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Towards a real convergence for Multi-play

Publication date: May 13, 2009

Authors: Matias, Jon Jacob, Eduardo Higuero, Marivi Astorga, Jasone
Type:Conference article
Publication details
Series: - Book title: IEEE International Symposium on Broadband Multimedia Systems and Broadcasting (BMSB 20009)
Chapter: - Edition: -
Volume: - Journal: -
Number: - Pages: -
ISBN/ISSN: - admin.research.publications.city: -
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Abstract

Broadband service delivery has experienced a great evolution due to significant technological advances, which have favored the appearance of new business models. In this context, multi-play services denote the provisioning of several broadband services over a single broadband connection. In current deployments, there are a concrete number of services available (the same for all the customers), and bandwidth is pre-allocated by each service. This paper proposes a new approach that addresses this topic in a generic way. The new architecture does not impose any restrictions and handles the multi-service delivery with independence of the number of services. The new multi-play approach makes use of Carrier-Grade Ethernet to achieve network convergence, which means that the same network resources are used to carry all the broadband services. Carrier-Grade Ethernet is an umbrella term for a group of initiatives and standards that try to overcome the restrictions of Ethernet as carrier transport technology. Some of these standards such as Provider Bridges, Provider Backbone Bridges, PBB-Traffic Engineering, or Shortest Path Bridging are introduced. Finally, this paper proposes a built-in security scheme, which controls the admission to the network by preventing unauthorized users from accessing services. This approach is based on a modified version of IEEE 802.1X which permits the simultaneous establishment of multiple authentication processes, one per each service that the customer requests.