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Why Satellite for Broadband Access

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Why Satellite for Broadband Access? The satellite communications industry is a mature and stable one. For decades, satellites have been used to transport analog voice and video signals around the globe, providing excellent quality and reliability. Reliability of the actual satellites once placed in operation approaches 100%. Failures have almost always occurred during launch or prior to deployment of services. In addition to voice and video signals, satellites have been successfully used to transport data for many years. Everyone has seen the dishes on top of gas stations and convenience stores that are used for low-speed transactions such as credit card approvals. With the advent of the Internet, satellite technology companies have added broadband IP support making it possible for even the most remote locations to participate in the World Wide Web. Most legacy broadband satellite solutions have been built by piggybacking IP on top of DVB satellite technology, which was designed for television video. These solutions are inefficient and sluggish, and generally provide poor uplink performance and lack support for applications such as VoIP . New technology from iDirect, developed from the ground up to support IP over satellite, has had the effect of upgrading performance in a manner that is similar to the upgrade from a shared Ethernet hub to a switch. The resulting solution provides enterprise class quality and reliability. iDirect Technology Discussion Legacy Satellite Solutions The broadband satellite industry is undergoing an evolution similar to that experienced by wireline services in the early 90’s. At that time, most companies who wished to network their remote locations at speeds that exceeded dial up capability were required to install point-to-point leased lines, using either DDS circuits or very expensive T-1 lines. With the introduction of ‘shared resource’ technologies such as Frame Relay, SMDS , and ATM it became possible to share infrastructure costs and to share bandwidth between multiple locations. In particular, the popularity of Frame Relay made it possible for the first time, for companies to network their remote sites with relatively high-speed connections at affordable prices. This capability in turn made it possible for software application developers to deliver company-wide applications that could be deployed across the entire company, improving communications and productivity, and eliminating duplicate administrative functions at each branch office. Of course, with the advent of the Internet and broadband services, applications grew in functionality and bandwidth requirements. Now it can be argued that roll-out of new Internet-enabled applications are stalled due to the lack of ubiquitous, affordable broadband service for all remote sites regardless of location. In the satellite industry, data services were initially delivered over dedicated point-to-point circuits known as SCPC that are very similar to point-to-point leased lines. Because bandwidth and communication resources are not shared, this is an expensive undertaking. Similar to the technological advances that took place in the
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Page 1: Why Satellite for Broadband Access

Why Satellite for Broadband Access?The satellite communications industry is a mature and stable one. For decades, satellites have been used to transport analog voice and video signals around the globe, providing excellent quality and reliability. Reliability of the actual satellites once placed in operation approaches 100%. Failures have almost always occurred during launch or prior to deployment of services. In addition to voice and video signals, satellites have been successfully used to transport data for many years. Everyone has seen the dishes on top of gas stations and convenience stores that are used for low-speed transactions such as credit card approvals. With the advent of the Internet, satellite technology companies have added broadband IP support making it possible for even the most remote locations to participate in the World Wide Web.

Most legacy broadband satellite solutions have been built by piggybacking IP on top of DVB satellite technology, which was designed for television video. These solutions are inefficient and sluggish, and generally provide poor uplink performance and lack support for applications such as VoIP. New technology from iDirect, developed from the ground up to support IP over satellite, has had the effect of upgrading performance in a manner that is similar to the upgrade from a shared Ethernet hub to a switch. The resulting solution provides enterprise class quality and reliability.

iDirect Technology Discussion Legacy Satellite Solutions

The broadband satellite industry is undergoing an evolution similar to that experienced by wireline services in the early 90’s. At that time, most companies who wished to network their remote locations at speeds that exceeded dial up capability were required to install point-to-point leased lines, using either DDS circuits or very expensive T-1 lines. With the introduction of ‘shared resource’ technologies such as Frame Relay, SMDS, and ATM it became possible to share infrastructure costs and to share bandwidth between multiple locations. In particular, the popularity of Frame Relay made it possible for the first time, for companies to network their remote sites with relatively high-speed connections at affordable prices. This capability in turn made it possible for software application developers to deliver company-wide applications that could be deployed across the entire company, improving communications and productivity, and eliminating duplicate administrative functions at each branch office. Of course, with the advent of the Internet and broadband services, applications grew in functionality and bandwidth requirements. Now it can be argued that roll-out of new Internet-enabled applications are stalled due to the lack of ubiquitous, affordable broadband service for all remote sites regardless of location.

