The Co-mingled Universe of R&E Networking Ken Klingenstein Director, Internet2 Middleware and Security Topics • A brief history from a good seat… • Going forward “opportunities” • Characteristics of R&E networking • Relating to corporate requirements • What does comingled mean? • To the current commodity • To the future clean slate… 2 A Brief History … • Getting onto Arpanet… • The mid ’80’s • JVNC, NSFnet, ESNet, BITnet, CSNet • On-campus, the shift from TN3270 to campus nets • The mid ’90’s • vBNS, Abilene, etc • The emergence of the border router • On-campus, from multiprotocols to TCP/IP 3 And now… • A major R&E institution has several external connections, with distinct characteristics (performance, AUP’s, etc.) • Complex campus networks, with high- performance meshes, lower-speed extensions, clusters of advanced nets, etc. • Distributed management of networks and desktops • Lots of special cases, like Medical Schools, Engineering Colleges, Dormitories 4 And now… • Security challenges • The demise of the fictitious perimeter • Roaming devices • Wireless • Slow to deploy DNSSec and problematic IPSec • The prospect of new types of external non-IP connections • Complex, undiagnosable deployments • Policy drivers for technology 5 Going Forward “Opportunities”… • The prospect of on-demand personal “lambdas” • Infocard • Federated identity and trust • Uneven economics 6 Characteristics of R&E Networking • Enterprise centric • Networking is part of an infrastructure provided to members. Operated often as a common good • Often run to a building or POP in a sub-unit; often some wall-plate services as well • Desktop autonomy • Heterogeneity of platforms • Loose desktop management • Leading edge • Early developers/adopters of new technologies • Regulatory complexity • HIPAA, FERPA, AUP, DMCA 7 More characteristics • Demanding applications • Bandwidth, latency, jitter, transparency • Strong inter-institutional requirements • Multiple external links • AUP’s • Performance distinctions • Funding that favors one-time versus continuing costs 8 Relating to corporate needs • From the Jericho forum: • Can no longer assume that an organization owns, controls and is accountable for the ICT infrastructure it employs • Should not assume that all individuals sit within organizations and are managed by a single IdM • Vision statement: • Cross-organizational security processes and services • Open standards • Assurance processes that when used in one organization can be trusted by others 9 Network Applications Consortium •NAC - a group of 25-30 major companies (Boeing, Bechtel, GlaxoSmithKline, PG&E, etc.) with intermingled research and operational environments •Welcome to the Network Applications Consortium "where membership radically improves the delivery of agile IT infrastructure in support of business objectives" •Original focus was on middleware, where Internet2 and NAC members have had meaningful if sporadic interactions •Added focus over the last year on network security •http://www.netapps.org/ 10 NAC Enterprise Security Architecture Key Concepts: Key leveraging • Security by design technologies: • Usability and • Identity manageability Management • Defense in depth • Directory Services • Simplicity • Border Protection • Enforced policy • Reusable tools • Desktop management 11 • Role based security Comingled with the commodity • The commodity Internet is a part of the R&E network environment • With its security issues • With its packet disruption appliances • With its legacy requirements • True to being the original crucible, new deployments in commodity often begin in R&E • Multicast, IPv6, DNSSec 12 Co-mingled with the future • It is likely that any advanced network initiatives will have presence on campuses and require integration. • Forces may drive management of long distance networking to the end points • Layers of invention that new networking approaches could leverage are being developed in the R&E community • Trust fabrics • Manageability discussions 13 Distinctions? • This workshop is more on architectures than protocols • We have steep requirements around policy • We are driven by researcher needs as much as by economics, capabilities, security, policy, etc. 14 Questions -1 • Role of enterprise vs role of VO vs role of individual • In authn/z • In provisioning networking • In resource discovery, etc… • What role will the enterprise have in personal lambdas? • What parts of the infrastructure will the enterprise own? Manage? 15 Questions -2 • What parts of manageability matter? Costs, downtime, security, privacy… • Does the control plane/data plane distinction continue to matter? Do we need more planes or less? (remember dynamic networking…) • How will diagnostics happen in the face of complexity, higher levels of performance, scale, etc? • How will resource discovery be addressed at so many layers? 16 Questions - 3 • How important is e2e transparency? How important is innovation in the face of security? • What will drive change? • How will devices and appliances on the net change the problem? • Will outsourcing, offshoring etc affect R&E nets? 17