent CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch and the PacketStar PSAX 4500, PSAX 2300, PSAX 1250, and PSAX 1000 Multiservice Media Gateways all support IMA. These Lucent products support a wide range of DS1, E1, channelized DS3/1 and channelized STM-1/E1 IMA modules to give service providers provide the flexibility to deploy customizable bandwidth services or reduce transmission costs in wireless and wireline backbone networks. This section briefly describes the IMA support on the Lucent CBX 500 and PacketStar PSAX product lines.2 (For more information on the potential applications for the Lucent IMA solutions, see Section 4.) IMA support on the CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch The CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch supports a 3-Port Channelized DS3/1 with IMA ATM module and a 1-Port Channelized STM-1/E1 with IMA ATM module. IMA implementation on the CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch complies with the ATM Forum IMA v1.1 specification and is backward compatible with v1.0. Following are just a few characteristics worth noting on how the CBX 500 switch supports IMA. The remainder of this section describes the modules framing procedures, flow control capabilities, bandwidth allocation mechanism after-link failure, and port densities.
Internal framing ensures full support for ATM traffic management and QoS

The IMA process on each end of the IMA link distributes ATM cells for transmission over the WAN in a strict roundrobin fashion among the constituent DS1 links. The 3-Port Channelized DS3/1 with IMA ATM module operates at DS3 speeds so its implementation requires an extra framing step. Each DS3 port on the module connects to an M13/DS3 framer. The 28 DS1 circuits within each channelized DS3 port then connect to one of four DS1 framers.3 Each IMA group supported on the module is engineered using DS1 links that use a common DS1 framer. When the DS1 framer passes information to an IMA processor, the IMA processor assembles the channels to pass along to the ATM plane for flow control before transmitting them onto the switch fabric. Once it hits the switch fabric, the traffic looks and acts like any other ATM circuit with associated QoS.
Flow control enables end-to-end QoS

Both the 3-Port Channelized DS3/1 with IMA and the 1-Port Channelized STM-1/E1 with IMA ATM modules have an integrated flow control processor (FCP) subsystem to deliver end-to-end Available Bit Rate (ABR) flow control as well as two forms of closed-loop flow control to intelligently move congestion to the network edge. In addition, the FCP subsystem uses per-VC queuing on non-real-time circuits to grow virtual circuit (VC) rates when possible or to intelligently throttle down the VC rates as needed.

Lucent Stinger DSL Access Concentrators also support IMA. More information on the Lucent Stinger DSLAM product line can be found at http://www.lucent.com/solutions/broadband_access.html. The first three DS1 framers handle eight of the DS1 circuits. The fourth handles only four DS1s, for a total of 28 DS1 circuits.

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Bandwidth allocation procedures protect high-value services after individual link failures

If one link in an IMA group fails, IMA automatically shifts traffic to the remaining links in the group. As long as the available bandwidth does not fall below the configured minimum bandwidth threshold, the IMA group continues to transmit traffic without interruption at a reduced rate. The IMA implementation on the CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch enables service providers to use ATMs QoS and priority schemes to determine how bandwidth is allocated after link failures to protect higher-value, QoS-sensitive services. To understand how this works, suppose a service provider is using an IMA group that contains three DS1 links. When one link in the group fails, the throughput for the IMA group drops from 4.5 Mbps to 3 Mbps, but the IMA group continues transmitting. If the service traffic carried on the group requires less than 3 Mbps of bandwidth, then there is no need to reallocate resources among the services. If the service traffic exceeds 3 Mbps, the egress buffers for the IMA group back up until they reach the discard level. At this point, the IMA group has a negative available bandwidth, causing all circuits configured on the link to compete for bandwidth. The IMA implementation on the CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch does not delete or bounce circuits. Instead, the CBX 500 redistributes the remaining bandwidth among the circuits according to their QoS level giving higher priority circuits preference over lower priority ones.
High port densities for increased scalability

Each CBX 500 3-Port Channelized DS3/1 with IMA ATM module has a capacity of up to 42 IMA groups or up to 30 IMA groups on each CBX 500 1-Port Channelized STM-1/E1 with IMA ATM module.4 Alternatively, any of the DS1 or E1 links on the channelized modules can be defined as non-IMA links and used as any other DS1 or E1 ATM link supported by the CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch to create extremely dense DS1 or E1 ATM services. The two CBX 500 channelized IMA modules offer a higher port density and lower per-port cost than multiple port DS1 or E1 cards. (See Figure 6.)
Capacity CBX 500 Switch Description

