Network Environment and IPv4 ServicesRTPCom is a fictitious wholesale access provider that covers most major metropolitan areas in the United States. It started by providing access services to its residential and business customers over dialup and ISDN. Today, most of its customers are provided broadband access over xDSL, Fiber, or WiFi. RTPCom provides IPv4 unicast connectivity for its customers, linking them to their Internet service providers of choice.Considering the large number of residential customers, aggregation is important in RTPCom's network design. Its backbone is structured in three levels of points of presence (POPs) (Figure 14-1). Figure 14-1. RTPCom POP Architecture![]() Figure 14-2. RTPCom NetworkGeographical Topology[View full size image] ![]()
They also contain the L2TP Network Server (LNS) routers that terminate the PPP sessions initiated by the customers. The de-encapsulated traffic is then handed over to the ISP selected by those customers. Each LNS router supports the customers of a single ISP and it connects over dedicated VLANs to two edge routers that provide the uplink to that ISP. The L1 POP design and the backbone topology are shown in Figure 14-3. Authentication, authorization, and accounting (AAA) resources that are used by the LNS for managing the PPP sessions are maintained by the corresponding ISP and are not shown in this figure. Figure 14-3. Level 1 POP Design and Backbone Topology![]() Figure 14-4. Level 2 POP Design[View full size image] ![]() Figure 14-5. Level 3 POP Design[View full size image] ![]() Figure 14-6. RTPCom Access LayerChapter 3, "Delivering IPv6 Unicast Services," the cable specification (DOCSIS) does not support IPv6, so tunneling is the only mechanism available for transporting the IPv6 traffic.RTPCom is currently evaluating WiMAX as an access technology but no service is yet provided as this would require a license subscription.For the IPv4 service, RTPCom aggregates the customer-initiated PPP over Ethernet (PPPoE) sessions and bundles them through Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol (L2TP) tunnels to the edge of its network. LNS routers in L1 POPs terminate the PPPoE sessions, de-encapsulate the traffic, and forward it to ISPs. The operation of this service is also exemplified in Figure 14-6.Through this wholesale model, RTPCom is not responsible for managing the global IPv4 addresses used by these customers, because they are managed by their ISP. RTPCom only provides transport for the encapsulated traffic and for that purpose it uses the private IPv4 address space.The bulk of RTPCom's business is providing residential customers with access to an ISP. It is also aggressively developing its small office/home office (SOHO) customer base. RTPCom would like to expand its service offering into the Triple Play (data, voice, video) arena. Although the wholesale model used for the IPv4 unicast-based services can easily support Voice over IP (VoIP), it does not support in a scalable manner content delivery (CD)-based on multicast. All RTPCom's customers have a virtual point-to-point link to their gateway (LNS) across a large portion of the network (L3, L2, and nearest L1 POP). Because the LNS is the only device that can do traffic replication for all the end users, RTPCom's network is flooded with multiple replicas of the same packets for each customer subscribed to a given content channel. This inefficient use of network resources limits significantly the scale of any multicast-based service. |




