Next-generation WANs: No more tiers

In case you missed the memo, MPLS now is the technology of choice for WAN underpinnings. More than half of the companies I work with on a regular basis say they’re using MPLS or planning to in the near future.

MPLS isn’t the whole story, however. A less-obvious but fascinating corollary is the demise of the three-tiered architecture that dominated WANs from roughly 1995 until about last year. In case you’ve forgotten, here’s how it worked: Tier 1 was the high-speed interconnects (ATM or dark fibre) linking data centres, contact centres and large headquarters facilities. Tier 2 was the core WAN architecture, typically frame relay, which connected larger sites with the majority of sites. Tier 3 was the mishmash of connectivity options (dial-up Internet VPN links, very-small-aperture terminals and so on) used to link remote and mobile sites into the core WAN.

What happened over the past few years is that data centre consolidation, branch-office proliferation, the growth in broadband and the spread of MPLS have combined to fuse that tiered architecture into a much flatter design — one that relies on MPLS-based services to most sites in the network, from branch or remote offices to data centres.

Let’s start with data centre consolidation. As I’ve noted in previous columns, most companies have consolidated their data centres over the past 12 months — and most will continue to do so during the next 12 months. That means ultimately we’ll arrive at an architecture based on two to four data centres linked by a range of high-speed network technologies. While dense wavelength division multiplexing over dark fibre is a common choice as a data centre interconnection, companies increasingly are moving to high-speed MPLS services.

Not every company is jumping on the MPLS bandwagon, however. Some high-end firms report that without a substantial number of branch offices to connect to, MPLS doesn’t offer a price-performance advantage over, say, dark fibre.

Speaking of branch offices, I’m seeing roughly a 10 per cent annual increase in the number of branch offices. The vast majority of these branch offices have broadband connections. That’s a sea change from yesteryear, when branch offices typically were served by 56K to fractional-T1 connections. Once again, MPLS-based services are a perfect fit.

The bottom line? The three-tiered architecture is fading away, replaced by a flat MPLS mesh.

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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