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- Network Working Group V. Cerf
- Request for Comments: 1167 CNRI
- July 1990
-
-
- THOUGHTS ON THE NATIONAL RESEARCH AND EDUCATION NETWORK
-
- Status of this Memo
-
- The memo provides a brief outline of a National Research and
- Education Network (NREN). This memo provides information for the
- Internet community. It does not specify any standard. It is not a
- statement of IAB policy or recommendations.
-
- Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
-
- ABSTRACT
-
- This contribution seeks to outline and call attention to some of the
- major factors which will influence the form and structure of a
- National Research and Education Network (NREN). It is implicitly
- assumed that the system will emerge from the existing Internet.
-
- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
-
- The author gratefully acknowledges support from the National Science
- Foundation, The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the
- Department of Energy and the National Aeronautics and Space
- Administration through cooperative agreement NCR-8820945. The author
- also acknowledges helpful comments from colleagues Ira Richer, Barry
- Leiner, Hans-Werner Braun and Robert Kahn. The opinions expressed in
- this paper are the personal opinions of the author and do not
- represent positions of the U.S. Government, the Corporation for
- National Research Initiatives or of the Internet Activities Board.
- In fact, the author isn't sure he agrees with everything in the
- paper, either!
-
- A WORD ON TERMINOLOGY
-
- The expression "national research and education network" is taken to
- mean "the U.S. National Research and Education Network" in the
- material which follows. It is implicitly assumed that similar
- initiatives may arise in other countries and that a kind of Global
- Research and Education Network may arise out of the existing
- international Internet system. However, the primary focus of this
- paper is on developments in the U.S.
-
-
-
- Cerf [Page 1]
- RFC 1167 NREN July 1990
-
-
- FUNDAMENTALS
-
- 1. The NREN in the U.S. will evolve from the existing Internet base.
- By implication, the U.S. NREN will have to fit into an international
- environment consisting of a good many networks sponsored or owned and
- operated by non-U.S. organizations around the world.
-
- 2. There will continue to be special-purpose and mission-oriented
- networks sponsored by the U.S. Government which will need to link
- with, if not directly support, the NREN.
-
- 3. The basic technical networking architecture of the system will
- include local area networks, metropolitan, regional and wide-area
- networks. Some nets will be organized to support transit traffic and
- others will be strictly parasitic.
-
- 4. Looking towards the end of the decade, some of the networks may be
- mobile (digital, cellular). A variety of technologies may be used,
- including, but not limited to, high speed Fiber Data Distribution
- Interface (FDDI) nets, Distributed-Queue Dual Bus (DQDB) nets,
- Broadband Integrated Services Digital Networks (B-ISDN) utilizing
- Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) switching fabrics as well as
- conventional Token Ring, Ethernet and other IEEE 802.X technology.
- Narrowband ISDN and X.25 packet switching technology network services
- are also likely play a role along with Switched Multi-megabit Data
- Service (SMDS) provided by telecommunications carriers. It also
- would be fair to ask what role FTS-2000 might play in the system, at
- least in support of government access to the NREN, and possibly in
- support of national agency network facilities.
-
- 5. The protocol architecture of the system will continue to exhibit a
- layered structure although the layering may vary from the present-day
- Internet and planned Open Systems Interconnection structures in some
- respects.
-
- 6. The system will include servers of varying kinds required to
- support the general operation of the system (for example, network
- management facilities, name servers of various types, email, database
- and other kinds of information servers, multicast routers,
- cryptographic certificate servers) and collaboration support tools
- including video/teleconferencing systems and other "groupware"
- facilities. Accounting and access control mechanisms will be
- required.
-
- 7. The system will support multiple protocols on an end to end basis.
- At the least, full TCP/IP and OSI protocol stacks will be supported.
- Dealing with Connectionless and Connection-Oriented Network Services
- in the OSI area is an open issue (transport service bridges and
-
-
-
-
- Cerf [Page 2]
- RFC 1167 NREN July 1990
-
-
- application level gateways are two possibilities).
-
- 8. Provision must be made for experimental research in networking to
- support the continued technical evolution of the system. The NREN
- can no more be a static, rigid system than the Internet has been
- since its inception. Interconnection of experimental facilities with
- the operational NREN must be supported.
-
- 9. The architecture must accommodate the use of commercial services,
- private and Government-sponsored networks in the NREN system.
-
- Apart from the considerations listed above, it is also helpful to
- consider the constituencies and stakeholders who have a role to play
- in the use of, provision of and evolution of NREN services. Their
- interests will affect the architecture of the NREN and the course of
- its creation and evolution.
-
- NREN CONSTITUENTS
-
- The Users
-
- Extrapolating from the present Internet, the users of the system
- will be diverse. By legislative intent, it will include colleges
- and universities, government research organizations (e.g.,
- research laboratories of the Departments of Defense, Energy,
- Health and Human Services, National Aeronautics and Space
- Administration), non-profit and for-profit research and
- development organizations, federally funded research and
- development centers (FFRDCs), R&D activities of private
- enterprise, library facilities of all kinds, and primary and
- secondary schools. The system is not intended to be discipline-
- specific.
