Side_1_360

(Dana P.) #1
To get access to a service, the user sends a ser-
vice request to the AAA server. This checks the
authorisation of the user and, assuming access
is granted, forwards the necessary information
(Application Specific Information, ASI) to the
ASM. The ASM finds the information relevant
for configuration of the network resources (ser-
vice equipment) and distributes this information
to the network nodes. In case of DiffServ, the
accounting system, QoS control, and Bandwidth
Broker are noted.

5 Policy and Traffic


Engineering


Considering the heterogeneous network ele-
ments and traffic flows that are expected to be
observed, a number of high-level requirements
are placed on the management solutions:


  • Automation of management task;

    • Centralised management with fewer classes of
      management interfaces;

    • Abstracted (or simplified) management data;

    • End-to-end provisioning of the network;

    • Consistent and uniform provisioning across all
      network elements;

    • Standards-based solutions in order to allow
      inter-operability at network element and OSS
      level;

    • Scalable solution for large networks.




The IETF Policy Management Framework has
been devised keeping these requirements in
mind.

5.1 Policy – What is it?

Policy can be considered as a set of principles
for usage of resources, given by business con-
siderations. That is, the business decisions are
translated into statements relevant for the usage
of resources in the network.

The semantics of a policy ruleis a conditional
imperative statement in the form

if <condition> then <action>

Thus, applying a rule means to evaluate its con-
dition (matching the rule) and, depending on the
outcome of that, either execute the action or not.
Policy rules may be nested.

Policy-based network management would pro-
vide a centralised platform for network man-
agers for defining and distributing network poli-
cies to enforcement points throughout a network.
In a typical policy-based framework, see Figure

Figure 9 Policy-based
integrated accounting,
using DiffServ


Figure 10 Policy Framework
components and protocols


AAA server

ASM

Bandwidth
Broker

QoS auditing
control

Accounting
configuration

Measurement infrastructure

accounting
policies

policy parameters
QoS-related
policies bandwidth
request

meter
instruction

measurement
setup

other
bandwidth
brokers

service request
user

service
equipment

ASI

Policy
Repository

Policy Entry Console

Policy
Decision Point
(Policy Server)
(PDP)

LDAP

LDAP

COPS

Policy Enforcement
Points (PEPs)
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