• DocumentCode
    2854088
  • Title

    Delivery Requirements and Implementation Guidelines for the NASPInet Data Bus

  • Author

    Bakken, David E. ; Hauser, Carl H. ; Gjermundrod, Harald

  • Author_Institution
    Sch. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Washington State Univ., Pullman, WA, USA
  • fYear
    2010
  • fDate
    4-6 Oct. 2010
  • Firstpage
    37
  • Lastpage
    42
  • Abstract
    The bulk power system faces many challenges as load growth continues to far outstrip new transmission capacity, utility operators are retiring in large numbers, and renewable sources of energy and microgrids with very different power characteristics must be integrated into electricity grids and be actively managed. NASPInet holds great promise to help improve the reliability, efficiency, and cyber-security of the bulk power system. In order to achieve this potential, NASPInet must support a wide range of guarantees for latency, rate, and availability. It also must support delivery with extremely stringent values of low latency and high availability, and do so across a wide area even in the face of potential IT failures and cyber-attacks. In this paper, we describe the baseline delivery requirements for performance and fault-tolerance that NASPInet must provide if it is to meet those goals. We then offer twenty implementation guidelines that we argue must be met if the delivery requirements are to be implementable and at reasonable cost. These guidelines are based on a number of sources, including our 11 years of designing and developing GridStat (an implementation of the NASPInet Data Bus), the experience of us and others on projects by DARPA and others involving wide-area, real-time, fault-tolerant, and secure middleware for wide-area networks, and the state of the art and practice in networking and distributed computing. Finally, we summarize the coverage of those delivery requirements and implementation guidelines that middleware, networking protocols IP Multicast and MPLS, and power protocols C37.118 and IEC 61850, provide.
  • Keywords
    IP networks; fault tolerance; middleware; multicast protocols; multiprotocol label switching; power engineering computing; power grids; power system reliability; power system security; DARPA; GridStat; IEC 61850; IT failures; MPLS; NASPInet data bus; bulk power system cyber-security; distributed computing; electricity grids; fault-tolerance; microgrids; middleware; networking IP multicast protocol; power protocols C37.118; power system reliability; renewable energy sources; wide-area networks; Artificial neural networks; Availability; Guidelines; Middleware; Quality of service; Subscriptions; Throughput;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Smart Grid Communications (SmartGridComm), 2010 First IEEE International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Gaithersburg, MD
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-6510-1
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/SMARTGRID.2010.5622013
  • Filename
    5622013