In the satellite industry, data services were initially delivered over dedicated point-to-point circuits known as SCPC that are very similar to point-to-point leased lines. Because bandwidth and communication resources are not shared, this is an expensive undertaking. Similar to the technological advances that took place in the wireline industry in the early 90’s, ‘shared resource’ solutions are now becoming available in the satellite industry, driving down the costs for connecting remote sites to the Internet and/or to corporate headquarters.

Many of the shared broadband satellite solutions that are available today are based on technology called TDMA, and like Frame Relay, they take advantage of the fact that IP traffic is very bursty in nature. Most applications require short bursts of information requesting data, followed by the download of the requested information, then a period of inactivity as that information is reviewed and worked with. This creates a great deal of idle or wasted bandwidth on a dedicated SCPC circuit. As the diagrams below illustrate, IP traffic tends to be asymmetric, with anywhere from 4 to 8 times as much download traffic as upload traffic in typical applications. The bursty nature of IP makes it possible to share bandwidth among multiple users, effectively reducing costs and increasing efficiency.

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Most legacy broadband satellite services were developed primarily by piggybacking IP on top of the existing technology used by satellites for delivering analog voice and data called DVB. DVB is used to transport television signals from companies such as DirecTV and Dish Network. To transport IP packets, these solutions simply encapsulate the IP traffic in MPEG video frames that are transported by DVB as though they are voice/video. The good news is that DVB/MPEG is a mature technology and the chip-sets to provide this service are relatively inexpensive. The bad news is that this is not an optimum solution for transporting IP traffic as there is a great deal of inefficiency and unnecessary overhead. The download of IP traffic to remote sites is actually the easy part. The uplink or return path is the most difficult to design for maximum efficiency and performance, balanced by cost.

Today there are any number of broadband satellite solutions available that provide marginal broadband service for customers, but many have deficiencies that have resulted in slow acceptance of broadband satellite as a mainstream solution for business users. We will now take a closer look at some of these critical issues and discuss how the new iDirect technology has resolved them.

TCP/IP over Satellite

A significant difficulty encountered in supporting TCP/IP applications over satellite has to do with the inherent latency or delay of satellite systems. Because satellites are 23,000 miles above the earth, the time it takes for a signal to go from the ground to the satellite and back to the ground is just over 1/4 second. The TCP/IP protocol was designed for guaranteed transport. A server or PC sending data will begin by sending a few packets and then waiting for an acknowledgment that the data was received before sending any more. If the data is successfully received and acknowledged, the sending device will send more packets at a faster rate. It will continue to speed up until acknowledgments are lost. This tells the sending device what the speed or bandwidth capability of the transport services is, and it will send remaining data at that rate. Unfortunately, satellite latency appears to the sending TCP/IP device as a very slow or congested circuit. It expects an acknowledgment within a short time period and when it doesn’t get it, it throttles back and retries. Satellite vendors circumvented this problem by using TCP acceleration techniques sometimes called spoofing. This is based on the same techniques that were used to solve similar problems with IBM SNA/SDLC and other older protocols in the past. Many satellite solutions require an external device to provide TCP acceleration. Almost all legacy solutions accelerate TCP in only one direction. Many of the solutions are based on ‘spoofing’ the TCP/IP protocol. The problem here is that there is no end-to-end management of the TCP session, so if a packet is dropped midway through transferring a large file, the file must be retransmitted from the beginning. iDirect provides bi-directional TCP acceleration, built into the satellite router and hub equipment at both the remote site and teleport hub equipment. Further, the data transmission is tracked and buffered and occasional acknowledgments are sent end-to-end so that if an error does occur, only the corrupted portion need be retransmitted.

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Another related issue is TCP Session Setup. This can be seen when pulling up a web page that has multiple links on it for content. Each one of these links must go through a connection/acknowledgment process that must be performed sequentially and is directly affected by satellite latency. iDirect provides HTTP or Web Acceleration that works in both directions. It dramatically improves web response by eliminating the need for the acknowledgment packets to traverse the satellite link. This results in downloading pages smoothly and quickly as though on a terrestrial link.

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Reliability and Rain Fade

Everyone who has ever used DirecTV or Dish Network video television service is aware of the fact that service can be degraded or lost during a bad storm. This interference is especially troubling for IP traffic. TCP/IP requires very low bit error rates (10-9 BER) to deliver data at full speed. With increasing error rates, packets must be retransmitted, resulting in a significant reduction in throughput. On an IP satellite service, when the Bit Error Rate degrades to 10-7 BER, IP throughput drops to about 5%. Satellite vendors have incorporated forward error correction (FEC) technology that works to correct errors in an effort to avoid retransmission. The challenge is to find a balance between the overhead of the FEC technology and the gain in performance by mitigating errors and retransmits. The most common FEC today is called Reed Solomon Viterbi (RSV). This FEC technology has been incorporated into many of the chip-sets that use DVB/MPEG to deliver data. The primary limitation of RSV is that the higher the level of desired reliability, the greater the amount of FEC overhead, at great cost to bandwidth efficiency.

