A metropolitan area network (MAN) is a
computer network that interconnects users with computer resources in a geographic region of the size of a
metropolitan area
A metropolitan area or metro is a region that consists of a densely populated urban agglomeration and its surrounding territories sharing industries, commercial areas, transport network, infrastructures and housing. A metro area usually com ...
. The term MAN is applied to the interconnection of
local area networks (LANs) in a city into a single larger network which may then also offer efficient connection to a
wide area network. The term is also used to describe the interconnection of several LANs in a metropolitan area through the use of
point-to-point connections between them.
History
By 1999,
local area networks (LANs) were well established and providing data communication in buildings and offices. For the interconnection of LANs within a city, businesses relied primarily on the
public switched telephone network
The public switched telephone network (PSTN) provides Communications infrastructure, infrastructure and services for public Telecommunications, telecommunication. The PSTN is the aggregate of the world's circuit-switched telephone networks that ...
. But while the telephone network was able to support the packet-based exchange of data that the various LAN protocols implemented, the bandwidth of the telephone network was already under heavy demand from
circuit-switched
Circuit switching is a method of implementing a telecommunications network in which two network nodes establish a dedicated communications channel ( circuit) through the network before the nodes may communicate. The circuit guarantees the full b ...
voice, and the
telephone exchanges were ill-designed to cope with the traffic spikes that LANs tended to produce.
To interconnect local area networks more effectively, it was suggested that office buildings are connected using the
single-mode optical fiber lines, which were by that time widely used in long-haul telephone trunks. Such
dark fibre links were in some cases already installed on customer premises and telephone companies started to offer their dark fibre within their subscriber packages. Fibre optic metropolitan area networks were operated by telephone companies as private networks for their customers and did not necessarily have full integration with the public
wide area network (WAN) through gateways.
Besides the larger companies that connected their offices across metropolitan areas, universities and research institutions also adopted dark fibre as their metropolitan area network backbone. In
West Berlin the BERCOM project built up a multifunctional broadband communications system to connect the
mainframe computers that publicly funded universities and research institutions in the city housed. The BERCOM MAN project could progress at speed because the
Deutsche Bundespost had already installed hundreds of miles of fibre optic cable in West Berlin. Like other metropolitan dark fibre networks at the time, the dark fibre network in West Berlin had a star topology with a hub somewhere in the city centre.
The backbone of the dedicated BERCOM MAN for universities and research institutions was an optical fibre double ring that used a high speed
slotted ring protocol developed by the GMD Research Centre for Innovative Computer Systems and Telephony. The BERCOM MAN backbone could thus support two times 280 Mbit/s data transfer.
The productive use of
dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM) provided another impetus for the development of metropolitan area networks in the 2000s. Long haul DWDM, with ranges from 0 to 3000+ km, had been developed so that companies that stored large amounts of data on different sites, could exchange data or establish mirrors of their
file server
In computing, a file server (or fileserver) is a computer attached to a network that provides a location for shared disk access, i.e. storage of computer files (such as text, image, sound, video) that can be accessed by the workstations that are ab ...
. With the use of DWDM on the existing fibre optic MANs of carriers, companies no longer needed to connect their LANs with a dedicated fibre optic link.
With DWDM companies could build dedicated MANs using the existing dark fibre network of a provider in a city. MANs thus became cheaper to build and maintain.
The DWDM platforms provided by dark fibre providers in cities could allow for a single fibre pair to be divided into 32 wavelengths. One multiplexed wavelength could support between 10 Mbit/s and 10 Gbit/s. Thus companies that paid for a MAN to connect different office sites within a city could increase the bandwidths of their MAN backbone as part of their subscription. DWDM platforms also alleviated the need for protocol conversion to connect LANs in a city, because any protocol and any traffic type could be transmitted using DWDM. Effectively it gave companies wishing to establish a MAN choice of protocol.
Metro Ethernet, where a fibre optic ring within a larger city was built as MAN backbone carrying
Gigabit Ethernet, became common. The ring topology was implemented using the
Internet protocol (IP), so that data could be rerouted if a link was congested or one of the links that was part of the ring failed. In the USA the
Sprint Corporation was at the forefront of building fibre optic rings that routed IP Packets on the MAN backbone. Between 2002 and 2003 Sprint built three MAN rings to cover
San Francisco,
Oakland
Oakland is the largest city and the county seat of Alameda County, California, United States. A major West Coast port, Oakland is the largest city in the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area, the third largest city overall in the Bay A ...
and
San Jose, and in turn connected these three metro rings with a further two rings. The Sprint metro rings routed voice and data, were connected to several local telecom exchange points and totalled 189 miles of fibre optic cable. The metro rings also connected many cities to the
Internet that went on to become part of the
Silicon Valley tech-hub, such as
Fremont,
Milpitas,
Mountain View,
Palo Alto,
Redwood City,
San Bruno,
San Carlos,
Santa Clara and
Sunnyvale
Sunnyvale () is a city located in the Santa Clara Valley in northwest Santa Clara County in the U.S. state of California.