-
- It is critical to recognize that even in the present Internet, it
- has been possible to accommodate a remarkable amalgam of private
- enterprise, academic institutions, government and military
- facilities. Indeed, the very ability to accept such a diverse
- constituency turns on the increasing freedom of the so-called
- intermediate-level networks to accept an unrestricted set of
- users. The growth in the size and diversity of Internet users, if
- it can be said to have been constrained at all, has been limited
- in part by usage constraints placed on the federally-sponsored
- national agency networks (e.g., NSFNET, NASA Science Internet,
- Energy Sciences Net, High Energy Physics Net, the recently
- deceased ARPANET, Defense Research Internet, etc.). Given the
- purposes of these networks and the fiduciary responsibilities of
- the agencies that have created them, such usage constraints seem
- highly appropriate. It may be beneficial to search for less
-
-
-
- Cerf [Page 3]
- RFC 1167 NREN July 1990
-
-
- constraining architectural paradigms, perhaps through the use of
- backbone facilities which are not federally-sponsored.
-
- The Internet does not quite serve the public in the same sense
- that the telephone network(s) do (i.e., the Internet is not a
- common carrier), although the linkages between the Internet and
- public electronic mail systems, private bulletin board systems
- such as FIDONET and commercial network services such as UUNET,
- ALTERNET and PSI, for example, make the system extremely
- accessible to a very wide variety of users.
-
- It will be important to keep in mind that, over time, an
- increasing number of institutional users will support local area
- networks and will want to gain access to NREN by that means.
- Individual use will continue to rely on dial-up access and, as it
- is deployed, narrow-band ISDN. Eventually, metropolitan area
- networks and broadband ISDN facilities may be used to support
- access to NREN. Cellular radio or other mobile communication
- technologies may also become increasingly popular as access tools.
-
- The Service Providers
-
- In its earliest stages, the Internet consisted solely of
- government-sponsored networks such as the Defense Department's
- ARPANET, Packet Radio Networks and Packet Satellite Networks.
- With the introduction of Xerox PARC's Ethernet, however, things
- began to change and privately owned and operated networks became
- an integral part of the Internet architecture.
-
- For a time, there was a mixture of government-sponsored backbone
- facilities and private local area networks. With the introduction
- of the National Science Foundation NSFNET, however, the
- architecture changed again to include intermediate-level networks
- consisting of collections of commercially-produced routers and
- trunk or access lines which connected local area network
- facilities to the government-sponsored backbones. The
- government-sponsored supercomputer centers (such as the National
- Aerospace Simulator at NASA/AMES, the Magnetic Fusion Energy
- Computing Center at Lawrence Livermore Laboratory and the half-
- dozen or so NSF-sponsored supercomputer centers) fostered the
- growth of communications networks specifically to support
- supercomputer access although, over time, these have tended to
- look more and more like general-purpose intermediate-level
- networks.
-
- Many, but not all, of the intermediate-level networks applied for
- and received seed funding from the National Science Foundation.
- It was and continues to be NSF's position, however, that such
-
-
-
- Cerf [Page 4]
- RFC 1167 NREN July 1990
-
-
- direct subsidies should diminish over time and that the
- intermediate networks should become self-sustaining. To
- accomplish this objective, the intermediate-level networks have
- been turning to an increasingly diverse user constituency (see
- section above).
-
- The basic model of government backbones, consortium intermediate
- level nets and private local area networks has served reasonably
- well during the 1980's but it would appear that newer
- telecommunications technologies may suggest another potential
- paradigm. As the NSFNET moves towards higher speed backbone
- operation in the 45 Mb/s range, the importance of carrier
- participation in the enterprise has increased. The provision of
- backbone capacity at attractive rates by the inter-exchange
- carrier (in this case, MCI Communications Corporation) has been
- crucial to the feasibility of deploying such a high speed system.
-
- As the third phase of the NREN effort gets underway, it is
- becoming increasingly apparent that the "federally-funded
- backbone" model may and perhaps even should or must give way to a
- vision of commercially operated, gigabit speed systems to which
- the users of the NREN have access. If there is federal subsidy in
- the new paradigm, it might come through direct provision of
- support for networking at the level of individual research grant
- or possibly through a system of institutional vouchers permitting
- and perhaps even mandating institution-wide network planning and
- provision. This differs from the present model in which the
- backbone networks are essentially federally owned and operated or
- enjoy significant, direct federal support to the provider of the
- service.
-
- The importance of such a shift in service provision philosophy
- cannot be over-emphasized. In the long run, it eliminates
- unnecessary restrictions on the use and application of the
- backbone facilities, opening up possibilities for true ubiquity of
- access and use without the need for federal control, except to the
- extent that any such services are considered in need of
- regulation, perhaps. The same arguments might be made for the
- intermediate level systems (metropolitan and regional area access
- networks). This does NOT mean that private networks ranging from
- local consortia to inter-continental systems will be ruled out.