3-Port Channelized DS3/1 with IMA ATM module


28 DS1s 84 DS1s 1,176 DS1s 2,352 DS1s 42 IMA groups 588 IMA groups 1,176 IMA groups 16,384 virtual circuit endpoints

1-Port Channelized STM1/E1 with IMA ATM module


63 E1s 63 E1s 882 E1s 1764 E1s 30 IMA groups 420 IMA groups 840 IMA groups 16,384 virtual circuit endpoints

IMA-enabled E1 or DS1 interfaces per port IMA-enabled E1 or DS1 interfaces per module IMA-enabled E1 or DS1 interfaces per chassis IMA-enabled E1 or DS1 interfaces per rack IMA groups per module IMA groups per chassis IMA groups per rack Virtual circuit support per module
5 5

Figure 6 The 3-Port Channelized DS3/1 with IMA and 1-Port Channelized STM-1/E1 with IMA ATM modules combine high port density with low per-port costs.

Service providers use standard digital cross connect devices to access the 28 DS1s on each physical DS3 port on the CBX 500 3-Port Channelized DS3/1 with IMA ATM module and the 63 E1s on the CBX 500 1-Port Channelized STM-1/E1 with IMA ATM module. The cross-connects simply break out the channelized DS1 or E1 lines from the unified DS3 or STM-1 line. This system allows extremely high DS1/E1 port density from the CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch.
4

This 30 IMA group number includes 27 IMA groups containing two E1s and three IMA groups containing three E1s. Assumes that each chassis is fully loaded with the 3-Port Channelized DS3/1/0 with IMA ATM module or 1-Port Channelized STM-1/E1with IMA ATM module.

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Dynamic changes to IMA groups minimize service interruptions

Unlike competing solutions, the IMA implementation on the CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch enables service providers to add or remove links from existing IMA groups without tearing down the bundle. This gives service providers the flexibility to dynamically resize bandwidth for specific customers without interrupting current services. For example, CBX 500 IMA modules can be used to create IMA groups containing only a single DS1 or E1 link. When customers are ready to upgrade to a higher level of service, more DS1 or E1 facilities can be added to the existing IMA group to dynamically increase the available service bandwidth. IMA support on the PacketStar PSAX Multiservice Media Gateways As with the CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch, the IMA implementation on Lucent PacketStar PSAX Multiservice Media Gateway devices complies with the ATM Forum IMA v1.1 specification. In addition, PSAX gateways comply with both variants of the earlier ATM Forum IMA v1.0 specification. IMA implementation on the PacketStar PSAX Multiservice Media Gateway devices complies with ATM Forum IMA specifications. Four aspects of the PSAX implementation make it an especially cost-effective choice for service providers: The wide range of available IMA modules The manner in which PSAX reallocates bandwidth after individual link failures The ability to dynamically add or remove links from IMA bundles without interrupting services The flexibility to use any PSAX module with any PSAX chassis These features are described below.
A wide range of IMA modules for finely tuned IMA services

The PacketStar PSAX Multiservice Media Gateway family currently supports five IMA modules: 6-port DS1 IMA module 6-port E1 IMA module Medium-density 12-port DS1 IMA module High-density 21-port E1 IMA module 1-port Channelized DS3 IMA module Two additional modules, a 1-port Channelized OC-3 IMA module that supports up to 84 DS1s and a 1-port Channelized STM-1 that supports up to 63 E1s, will be available in a future release. This broad range of IMA-capable modules gives service providers the flexibility to deploy equipment that provides the appropriate amount of port density for each location in their network. The following chart outlines the port densities on each currently available module.

The CBX 500 switch and PacketStar PSAX gateway IMA implementations give service providers the flexibility to dynamically resize bandwidth without interrupting service.