There is a newer and far superior technology called Turbo Product Codes (TPC) that works using a reiterative process much like a turbo on a car engine. It essentially corrects some of the errors, and then sends the data through the process again, attempting to correct any packet corruption that might have occurred during transmission. It does this using a minimum of FEC overhead. Turbo Product Coding, reduces the amount of power required for antennas to transmit signals to a satellite while maintaining high error correction performance. As a result, customers can use smaller, less expensive antennas, thereby enabling voice, data and Internet applications to be supported more cost-effectively. According to industry experts, Turbo Product Codes, or TPC, offers the best coding performance of any common FEC technology implemented to date. In communications engineering you rarely get something for nothing. Generally technology that improves information reliability comes at the cost of either time or bandwidth. TPC is as close to something for nothing as you can get today.

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iDirect is the first satellite technology provider to implement this new technology in their product, and the only one (at this time) to utilize it in both directions.

Note, that some vendors have begun to implement “Turbo Codes” which is not the same thing as Turbo Product Codes and does not deliver the same degree of efficiency and reliability. There are actually two different implementations of Turbo Codes: Turbo Convolutional Codes, or TCC, and Turbo Product Codes or TPC. According to the experts, the most promising current implementation is Turbo Product Codes, or TPC, as it provides a significant advantage in terms of reliability and increased performance. TCCs typically have a noise floor that limits the maximum bit error rate achievable.

Along with the forward error correction, VSAT transmission power is an important factor in punching through inclement weather. On satellite transponders, it is power, not bandwidth that is the critical factor. Satellite providers have rules regarding how much power can be directed at the satellite. Most VSATs have a fixed amount of power they can use to transmit a signal. As the weather degrades there will come a point where the transmission power is insufficient to reach the transponder without significant errors occurring, which drastically reduces IP throughput to the point where it may fail.

The iDirect solution addresses rain fade in two ways: first of all, the use of TPC forward error correction technology means that significantly less power is required to deliver the same bandwidth as a legacy system using RSV.

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Secondly, the iDirect solution incorporates automatic power control that automatically boosts transmit power as the signal degrades due to inclement weather. The additional power margin provided by TPC forward error correction can be used to boost the signal without exceeding the power limits imposed by the satellite vendor on their transponder. The hub equipment located at the teleport constantly monitors the signal from each remote site. As bad weather moves into a particular area, the remote VSAT(s) in that area are remotely and automatically commanded to boost their transmission power. As the weather clears, the transmission power is throttled back.

Performance Issues

Downloading (outbound) on a broadband satellite system is not overly difficult. The transmission is basically a broadcast that is sent to all remote VSATs. In the case of the iDirect solution, each satellite router has a burned in MAC address and it can only receive data that is specifically sent to it. iDirect uses a proprietary TDM frame format that is approximately 60% more efficient than most DVB systems, otherwise the operation is very similar. The difficulty comes on the uplink or inbound link.

Bandwidth contention

Multiple remote VSATs must contend for bandwidth in order to transmit or uplink their data. Some legacy broadband satellite systems contend for bandwidth, leveraging technology that works much like shared Ethernet. As more users are added to the system there are collisions that result when multiple users request bandwidth at the same time. As the load increases, this can create a snowball effect until all the bandwidth is chewed up just handling the contention. Thus it is very important that the network not be highly over-subscribed or service may be seriously impacted.

Once a VSAT has contended for access, the hub will assign bandwidth on the same frequency or channel (TDMA) or on multiple frequencies or channels (MF-TDMA). This bandwidth assignment will be made based on some sort of fair access algorithm and the active bandwidth request from the remote VSATs. Unfortunately the access is inconsistent because collisions may occur when multiple

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VSATs request a connection and bandwidth at the same time, and must back off and retransmit. This causes slow startup times and adds jitter which affects applications like VoIP and Video/IP.

Most of these systems (which are based on the DVB/RCS specification) allocate bandwidth in 8 or 16 Kbps chunks for pre-configured amounts of time, frequently measured in seconds. As the time period expires, if the remote VSAT isn’t using the bandwidth or if a higher priority request is made, then the bandwidth is released and may be reassigned. Unfortunately this method of allocating bandwidth can be very wasteful and inefficient, and is very difficult to optimize for best performance. Internet or web based traffic is very bursty. Transmission times are generally very short and random in nature. Since bandwidth is generally allocated for a minimum of several seconds, all the idle time in which a VSAT holds assigned bandwidth, but is not actively transmitting is wasted transmission capacity.