Sunnyvale lies along the historic El Camino Real and Highway 101 and is bordered by portions of San Jose to the north ...
. By adopting IP routing for its metro Ethernet rings, Sprint could re-route traffic in its MANs within milliseconds in the event of fibre cuts or local
power outages.
The metro Ethernet rings that did not route IP traffic, instead used one of the various proprietary
spanning tree protocol implementations, so that each MAN ring had a root bridge. Because
layer 2 switching can not operate if there is a loop in the network, the protocols to support L2 MAN rings all need to block redundant links and thus block part of the ring.
Capsuling protocols, such as
Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS), were also deployed to address the drawbacks of operating L2 metro Ethernet rings.
Metro Ethernet was effectively the extension of
Ethernet protocols beyond the
local area network (LAN) and the ensuing investment in Ethernet led to the deployment of
carrier Ethernet, where Ethernet protocols are used in
wide area networks (WANs). The efforts of the
Metro Ethernet Forum (MEF) in defining best practice and standards for metropolitan area networks thus also defined carrier Ethernet. While the IEEE tried to standardise the emerging Ethernet-based proprietary protocols, industry forums such as the MEF filled the gap and in January 2013 launched a certification for network equipment that can be configured to meet ''Carrier Ethernet 2.0'' specifications.
Metropolitan internet exchange points
Internet exchange points (IXs) have historically been important for the connection of MANs to the national or global
Internet. The
Boston Metropolitan Exchange Point (Boston MXP) enabled metro Ethernet providers, such as the HarvardNet to exchange data with national carriers, such as the
Sprint Corporation and
AT&T. Exchange points also serve as low-latency link between
campus area networks, thus the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the
Boston University could exchange data, voice and video using the Boston MXP. Further examples of metropolitan Internet Exchanges in the USA that were operational by 2002 include the Anchorage Metropolitan Access Point (AMAP), the
Seattle Internet Exchange (SIX), the Dallas-Fort Worth Metropolitan Access Point (DFMAP) and the Denver Internet Exchange (IX-Denver).
Verizon put into operation three regional metropolitan exchanges to interconnect MANs and give them access to the Internet. The
MAE-West serves the MANs of
San Jose,
Los Angeles and
California. The
MAE-East interconnects the MANs of
New York City,
Washington, D.C., and
Miami. While the MAE-Central interconnects the MANs of
Dallas,
Texas, and
Illinois.
In larger cities several local providers may have built a
dark fibre MAN backbone. In London, the
metro Ethernet rings of several providers make up the London MAN infrastructure. Like other MANs, the London MAN primarily serves the needs of its urban customers, who typically need a high number of connections with low bandwidth, a fast transit to other MAN providers, as well as high bandwidth access to national and international long-haul providers. Within the MAN of larger cities, metropolitan exchange points now play a vital role. The
London Internet Exchange (LINX) had by 2005 built up several exchange points across the
Greater London
Greater may refer to:
*Greatness, the state of being great
*Greater than, in inequality (mathematics), inequality
*Greater (film), ''Greater'' (film), a 2016 American film
*Greater (flamingo), the oldest flamingo on record
*Greater (song), "Greate ...
region.
Cities that host one of the international Internet Exchanges have become a preferred location for companies and
data centres. The
Amsterdam Internet Exchange (AMS-IX) is the world's second-largest Internet Exchange and has attracted companies to Amsterdam that are dependent on high-speed internet access. The Amsterdam metropolitan area network has benefited too from high-speed Internet access.
Similarly Frankfurt has become a magnet for data centres of international companies because it hosts the non-profit
DE-CIX, the largest Internet Exchange in the world.
DE-CIX has gone on to establish carrier neutral metropolitan Internet Exchanges in
New York
New York most commonly refers to:
* New York City, the most populous city in the United States, located in the state of New York
* New York (state), a state in the northeastern United States
New York may also refer to:
Film and television
* '' ...
, Madrid,
Dubai,
Marseille, Dallas, Hamburg,
Munich, Duesseldorf, Berlin, Istanbul,
Palermo
Palermo ( , ; scn, Palermu , locally also or ) is a city in southern Italy, the capital (political), capital of both the autonomous area, autonomous region of Sicily and the Metropolitan City of Palermo, the city's surrounding metropolitan ...
, Lisbon,
Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata, Chennai, and Moscow. The business model of the metro DE-CIX is to reduce the transit cost for local carriers by keeping data in the metropolitan area or region, while at the same time allowing long-haul low-latency peering globally with other major MANs.
See also
*
Community network
*
E-government
*
Municipal wireless network
*
Smart city
*
Wireless community network
References
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