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Capacity 6-Port DS1 IMA module 6 DS1s 24 DS1s 60 DS1s in 19 shelf 84 DS1s in 23 shelf 90 DS1s 90 DS1s Up to 3 IMA groups 32,000 6-Port E1 IMA module 6 E1s 24 E1s 12-Port DS1 IMA module 12 DS1s 48 DS1s 21-port E1 IMA module 21 E1s 84 E1s 210 E1s in 19 shelf 294 E1s in 23 shelf 315 E1s 315 E1s Up to 10 IMA groups 32,000 1-Port Channelized DS3 IMA module 28 DS1s 112 DS1s 280 DS1s in 19 shelf 392 DS1s in 23 shelf 420 DS1s 420 DS1s Up to 14 IMA groups 32,000

Description IMA-enabled interfaces per port IMA-enabled interfaces per PSAX 1000 chassis6 IMA-enabled interfaces per PSAX 1250 chassis7

60 E1s in 19 shelf 120 DS1s in 84 E1s in 23 shelf 19 shelf 168 DS1s in 23 shelf 90 E1s 90 E1s Up to 3 IMA groups 32,000 180 DS1s 180 DS1s Up to 6 IMA groups 32,000

IMA-enabled interfaces per PSAX 2300 chassis8 IMA-enabled interfaces per PSAX 4500 chassis9 IMA groups per module Virtual circuit support per module

Figure 7 The IMA modules available for the PacketStar PSAX product line combine high port density with low perport costs. The port densities in this table reflect a redundant configuration that uses one of the available I/O slots to house a second CPU instead of an additional IMA module. Responding to link failures within the IMA group

As with other IMA implementations, IMA groups can be configured on PacketStar PSAX Multiservice Media Gateway devices to continue transmitting traffic over the remaining links when one or more links in an IMA group fail. This forces existing services to compete for a smaller amount of available bandwidth, so the PSAX uses its Connection Admission Control (CAC) algorithm to predictably allocate the remaining bandwidth. To understand how this works, suppose an IMA group containing three DS1 links (providing 4.5 Mbps aggregate bandwidth) is created. If one link fails, the IMA group automatically continues to transmit traffic over the remaining two links. When notified of the link failure, CAC adapts the maximum available bandwidth for the IMA group to 3 Mbps. If the current services transmitted over the IMA group require more than 3 Mbps, CAC deletes SVC or SPVC connections as necessary to reduce the IMA groups bandwidth requirements. CAC can delete SVCs and SPVCs without user intervention. If it does delete an SVC or SPVC connection, CAC generates a trap to notify operators of the event. If after deleting the SVCs and SPVCs, the remaining PVC services still require more than 3 Mbps of bandwidth, PSAX generates a trap to alert the network administrator to delete specific PVCs to reduce bandwidth requirements for services carried over the link to comply with the nominal CAC limit. When the failed link is restored to the IMA group, CAC automatically adjusts the maximum available bandwidth for the IMA group back to 4.5 Mbps again without interrupting any existing services. During this process, CAC automatically restores deleted SPVC connections. Deleted SVC connections, however, must be re-initialized.

Assumes a PSAX 1000 with four redundant slots is fully loaded with that particular module. Assumes a redundant PSAX 1250 is fully loaded with that particular module. There are 10 redundant slots in the 19 shelf and 14 redundant slots in the 23 shelf. Assumes a PSAX 2300 with 15 redundant slots is fully loaded with that particular module. Assumes a PSAX 4500 with 15 redundant slots is fully loaded with that particular module.

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Dynamically adding new links to an IMA group for service flexibility

As with the CBX 500, service providers can add or remove links from an existing IMA group without taking them out of service. To be able to add future links to an IMA group, the IMA group is established with extra ports assigned to the group, but without active facilities for those ports. When the actual facilities are later linked to the ports, CAC discovers the new facilities and restores them automatically to the IMA group increasing the maximum available bandwidth for the IMA service.
Interchangeable modules protect capital investments and improve operating efficiency

All PacketStar PSAX IMA modules are interchangeable, and therefore, service providers can install them on any PacketStar PSAX 4500, PSAX 2300, PSAX 1250, or PSAX 1000 Multiservice Media Gateway device as needs dictate. This helps service providers protect their initial capital investments, ensure interoperability, and improve operating efficiency. Multivendor Interoperability The IMA implementation on both the CBX 500 multiservice WAN switch and Lucent PacketStar PSAX Multiservice Media Gateway devices complies with the ATM Forum IMA v1.1 specification. Consequently, any PSAX Multiservice Media Gateway can interoperate with the CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch or any thirdparty solution that supports IMA v1.1 or v1.0. Unified Navis network management The Lucent Navis iOperations suite of software products supports the Lucent IMA solution and offers the integrated, role-based systems service providers need to manage the entire lifecycle of their multiservice, multivendor optical, packet, voice, data and mobile networks. Navis iEngineer software helps service providers configure, build, and maintain their networks, evolve them to include new technology, and enable seamless introduction of profitable new services, such as customizable bandwidth services based on IMA. The Navis iEngineer family includes the award-winning NavisCore Element Management System, which provides sophisticated, standards-based management for multiservice devices in frame relay, ATM, and IP networks on a single platform. Lucent has industry-leading switches combined with Navis network management software, enabling service providers worldwide to deliver high-performance ATM, frame relay, IP, and private line services from a single network infrastructure.

