Network World
Monday, October 13, 2008
DNSstuff.com
Get information about your IP
IP Information
50+ On-demand DNS and network tools

Community: LANs & WANs

Navigation

RE: Ethernet vs. MPLS in the WAN

IP MPLS and Ethernet VPLS services are both based on MPLS technology, and thus are able to meet the needs for a multipoint-to-multipoint converged network. The only difference is that one is handed off as a layer 3 service (IP MPLS) and the other as a layer 2 service (Ethernet VPLS). From our perspective, applications more than security or a desire to control routing seem to be driving the migration to Ethernet VPNs. It's not so much control of routing being a driver as it is not having to deal with another carriers IP network addressing policies. Ethernet end-to-end is simply easier to manage and scale than an IP MPLS network. The top enterprise application drivers for users migrating to Ethernet VPNs include: server virtualization and centralization (bridged SANs), fully-meshed VoIP and video across the WAN (low latency with CoS), collaboration (large files shared over long distances). As more companies globalize and adopt these applications across the WAN, the advantages of global Ethernet VPLS WAN over an IP MPLS WAN will become more apparent: simplicity, scalability, high security and high performance.

Click to read the article this is in response to.

ease of deployment and availability of skill sets.

0

simplicity in deployment and availability of necessary technical know-how will be a great influencer on which takes the lead in developing countries, the lands which will be investing most as their local telco markets liberalize...

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.

Latest LAN/WAN headlines from Network World:

Woven weaves 10G at $500 per port

Original VC investor in Cisco: Secret meeting slides leaked | NetworkWorld.com Community

Traffic rerouting on a single crossbar switch ?| NetworkWorld.com Community

Europe's doign worse? | NetworkWorld.com Community

Nortel hangs 'for sale' sign on metro Ethernet unit

  1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9  10  next 

Advertisement: