Presentation

Cisco IT
Executive
Presentation
Core Routing and
Switching
Version 13, Q3, FY09
Produced by the Cisco on Cisco team within Cisco IT
Presentation_ID
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Public
1
Executive Summary
Cisco All Packet Summary
• Core Switch:
Cisco
Catalyst
Core
Switch
:
6500
Series
Cisco Catalyst
Switch
6500
Series
Switch
• Edge Switches:
Cisco Catalyst
Edge
switches
6500,
3750G :
Cisco
Catalyst
Series
Switches
6500, 3750G
Switches
•Series
Access
Switch:
Cisco 6500, 4900
and 3750E
Series Routers
Presentation_ID
• Core Router:
Cisco :Catalyst
Edge
Cisco ISR
6500
Series
3845 Series
Router
Router
• Edge: Cisco
3845 Integrated
Edge
: Cisco
Services
Router
3845
Series
• Edge: Cisco
Multi-service
3845 Multiservice
Platform
Platform
• Edge: Cisco
3800 and 6500
Series Routers
• Console Server:
Cisco 2800 and
3800 Series
Routers
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
• WAN Access :
Cisco
WAN
access :
7200/7600
Cisco 7200/7600
Series
Router
Series
Router
• OC-48/STM-16
OC-48
/ STM-16
• OC-12/STM-4
OC-12
/ STM-4 /
• OC-3/STM-1
OC-3 / STM-1 /
• DS-3 WAN
DS-3 WAN
backbone
backbone
Cisco Public
• ISP Router:
Ciscoprovider
12400
Service
and 7200
IP-VPN
network
Series Router
in Europe
and
Emerging
• Service
Markets
provider IP
VPN network
in Europe
and
OC-192
rings
onemerging
large
markets
campus LANs
• 14 production /
customer
5 Enterprise
facing data
Production
Data
centers
Centers
• Data Center Nexus
• OC-192 rings
on large
campus LANs
2
Cisco Data Centers
Iron Port
SJ
WebEx Richardson
CROS
Linksys
Amsterdam
RTP
Scientific
Atlanta
Total of 215,000
square feet of
raised Data Center
space at Cisco
Data Centers
SODC
Business Data Center
© 2008 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Public
Engineering R&D Data Center
3
Latency Data Points between Data Center
Locations
Primary DC locations:
ƒ San Jose (SJC) <-> Research Triangle Park (RTP5): 85 ms
ƒ San Jose (SJC) <-> Mountain View (MTV5): 2 ms
ƒ San Jose (SJC) <-> Richardson (RCDN9): 53 ms
ƒ Research Triangle Park (RTP5) <-> Richardson (RCDN9): 40 ms
ƒ Richardson (RCDN9) <-> Richardson 2nd DC (new): not-to-exceed 1-2 ms
Latency to different continents:
ƒ San Jose (SJC) <-> Bangalore (BGL11): 240 ms
ƒ San Jose (SJC) <-> Amsterdam (AMS3): 172 ms
ƒ Richardson (RCDN9) <-> Bangalore (BGL11): 292 ms
ƒ Richardson (RCDN9) <-> Amsterdam (AMS3): 128 ms
Remote office latency extremes:
ƒ San Jose (SJC) <-> Saudi Arabai (JED01): 400 ms
ƒ San Jose (SJC) <-> Nairobi (NBO03): 740 ms
Presentation_ID
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Public
4
Campus
ƒ Gigabit Ethernet and 10 Gigabit Ethernet in campus core;
10/100/1000, Gigabit Ethernet to desktop
ƒ Cisco Catalyst 6500 Series as an edge–to–core platform using
both switching and routing capability
ƒ Campus network design uses duplexed equipment and circuits to
avoid single point of failure
Building
Distribution Frame
Building
Distribution Frame
Catalyst Series
6500 Router
HSRP
HSRP
Catalyst Series
6500 Switch
Category 5 Copper
Gigabit Ethernet Fiber
Intermediate Distribution Frames
Presentation_ID
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Intermediate Distribution Frames
Cisco Public
5
Cisco Global WAN 2008
Kanata
San Jose
Denver
LA
India
London
Chicago
IP VPN
Network
New York
Tokyo
Shanghai
Amsterdam
RTP
Dallas
Orlando
Atlanta
Bahrain
Hong Kong
Singapore
Sao Paulo
Sydney
Cisco Backbone WAN 2008
Legend
OC48 - STM16
OC12 - STM4
OC3 - STM1
Presentation_ID
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Public
- 2.5 Gbps
- 622 Mbps
- 155 Mbps
6
Europe and Emerging Markets Intelligent
Network Infrastructure
Bedfont Lakes
Brussels
Transport
Amsterdam
Edinburgh
ƒ Any-to-any
Glasgow
ƒ Provides security, QOS,
multicast, and resiliency
IDC
Edinburgh PE1
IDC
Manchester
Services
ƒ Enables voice, video, and
peering applications
ƒ Access to new services—
IP—PSTN, Internet
IDC
Brussels
IDC
Paris
IP
Network London
IDC
SP1
Amsterdam
PE1
Brussels
London PE2
Dublin
Stockholm PE2
Paris
AM. Paris
Dublin
PE2
PE1
PE2
IP
PE2
PE1
Frankfurt
Milan SP2
PE2
PE2
Copenhagen Stockholm
Munich
Zurich
PE1
PE1
Madrid PE2 PE2
IDC
PE2
Barcelona
Copenhagen
Munich
PE1
Dusseldorf
Milan
PE1
PE1
PE1
Hamburg
Zurich
PE1
PE1
Madrid
Stockholm
PE1
Manchester
PE1
Glasgow
PE1
Frankfurt
Munich
Hamburg
Milan
Madrid
Zurich
Dusseldorf
Barcelona
Presentation_ID
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Public
7
Routing and Switching – Past, Present and
Future
Past
Present
• Spoke-and-hub WAN
architecture
• Converged voice, video, and
data network
• Beginning of IP
convergence
• All-PBX infrastructure
• Bandwidth upgrades and
Equipment upgrades to
support 456 TelePresence
sites
• Early WLAN deployment
• WAAS/ACNS at every site
• Limited storage network
Future
•Nexus deployed for 10 gig
I/O consolidation
• AVS/ACE at every data
center
• Network as a platform for
enabling globalization,
collaboration and
virtualization
Presentation_ID
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Public
8
Core Routing & Switching – Business Value
Snapshot
Productivity
• Latency minimized through
“shortest path” any-to-any
topology, enhancing enduser experience
Quality/End User
Experience
• IP VPN = 1 connection to
network providing flexible
office adds and moves
Cost
Savings/Avoidance
• IP VPN = 4X bandwidth at
no extra cost
• International VoIP calling
• Overall cost reduction of
23% through modernized IP
network
• Highly adaptive routing and
switching with high-value
software platform optimize
long-term network business
value and cost-effectively
manage growth
Presentation_ID
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Public
9
To learn more about real-world
Cisco IT deployments, visit
www.cisco.com/go/ciscoit
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Public
10
Presentation_ID
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cisco Public
11