The iDirect system minimizes the ‘connect’ time by assigning a small amount of dedicated bandwidth or CIR (Committed Information Rate) to each satellite router, so a VSAT never has to ‘contend’ for access. It always has a connection to the hub. An additional pool of shared bandwidth is dynamically allocated to each remote site up to 8 times/second using a ‘fair access’ algorithm to prevent high usage sites from starving other sites. Bandwidth, or timeslots are never ‘held’ by VSATs, but are constantly assigned and allocated in real time, taking maximum advantage of available bandwidth and distributing it between users in real time. Bandwidth efficiency increases from 10 to 20% for most legacy systems, to over 95% on an iDirect system.

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The iDirect solution is excellent for VoIP and Video/IP for several reasons. Because of the dedicated bandwidth, there is no contention required to begin a transmission, managing jitter for these sensitive applications. Additionally, allocated bandwidth for a VSAT is ‘feathered’ or spread out across entire frames, creating a smooth even data flow, rather than the jerky delivery experienced with many other systems.

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The hub dynamically allocates bandwidth to each site based on configured rate limits, QoS, CIR and current queue depths. In some ways, this technology can be thought of as upgrading from a shared Ethernet hub to a smart Ethernet switch, with all of the resultant performance benefits provided by that solution.

Frame Size

Many legacy systems use a 250ms frame size. That means sampling at only 4 times/second which yields a sluggish web response and very poor voice quality. The iDirect frame size is variable depending on the application, but is generally set at 125ms which means sampling 8 times/second. This yields a crisp user web response and business class quality VoIP service. Of equal importance is the ability mentioned above, to ‘feather’ or spread out the transmission data smoothly and evenly across the transport frames for a consistent low-jitter service.

Quality of Service (QoS)

Application QoS based on Class Based Queuing, found in leading QoS engines like Lucent’s Access Point router, Sitara, etc. allows the administrator to allocate a percentage of bandwidth to specific applications or protocols and to set the priority level (basically the queue depth) in order to deliver the desired quality. QoS works in both directions, so a VoIP call won’t be stepped on by another VSAT’s large download file. When the prioritized application is idle, the bandwidth is available for general use. A further advantage and unique capability of the iDirect solution is the ability to do fragmentation and interleaving. This eliminates the case where the system has started to transmit a large data packet and a small voice packet comes behind and is delayed (even though it is prioritized in the queue). When large packets are fragmented, then the voice packet only has to wait for one slot.

Traffic prioritization may be performed on:

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Destination IP AddressSource IP AddressSource TCP Port NumberDiffserv and ToS BitsProtocol (TCP, FTP, UDP, RTP, ICMP)

The QoS feature can also be used to filter out or discard unwanted data based on the same criteria, basically by assigning zero (0%) bandwidth allocation for the undesirable application or protocol. For example, an organization might want to block gaming, or MP-3 downloads or Kazaa file sharing, or restrict the amount of bandwidth available for these and other applications.

Rate Limiting

The amount of upstream and downstream bandwidth for each individual site is controlled and managed using rate limiting. In this way, a business pays only for the amount of bandwidth they require on a per site basis. A site can use all the bandwidth available up to the point that it is rate limited.

Committed Information Rate (CIR)

As indicated above, each iDirect remote VSAT satellite router is assigned a small amount of dedicated bandwidth, eliminating the need to contend for an opportunity to transmit, and guaranteeing that no matter how busy the network, at least that basic amount of bandwidth will always be available. Additional CIR bandwidth can be permanently dedicated or dynamically allocated on a per site basis to support specific requirements for an additional cost. Dedicated CIR is bandwidth time slots permanently assigned to specific remotes that cannot be used by any other VSAT. Dynamic CIR is allocated to specific sites when they have data to send, otherwise the bandwidth time slots are put back in the shared pool for general use among all VSATs. A key differentiator is the speed with which dynamic CIR can be assigned. Most systems that provide a CIR capability will take 10’s of seconds to establish the dedicated bandwidth capacity, while the iDirect system will make it available in sub-second time.