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4. IMA applications
IMA opens up crucial new revenue and cost-saving opportunities for service providers with Lucent multiservice switches already deployed in their network. This section surveys a few of the major applications for Lucent IMA modules, including: Higher-density DS1 and E1 services Flexible bandwidth services for ATM and non-ATM users Low-speed converged services More efficient low-speed trunking between network sites. Increasing the port density of existing DS1 or E1 services The IMA modules available for the CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch and PacketStar PSAX Multiservice Media Gateways can be used for IMA-enabled services, or they can be used to support higher density ATM services at standard DS1 and E1 speeds. This offers several advantages to the service provider. First, service providers can replace multiple lower-density modules on existing CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switches or PacketStar PSAX Multiservice Media Gateways with a single high-density IMA card. This frees up slots on existing chasses for other services. For example, four 8-Port T1/E1 ATM modules installed on a single CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch can replace all four cards with a single 3-Port Channelized DS3/1 ATM with IMA module freeing up three slots, while increasing the port density of their DS1 services from 32 ports to 84 ports. By using existing equipment more efficiently, the need to acquire and deploy additional multiservice switches can be postponed. Second, service providers can configure any DS1 or E1 circuit supported on the cards as an IMA group with a single IMA link. Configuring the links in this way allows seamless upgrades of existing DS1 or E1 links to higher speed services without tearing down the original link or interrupting existing services. Instead, additional links can be dynamically added to the existing IMA group to increase its available bandwidth. The flexibility of the Lucent solution contrasts with competing IMA implementations that require service providers to interrupt services by tearing down the circuit, deleting the existing logical port and creating a new IMA group to change the available bandwidth. Finally, service providers applying for tariff permission to implement IMA in a given region can use the IMA modules to offer high-density DS1 or E1 services while the applications are being processed. Once the tariff applications are approved, the new services can be immediately turned up. Providing flexible bandwidth services to ATM users The most obvious service application for IMA is to offer flexibly sized bandwidth services between DS1 and DS3 or E1 and STM-1.Service providers can use the IMA modules in the CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch and PacketStar PSAX Multiservice Media Gateways to offer scalable, flexible IMA services in 1.5 Mbps or 2 Mbps increments. For example, if a customer has enough voice, video, and data traffic to consume between 5 and 6 Mbps of bandwidth, depending on traffic bursts, an IMA-based service bundling four DS1s or three E1s together can be provided to offer a 6 Mbps service. Without IMA, the the customer is forced to purchase a more costly DS3 (45 Mbps) or STM-1 (155 Mbps), both of which may provide far more bandwidth than the customer truly needs.

Free-up slots on existing chasses for other services by replacing multiple lower-density modules with a single high-density IMA module.

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Built-in IMA capabilities on the IMA modules available for the Lucent CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch and the PacketStar PSAX Multiservice Media Gateway family aggregate multiple DS1 or E1 ATM cell streams into a single logical interface or IMA group. The CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch modules can be used to create aggregated IMA groups using two to eight DS1s or two to nine E1s. Alternatively, service providers can use the IMA modules available for the PacketStar PSAX Multiservice Media Gateway family to create aggregated IMA groups using anywhere from two to 21 E1 links or two to 28 DS1 links. This allows service providers the flexibility to offer a broad range of interim bandwidth services for direct ATM interfaces (see Figure 8 below).
Constituent links |per IMA group 2 to 8 DS1 links 2 to 9 E1 links Range of potential bandwidth services10 1.5 to 12 Mbps, in 1.5 Mbps increments 2 to 18 Mbps, in 2 Mbps increments 3 to 9 Mbps, in 1.5 Mbps increments 4 to 12 Mbps, in 2 Mbps increments 3 to 18 Mbps, in 1.5 Mbps increments 4 to 42 Mbps, in 2 Mbps increments 3 to 42 Mbps, in 1.5 Mbps increments

Switch CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch

Module 3-Port Channelized DS3/1 with IMA ATM module 1-Port Channelized STM-1/E1 with IMA ATM module

