NBN Co reveals B2B gateway architecture

 

Commits to at least 95 percent availability.

NBN Co plans to schedule a weekly "change window" between 2am and 6am where it can service its B2B gateway - the IT interconnection point with ISP systems.

The network builder shed light on the architecture and operation of the gateway in a series of changes made to its technical specifications published over the weekend.

The physical gateway itself will be an IBM WebSphere DataPower XB60 appliance, touted by Big Blue as a way to "extend your business to... customers and partners with DMZ-grade security".

All interactions between NBN Co and access seekers – such as address searches, orders and service desk tickets – would pass between the B2B gateway and the ISP's message service handler (MSH).

NBN Co said it was "conscious" of the impact that any scheduled or unscheduled outages to the B2B gateway would have on ISPs servicing their customers.

"We aim to achieve scheduled service hours of 24x7 except for a weekly change window (requiring prior notification of outage) between 2am and 6am (exact outage window to be confirmed)," the network builder said.

"NBN Co commits to provide better than 95 percent availability of interactions to support processes to fulfil, assure and bill services when measured over any 60-day period, excluding planned outages and unavailability caused by a Force Majeure event.

"System architecture design targets are higher, and long term, it is expected that stable in-service performance may in some cases exceed 99 percent".

Force Majeure is a legal clause that exempts NBN Co from responsibility in circumstances beyond their control – such as a so-called 'Act of God'.

NBN Co said it would build geographic redundancy into its B2B infrastructure and hoped ISPs would do the same.

"Similar deployment architectural considerations from Access Seekers will support very high availability for reliable delivery of messages between organisations," NBN Co said.

Processing times

NBN Co has also – for the first time – put performance targets on its B2B system, from the time a message enters the gateway to the time it exits for the return trip back to the ISP.

For example, it wants an ISP looking up the address of a potential NBN customer to pass through its systems in under five seconds.

Order fulfillment should take less than five minutes. Trouble ticket lodgment should occur in under ten seconds, according to the NBN documents.

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NBN Co reveals B2B gateway architecture
"Well, fundamentally, yes, Hubert. . ."
By anonymous
 
 
 
Comments: 6
Bob
May 9, 2011 3:33 PM
95% Availability!. When did we become a third world country? That's about 18 days a year of outage.
davmel
May 9, 2011 4:32 PM
Bob, that is the availability window for making CHANGES to service configuration (e.g. adding new users, changing service speeds etc).
That's better than what most ISP's have now so don't jump to the "third world country" nonsense.
It has nothing to do with the much higher availability of the services to end users which are unaffected (unless a change is required). Telstra by comparison has a sheduled outage change window from 12am to 6am almost every day.
TReichle
May 9, 2011 4:33 PM
I think they are saying if you pick any period of 60 days it will be down for less then 3 days.

Most 60 days period it would be down for less then 15 hours.

Also this is not the actual NBN. This is the system for businesses to pay the NBN or schedule connections etc.
singo79
May 10, 2011 10:31 AM
Sounds like Bob is a typical Liberal drone, hanging off every word coming out of Malcolm Turnbull and Tony Abbott's mouths.

Typical Liberal supporters, running their mouths off before they understand the subject matter.
HubertCumberdale
May 11, 2011 12:29 PM
singo79 wrote:
hanging off every word coming out of Malcolm Turnbull and Tony Abbott's mouths.

Are you sure it's their mouths?
anonymous
May 11, 2011 8:26 PM

Well, fundamentally, yes, Hubert. . .
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