Security

Many companies desire the use of satellite broadband for private IP networking instead of, or in addition to Internet access. This is easily accomplished. Traffic from remote sites lands at the teleport, where Internet traffic is directed to a firewall and dropped with no intermediate hops onto a Tier One ISP backbone at very high speeds. Private IP traffic is directed to a Frame Relay, T-1, VPN or other wireline link that terminates back at the company’s headquarters location. The connection is private in all regards, similar to a Frame Relay network. For additional security, most iDirect-enabled Network Operators support iDirect’s optional 3DES encrypted service across the satellite link. Everything to and from the remote VSAT is encrypted across the satellite link. The benefits of TCP and web acceleration are maintained. The customer can decide whether to encrypt links to some or all of their remote

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offices. The 3DES encryption is provided by the Hifn chipset that is found in VPN appliances and routers from many vendors. The performance hit for 3DES encryption is less than 1%.

Some organizations have specific requirements for security, and satellite latency can create some interesting challenges for VPNs. Business Satellite Solutions fully understands these limitations and can provide consulting and advice for a range of security solutions that work over satellite such as:

SSL-based VPNs that are easy to deploy because no client software is required. They ride on top of TCP, so TCP Acceleration continues to operate.

SLE or Selective Layer Encryption solutions that encrypt data but leave the TCP control information alone so that TCP Acceleration can work properly.

Encapsulation techniques that wrap an IPSec VPN packet in a new TCP header that can be accelerated.

Integrated Solution

Many satellite systems require that you convert a PC into a router in order to share the connection. Others provide a dedicated PC or device that delivers a proxy service to share the connection with multiple users. The iDirect solution uses a small hardware box with no moving parts, that includes standard routing features such as Static IP, RIP2, IGMPv2, DHCP, NAT, DNS caching, VLAN tagging, GRE Tunnel Acceleration, etc. It delivers a 'hot' 10/100 Ethernet port to connect to your networking gear. The satellite modem, router, TCP acceleration, and QoS engine are all in a single, reliable, integrated package.

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Service Delivery Options

Most legacy systems require that the service provider procure a large chunk of space segment, typically an entire transponder. This means that they must design their service offering for a mass market, with an eye to servicing and supporting as many subscribers as possible on a network. The iDirect solution supports the ability to economically engineer smaller, customized service offerings to meet specific customer demands. There are generally three types of service offerings available that we shall refer to as Enterprise, Carrier/Premium, and Private Network. Not network operators offer all three service types. Due to the flexibility of the iDirect solution for a network operator to engineer a service offering to specifically address specific markets, there is variance in the offerings from different providers. Business Satellite Solutions will work with you to determine which service offering is best for your requirements.

Enterprise Service

With this solution, a service provider will generally configure a service that provides an ‘a la carte’ menu of bandwidth offerings. This is similar to typical business broadband solutions like DSL and Fixed Wireless that are shared by multiple companies at reasonably conservative sharing or subscription ratios. Typical generic service offerings range from 128 Kbps x 64 Kbps up to 4 Mbps x 512 Kbps. This is a good solution for the enterprise with just a few remote sites. Bandwidth levels can be upgraded on a per site basis as requirements increase.

Carrier or Premium Services

These services are generally intended to be used for Internet Café’s, ISP backhaul service or very high volume business use. They are also appropriate for solutions that have a high volume of concurrent VoIP or Video/IP transmissions. Generally some percentage of the service offering has a built in CIR to ensure sufficient dedicated bandwidth to meet the saturated data throughput requirements for these ‘heavy use’ applications. Additional CIR may be available for additional cost to meet the specific requirements of the situation.

Private Network Service

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An enterprise that has many remote sites may opt to procure a private network service in which bandwidth is shared only by that company’s remote sites. The service can be customized and designed with sharing ratios to meet specific business requirements. A business may opt to increase the sharing or subscription ratio in order to reduce the cost per site. They may opt to select bandwidth rates that are higher than a generic service offering and install the appropriate dish and transmission equipment to support the higher rates. The iDirect solution supports up to a maximum of 9Mbps x 4 Mbps. Companies with many sites across multiple time zones may distribute them across multiple carriers in order to split the traffic load by time of day. Business Satellite Solutions uses an iDirect-provided segment analysis tool to help determine the correct sharing, CIR and other parameters to meet the specific business requirement.

Transportable Solutions

In addition to fixed installations, the iDirect solution is excellent for mobile or transportable satellite solutions that can be assembled and commissioned in a matter of a couple hours, then packed up and moved to a new site as needed. With this solution, a company might arrive on site, set up and point the dish, use a GPS to enter the location coordinates for the dish and bring the system online quickly. With a couple of VoIP phones and a small switch or hub, a remote site can have extensions off the corporate PBX, and be connected to the Internet and/or headquarters in no time.


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