IMA groups per module Up to 42 groups Up to 30 groups

PacketStar PSAX Multiservice Media Gateway family

6-port DS1 IMA module 6-port E1 IMA module Medium Density 12-port DS1 IMA module High Density 21-port E1 IMA module 1-port Channelized DS3 IMA module11

Up to 3 groups Up to 3 groups Up to 6 groups Up to 10 groups Up to 14 groups

2 to 6 DS1 links 2 to 6 E1 links 2 to 12 DS1 links 2 to 21 E1 links 2 to 28 DS1 links

Figure 8 Service providers can use the modules available for the Lucent CBX 500 Multiservice WAN switch and PacketStar PSAX Multiservice Media Gateway family to create a wide range of bandwidth services to help bridge the gap between entry-level DS1 or E1 access services and more expensive DS3, E3, or STM-1 services.

Providing flexible bandwidth services for non-ATM users In addition to supporting direct ATM interfaces, service providers can use IMA support on the CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch with ATM Forum IMA v1.1-compliant customer premise equipment (CPE) to provide access to flexible, higher bandwidth services to end-users over familiar, non-ATM interfaces, such as Frame Relay, Ethernet, private line, and voice. To offer this service, each DS1 or E1-based IMA group on the CBX 500 switch is associated with an ATM UNI interface to an IMA-capable CPE, such as a member of the PacketStar PSAX Multiservice Media Gateway family. This configuration eliminates the complexities of ATM access for the end-user, while preserving ATMs flexible and reliable service management structure. Figure 9 illustrates this application using the CBX 500 3-Port Channelized DS3/1 with IMA ATM module.

10

Any DS1 or E1 link on this module can be designated as a non-IMA link or as an IMA group with only one constituent link designated to provide 1.5 Mbps or 2 Mbps access services. Supports 28 DS1 interfaces.

11

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Figure 9 The 3-Port DS3/1 Channelized ATM with IMA module delivers bandwidth between 1.5 and 45 Mbps for end user connections and network links. The I/O module supports direct ATM interfaces, as well as non-ATM interfaces from certain Frame Relay, Ethernet, private line, and voice equipment located on the customer premise.

Supporting converged services with links below DS3 In the past, enterprises that required more than one type of service from a service provider would also require more than one way to access those services. Each access method carried a specific type of traffic (i.e. voice or Frame Relay or IP traffic) to support a specific business application, but when circuits are reserved for specific applications or traffic types, this sacrifices the ability to use ATM to consolidate and efficiently manage diverse traffic types across those circuits. Offering converged access over ATM enables service providers to use the inherent strengths of ATM to simplify enterprise WAN access. To offer the service, the service provider uses IMA to create a single access pipe with enough bandwidth to support all WAN access needs (voice, video, SNA, LAN, Frame Relay, ATM, and other data services). ATMs strict QoS and traffic management supports converged voice, video, and data services over the IMA link. With IMA, service providers can once again take advantage of ATMs statistical multiplexing and load balancing capabilities to efficiently manage edge bandwidth. The following two diagrams illustrate the potential impact. In the first diagram, the service provider is using three separate circuits to handle voice, video, and data traffic. Circuit 1, which handles only voice traffic, is at 70% capacity. Circuit 2, which handles only video traffic, is at 20% capacity. Circuit 3, which handles data traffic, is at 80% capacity. Since the data traffic continues to grow steadily, the service provider is currently evaluating whether to deploy a fourth circuit to handle the data traffic overflow.
70% 20% 80%

Circuit 1 Voice only

Circuit 2 Video only

Circuit 3 Data only

Figure 10 Using three separate circuits to handle specific types of traffic without IMA.

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In the next diagram, the links are bundled into a single IMA group to carry voice, video and data traffic. This enables the service provider to use the isolated bandwidth on Circuits 1 and 2 to support data traffic overflow. By using IMA to logically consolidate the existing circuits, the service provider has freed up an entire circuit to support other customers relieving congestion at the network edge. In addition, since the IMA group continues working even if one of the constituent links fails, fault tolerance for the converged services is also improved.
100% 70%

Circuit 1 Data, Voice & Video

Circuit 2 Data, Voice & Video

Circuit 3 No longer needed

Figure 11 Supporting converged services using an IMA group. IMAs more efficient bandwidth management enables the service provider to eliminate the third link. Because IMA uses a round-robin scheduler to balance the load, the remaining two links operate at 85% capacity.

