[LINK] Melb Uni 10gig/sec label switching network
stephen at melbpc.org.au
stephen at melbpc.org.au
Tue Jun 5 22:49:44 AEST 2007
Uni set to flick its switches
Nick Miller June 5, 2007
<http://www.theage.com.au/technology/index.html>
The University of Melbourne is poised to turn on the first stage of its
$25 million IT upgrade - a $5 million core network that the university
says will be among the world's best.
It has put to tender the project's next stages - a campus wireless
network and edge switches to link departments.
Information vice-principal Linda O'Brien said the network will support
high-end research such as the university's role in the Atlas Experiment
at Switzerland's CERN particle physics lab that is searching for evidence
of the "God particle" - why matter has mass. It uses huge amounts of
data, shared by scientists around the world.
A better network was needed to link to the synchrotron, a firehose of
data, and to support NICTA's Melbourne hub that researches terabit
networks.
And it enables the university to switch to voice-over-IP, build a campus
wireless network, deploy Exchange email server, power-over-Ethernet and
quality-of-service applications.
Network manager Colin Blythe said the upgrade was needed three years ago
when spending was approved.
"You can spend all you like on Exchange and a new student system but if
the core network doesn't provide a good experience then people won't use
them," Mr Blythe said.
Some departments were using the multicast network protocol for video
streaming and to display images on lab equipment but he said it
was "having unfortunate effects on the rest of the network".
Ms O'Brien said a re-think was the only solution: "Universities are in
the knowledge business, pushing at the edges of technological
possibilities. This is a concerted effort to invest in bringing the
infrastructure up to something that befits a university of this kind."
The new 10 gigabits a second network will use Multi-Protocol Label
Switching - the technology powering Telstra's next-generation network.
Research, telephony, administration and student services have their own
virtual networks, insulated from each other's demands.
"We are ahead of leading research universities overseas such as Edinburgh
and UCLA, who have had to build multiple physical networks," Ms O'Brien
said. "We can deliver as good if not better performance on one network."
The university will centralise management of its departments' local
networks, saving money and providing consistent hardware and services.
The core network of 76 Cisco switches will be built and maintained by
integrator Netstar. It will use its network management platform nVisage
to monitor performance from its Sydney office.
But the project has been delayed. It was predicted to take three years to
build when announced in August 2004. However, the initial network upgrade
will not be finished until the end of the year.
The 18 core switches will be online by early July but the others will be
phased in up to December. The full effect won't be felt until buildings'
local networks are upgraded.
Netstar senior account manager Hayden Dunne said the delay was caused by
the design process, not his company's implementation. "This is the
biggest network refresh of its type in the education sector...and a
unique solution."
--
Cheers all ..
Stephen Loosley
Victoria, Australia
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