Title :
Measuring resilience in multi-carrier emergency and critical telecommunications systems
Author :
Masi, Denise M. ; Fischer, Martin J. ; Garbin, David A. ; Martin, Lane ; McGregor, Patrick V.
Author_Institution :
Noblis, Falls Church, VA
Abstract :
The ability to provide critical communications, particularly during disasters, is essential for national security and emergency preparedness (NS/EP). The authors present a quantitative study of the resilience of IP-based NS/EP services for the National Communications System (NCS). This analysis builds on a previous study of the survivability of a single carrierpsilas telecommunications network by extending it to a multi-carrier network. The authors quantify the differences in the ability to communicate depending on whether or not the carriers modify their internetwork routing policies to allow use of another carrier for transit by NS/EP traffic. The carrier network topologies used in the analysis are similar to major ISP backbones. The authors used IP-SURVIV, a Noblis network resiliency analysis tool, to analyze the throughput and connectivity of a multi-carrier network topology as network elements are disabled. Numerical results from random failure scenarios show that modifying internetwork routing policies to allow transit routing does improve network survivability, and should be considered for NS/EP traffic. This work also has broader application to resilience analysis of other critical communication systems on multi-carrier IP networks.
Keywords :
computer network reliability; emergency services; internetworking; national security; radio networks; telecommunication network routing; telecommunication network topology; telecommunication traffic; IP-SURVIV; National Communications System; Noblis network resiliency analysis tool; carrier network topologies; critical telecommunications systems; emergency preparedness; internetwork routing policies; multicarrier IP networks; multicarrier emergency telecommunications systems; national security; telecommunications network survivability; transit routing; Communication system traffic; IP networks; Internet; National security; Network topology; Resilience; Routing; Spine; Telecommunication traffic; Throughput;
Conference_Titel :
Military Communications Conference, 2008. MILCOM 2008. IEEE
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2676-8
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2677-5
DOI :
10.1109/MILCOM.2008.4753367