- The economics of private networking may still be favorable for
- sufficiently heavy usage. It does suggest, however, that
- achieving scale and ubiquity may largely rely on publicly
- accessible facilities.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Cerf [Page 5]
- RFC 1167 NREN July 1990
-
-
- The Vendors
-
- Apart from service provision, the technology available to the
- users and the service providers will come largely from commercial
- sources. A possible exception to this may be the switches used in
- the gigabit testbed effort, but ultimately, even this technology
- will have to be provided commercially if the system is to achieve
- the scale necessary to serve as the backbone of the NREN.
-
- An important consequence of this observation is that the NREN
- architecture should be fashioned in such a way that it can be
- constructed from technology compatible with carrier plans and
- available from commercial telecommunications equipment suppliers.
- Examples include the use of SONET (Synchronous Optical Network)
- optical transmission technology, Switched Multimegabit Data
- Services offerings (metropolitan area networks), Asynchronous
- Transmission Mode (ATM) switches, frame relays, high speed,
- multi-protocol routers, and so on. It is somewhat unclear what
- role the public X.25 networks will play, especially where narrow
- and broadband ISDN services are available, but it is also not
- obvious that they ought to be written off at this point. Where
- there is still research and development activity (such as in
- network management), the network R&D community can contribute
- through experimental efforts and through participation in
- standards-making activities (e.g., ANSI, NIST, IAB/IETF, Open
- NMF).
-
- OPERATIONS
-
- It seems clear that the current Internet and the anticipated NREN
- will have to function in a highly distributed fashion. Given the
- diversity of service providers and the richness of the constituent
- networks (as to technology and ownership), there will have to be a
- good deal of collaboration and cooperation to make the system work.
- One can see the necessity for this, based on the existing voice
- network in the U.S. with its local and inter-exchange carrier (IEC)
- structure. It should be noted that in the presence of the local and
- IEC structure, it has proven possible to support private and virtual
- private networking as well. The same needs to be true of the NREN.
-
- A critical element of any commercial service is accounting and
- billing. It must be possible to identify users (billable parties,
- anyway) and to compute usage charges. This is not to say that the
- NREN component networks must necessarily bill on the basis of usage.
- It may prove preferable to have fixed access charges which might be
- modulated by access data rate, as some of the intermediate-level
- networks have found. It would not be surprising to find a mixture of
- charging policies in which usage charges are preferable for small
-
-
-
- Cerf [Page 6]
- RFC 1167 NREN July 1990
-
-
- amounts of use and flat rate charges are preferred for high volume
- use.
-
- It will be critical to establish a forum in which operational matters
- can be debated and methods established to allow cooperative operation
- of the entire system. A number of possibilities present themselves:
- use of the Internet Engineering Task Force as a basis, use of
- existing telecommunication carrier organizations, or possibly a
- consortium of all service providers (and private network operators?).
- Even if such an activity is initiated through federal action, it may
- be helpful, in the long run, if it eventually embraces a much wider
- community.
-
- Agreements are needed on the technical foundations for network
- monitoring and management, for internetwork accounting and exchange
- payments, for problem identification, tracking, escalation and
- resolution. A framework is needed for the support of users of the
- aggregate NREN. This suggests cooperative agreements among network
- information centers, user service and support organizations to begin
- with. Eventually, the cost of such operations will have to be
- incorporated into the general cost of service provision. The federal
- role, even if it acts as catalyst in the initial stages, may
- ultimately focus on the direct support of the users of the system
- which it finds it appropriate to support and subsidize (e.g., the
- research and educational users of the NREN).
-
- A voucher system has been proposed, in the case of the NREN, which
- would permit users to choose which NREN service provider(s) to
- engage. The vouchers might be redeemed by the service providers in
- the same sort of way that food stamps are redeemed by supermarkets.
- Over time, the cost of the vouchers could change so that an initial
- high subsidy from the federal government would diminish until the
- utility of the vouchers vanished and decisions would be made to
- purchase telecommunications services on a pure cost/benefit basis.
-
- IMPORTANCE OF COMMERCIAL INTERESTS
-
- The initial technical architecture should incorporate commercial
- service provision where possible so as to avoid the creation of a
- system which is solely reliant on the federal government for its
- support and operation. It is anticipated that a hybrid system will
- develop but, for example, it is possible that the gigabit backbone
- components of the system might be strictly commercial from the start,
- even if the lower speed components of the NREN vary from private, to
- public to federally subsidized or owned and operated.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Cerf [Page 7]
- RFC 1167 NREN July 1990
-
-
- CONCLUSIONS
-
- The idea of creating a National Research and Education Network has
- captured the attention and enthusiasm of an extraordinarily broad
- collection of interested parties. I believe this is in part a
- consequence of the remarkable range of new services and facilities
- which could be provided once the network infrastructure is in place.
- If the technology of the NREN is commercially viable, one can readily
- imagine that an economic engine of considerable proportions might
- result from the widespread accessibility of NREN-like facilities to
- business sector.
-
- Security Considerations
-
- Security issues are not discussed in this memo.
-
- Author's Address
-
- Vinton G. Cerf
- Corporation for National Research Initiatives
- 1895 Preston White Drive, Suite 100
- Reston, VA 22091
-
- EMail: vcerf@NRI.Reston.VA.US
-
- Phone: (703) 620-8990
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-