Service providers can offer customers a single integrated bill and a single circuit to support all services, which leads the industry to refer to converged access over IMA as a one pipe, one bill service. Reducing the cost of network backhaul Service providers can also use IMA within the network backbone to create efficient low-speed trunks in areas where DS3 or STM-1 lines are not cost-effective or simply not available. With IMA, additional DS1 or E1 lines can provide added incremental bandwidth as demand grows without sacrificing the ability to use ATMs QoS, traffic management, and statistical multiplexing capabilities to efficiently manage diverse traffic types across multiple circuits. The following diagram illustrates how a wireless service provider can use IMA on any PacketStar PSAX Multiservice Media Gateway for cost-effective backhaul from the cell site. As the diagram shows, service providers can use the PSAX to provide efficient cell site backhaul for a variety of wireless networks including CDMA, TDMA, GSM, and AMPS as well as 3G voice and data services. PSAX provides service providers with the flexibility to migrate from GSM to UMTS without upgrading their backhaul equipment. PacketStar PSAX Multiservice Media Gateways also offer unique, low-cost scalability. PacketStar PSAX 1000 can support smaller cell sites, then evolve to a higher capacity PacketStar PSAX 2300 as demand grows. All PSAX chassis use an interchangeable set of modules, so service providers can use equipment from existing backhaul applications to scale their networks. Finally, using the IMA capabilities on PSAX media gateways to provide appropriately sized backhaul pipes for existing wireless services can significantly reduce recurring facilities costs.

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Figure 12 Wireless service providers can use the IMA modules available for the PacketStar PSAX Multiservice Media Gateway family to reduce cell site backhaul costs throughout their networks.

Similarly, the IMA capabilities on the CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch can reduce facilities costs at radio network control (RNC) and node hub sites within their wireless networks. The following diagram illustrates this application. In the diagram, the service provider uses the IMA capabilities on the CBX 500 switch to avoid managing physical E1 links at the RNC site. This gives the service provider more flexibility to manage bandwidth and complete re-homing procedures. The IMA capabilities on the CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch allow ATM traffic to be aggregated on the remote side of the node hub site and help reduce leased line costs by utilizing trunks at speeds lower than DS3.
S I T M CBX M A 500 1

E1s

Node B

Mux

Chan. STM1

Optical Transport Network

Chan. STM1

Chan. STM1

Optical Transport Network

IMA Group

Radio Network Controller

Figure 13 Wireless service providers can use IMA capabilities on the CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switch to simplify bandwidth management and re-homing procedures at RNC sites.

Wireline service providers can use IMA in a similar fashion to create cost-effective, interim-speed trunks between access and edge devices (or edge and core devices). When deployed intelligently throughout wireless and wireline networks, IMA can help service providers reduce their facilities costs and more efficiently leverage the available bandwidth in their network backbones.

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5. Conclusion
As this paper demonstrates, adding one or more IMA modules to existing Lucent CBX 500 Multiservice WAN Switches or PacketStar PSAX Multiservice Media Gateways can be a cost-effective way to generate new revenue opportunities from the customized bandwidth and converged services markets. At the same time, implementing IMA on existing Lucent multiservice switches enables service providers to increase service density and use the bandwidth already in their network more efficiently reducing facilities costs and relieving congestion in network hubs and at network access points.

Appendix A: Acronyms
The following table lists the acronyms used in this paper.
Acronym ABR CDMA CPE FCP ICP ICP IMA MR NNI PVC QoS RNC SNA SVC TCO TDM UNI VC WAN Meaning Available Bit Rate Code Division Multiple Access Customer Premise Equipment Flow Control Processor IMA Control Processor IMA Control Protocol Inverse Multiplexing for ATM Monthly Revenue Potential Network to Network Interface Permanent Virtual Circuit Quality of Service Radio Network Control Systems Network Architecture Switched Virtual Circuit Total Cost of Ownership Time Division Multiplexing User to Network Interface Virtual Circuit Wide Area Network

Specifications subject to change without notice. Contact your Lucent representative for more information on availability and upgrades. Lucent reserves the right to change, modify, transfer or other wise revise this publication without notice. To learn more about our comprehensive portfolio, please contact your Lucent Technologies Sales Representative, Lucent Business Partner or visit our web site at http://www.lucent.com/solutions/core_switching.html. CBX 500, Navis, NavisCore, PacketStar and Stinger are registered trademarks of Lucent Technologies, Inc.

Copyright 2003 Lucent Technologies Inc. All rights reserved MSS v1 3/03

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