iTnews
  • Home
  • News
  • Technology
  • Telco/ISP

Australia-US project achieves SDN routing breakthrough

By Juha Saarinen on May 8, 2015 11:23AM
Australia-US project achieves SDN routing breakthrough

Software-defined networking reaches internet scale.

The Australian Academic Research Network (AARNet) and the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) have demonstrated internet-scale software-defined network routing to the United States, using open source components.

Using a high throughput programmable Corsa OpenFlow DP6410 data plane, the Australian institutions set up a production SDN-based peering router with a switch deployed in AARNet's data centre in Haymarket, Sydney, and an Open Network Operating System (ONOS) application 15km away in Marsfield.

The Australian side has been peering for a month with the Vandervecken SDN router at the US Department of Energy's research Energy Sciences Network (ESnet) situated at the University of California, Berkeley, over a trans-pacific connection.

Source: On.lab

Some 15,000 routes to research and education networks were advertised by ESnet to the Vandervecken router in the US; these were in turn advertised to the Sydney peering router.

Being able to advertise large amounts of routes and interoperate with existing infrastructure demonstrates SDN is viable on a worldwide scale on production networks, the project partners said.

Vandervecken uses SDN router software developed by Google, which is based on the RouteFlow project for virtualised Internet Protocol (IP) routing services, and the Quagga open source software routing suite.

The SDN routing trial was conducted under the auspices of the Open Network Foundation's ON.Lab, which is developing ONOS.

AARNet and CSIRO joined the project, which started off across the Tasman as a collaboration between Google, the Research and Academic Network of New Zealand (REANNZ) and Victoria University, last year.

It was moved out of the country due to uncertainty around new communications security legislation that required operators to notify the NZ Government Communications Security Bureau (GCSB) and seek the agency's approval for equipment and configuration changes for public networks.

Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Copyright © iTnews.com.au . All rights reserved.
Tags:
aarnetcorsacsiroesnetgooglenfvonlabonosquaggasdntelco/ispvandervecken

Partner Content

How to turn digital complexity into competitive advantage
Promoted Content How to turn digital complexity into competitive advantage
Why rethinking your CMS is crucial for customer retention
Promoted Content Why rethinking your CMS is crucial for customer retention
Security "mindset shift" needed to protect organisations
Promoted Content Security "mindset shift" needed to protect organisations
Security: Understanding the fundamentals of governance, risk & compliance
Promoted Content Security: Understanding the fundamentals of governance, risk & compliance

Sponsored Whitepapers

Free eBook: Digital Transformation 101 – for banks
Free eBook: Digital Transformation 101 – for banks
Why financial services need to tackle their Middle Office
Why financial services need to tackle their Middle Office
Learn: The latest way to transfer files between customers
Learn: The latest way to transfer files between customers
Extracting the value of data using Unified Observability
Extracting the value of data using Unified Observability
Planning before the breach: You can’t protect what you can’t see
Planning before the breach: You can’t protect what you can’t see

Events

  • Forrester Technology & Innovation Asia Pacific 2022
By Juha Saarinen
May 8 2015
11:23AM
0 Comments

Related Articles

  • Russia says it's not planning to block YouTube
  • Optus repeats calls for OTT services to pay more
  • EU's Vestager assessing if tech giants should share telcos' costs
  • Researchers devise stealthy phone tracking without fake base stations
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook Share on LinkedIn Share on Whatsapp Email A Friend

Most Read Articles

NSW Police dumps Bezos-backed Mark43 from core systems overhaul

NSW Police dumps Bezos-backed Mark43 from core systems overhaul

Australian court finds insurer not liable for ransomware clean-up costs

Australian court finds insurer not liable for ransomware clean-up costs

NBN Co proposes to axe CVC across all plans by mid-2026

NBN Co proposes to axe CVC across all plans by mid-2026

Wesfarmers to stand up offensive cyber security capabilities

Wesfarmers to stand up offensive cyber security capabilities

Digital Nation

Metaverses on the agenda for Dominello, Husic ministerial meeting
Metaverses on the agenda for Dominello, Husic ministerial meeting
COVER STORY: How KPMG, Mirvac and ASX use blockchain to build trust in the property sector
COVER STORY: How KPMG, Mirvac and ASX use blockchain to build trust in the property sector
Domino’s invests in observability for zero contact delivery
Domino’s invests in observability for zero contact delivery
Australia will lose 11 percent of jobs to automation by 2040: Forrester
Australia will lose 11 percent of jobs to automation by 2040: Forrester
Criteo to fork out $94.7m for consent breaches
Criteo to fork out $94.7m for consent breaches
All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in any form without prior authorisation.
Your use of this website constitutes acceptance of nextmedia's Privacy Policy and Terms & Conditions.