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    <front>
        <title abbrev="DetNet Use Cases"> Deterministic Networking Use Cases</title>

        <author fullname="Ethan Grossman" initials="E.A.G." role="editor" surname="Grossman">
            <organization abbrev="DOLBY">Dolby Laboratories, Inc.</organization>

            <address>
                <postal>
                    <street>1275 Market Street</street>
                    <city>San Francisco</city>
                    <region>CA</region>
                    <code>94103</code>
                    <country>USA</country>
                </postal>

                <phone>+1 415 645 4726</phone>
                <email>ethan.grossman@dolby.com</email>
                <uri>http://www.dolby.com</uri>
            </address>
        </author>

        <author fullname="Craig Gunther" initials="C.A.G." surname="Gunther">
            <organization abbrev="HARMAN">Harman International</organization>

            <address>
                <postal>
                    <street>10653 South River Front Parkway</street>
                    <city>South Jordan</city>
                    <region>UT</region>
                    <code>84095</code>
                    <country>USA</country>
                </postal>

                <phone>+1 801 568-7675</phone>
                <email>craig.gunther@harman.com</email>
                <uri>http://www.harman.com</uri>
            </address>
        </author>

        <author initials="P" surname="Thubert" fullname="Pascal Thubert">
            <organization abbrev="CISCO">Cisco Systems, Inc</organization>
            <address>
                <postal>
                    <street>Building D</street>
                    <street>45 Allee des Ormes - BP1200 </street>
                    <city>MOUGINS - Sophia Antipolis</city>
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                    <country>FRANCE</country>
                </postal>
                <phone>+33 497 23 26 34</phone>
                <email>pthubert@cisco.com</email>
            </address>
        </author>

        <author fullname="Patrick Wetterwald" initials="P" surname="Wetterwald">
            <organization abbrev="CISCO"> Cisco Systems </organization>
            <address>
                <postal>
                    <street>45 Allees des Ormes</street>
                    <city>Mougins</city>
                    <code>06250</code>
                    <country>FRANCE</country>
                </postal>
                <phone>+33 4 97 23 26 36</phone>
                <email>pwetterw@cisco.com</email>
            </address>
        </author>
        <author fullname="Jean Raymond" initials="J" surname="Raymond">
            <organization abbrev="HYDRO-QUEBEC"> Hydro-Quebec </organization>
            <address>
                <postal>
                    <street>1500 University</street>
                    <city>Montreal</city>
                    <code>H3A3S7</code>
                    <country>Canada</country>
                </postal>
                <phone>+1 514 840 3000</phone>
                <email>raymond.jean@hydro.qc.ca</email>
            </address>
        </author>

        <author fullname="Jouni Korhonen" initials="J." surname="Korhonen">
            <organization abbrev="BROADCOM">Broadcom Corporation</organization>
            <address>
                <postal>
                    <street>3151 Zanker Road</street>
                    <city>San Jose</city>
                    <code>95134</code>
                    <region>CA</region>
                    <country>USA</country>
                </postal>
                <email>jouni.nospam@gmail.com</email>
            </address>
        </author>

        <author fullname="Yu Kaneko" initials="Y" surname="Kaneko">
            <organization>Toshiba</organization>
            <address>

                <postal>
                    <street>1 Komukai-Toshiba-cho, Saiwai-ku, Kasasaki-shi</street>
                    <city>Kanagawa, Japan</city>
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                <email>yu1.kaneko@toshiba.co.jp</email>
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        </author>

        <author fullname="Subir Das" initials="S" surname="Das">
            <organization>Applied Communication Sciences</organization>
            <address>

                <postal>
                    <street>150 Mount Airy Road, Basking Ridge</street>
                    <city>New Jersey, 07920, USA</city>
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                <email>sdas@appcomsci.com</email>
            </address>
        </author>

        <author fullname="Yiyong Zha" initials="Y.Z." surname="Zha">
            <organization abbrev="HUAWEI">Huawei Technologies</organization>
            <address>
                <postal>
                    <street/>
                    <city/>
                    <code/>
                    <region/>
                    <country/>
                </postal>
                <email>zhayiyong@huawei.com</email>
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        <author fullname="Bal&aacute;zs Varga" initials="B." surname="Varga">
            <organization>Ericsson</organization>
            <address>
                <postal>
                    <street>Konyves K&aacute;lm&aacute;n krt. 11/B</street>
                    <city>Budapest</city>
                    <country>Hungary</country>
                    <code>1097</code>
                </postal>
                <email>balazs.a.varga@ericsson.com</email>
            </address>
        </author>

        <author fullname="J&aacute;nos Farkas" initials="J." surname="Farkas">
            <organization>Ericsson</organization>
            <address>
                <postal>
                    <street>Konyves K&aacute;lm&aacute;n krt. 11/B</street>
                    <city>Budapest</city>
                    <country>Hungary</country>
                    <code>1097</code>
                </postal>
                <email>janos.farkas@ericsson.com</email>
            </address>
        </author>

        <author fullname="Franz-Josef Goetz" initials="F." surname="Goetz">
            <organization>Siemens</organization>
            <address>
                <postal>
                    <street>Gleiwitzerstr. 555</street>
                    <city>Nurnberg</city>
                    <country>Germany</country>
                    <code>90475</code>
                </postal>
                <email>franz-josef.goetz@siemens.com</email>
            </address>
        </author>


        <author fullname="Juergen Schmitt" initials="J." surname="Schmitt">
            <organization>Siemens</organization>
            <address>
                <postal>
                    <street>Gleiwitzerstr. 555</street>
                    <city>Nurnberg</city>
                    <country>Germany</country>
                    <code>90475</code>
                </postal>
                <email>juergen.jues.schmitt@siemens.com</email>
            </address>
        </author>

        <date month="July" year="2016"/>

        <area>Routing</area>
        <workgroup>Internet Engineering Task Force</workgroup>
        <keyword>DetNet</keyword>
        <keyword>AVB</keyword>
        <keyword>TSN</keyword>
        <keyword>SRP</keyword>
        <abstract>
            <t> This draft documents requirements in several diverse industries to establish
                multi-hop paths for characterized flows with deterministic properties. In this
                context deterministic implies that streams can be established which provide
                guaranteed bandwidth and latency which can be established from either a Layer 2 or
                Layer 3 (IP) interface, and which can co-exist on an IP network with best-effort
                traffic. </t>

            <t> Additional requirements include optional redundant paths, very high reliability
                paths, time synchronization, and clock distribution. Industries considered include
                wireless for industrial applications, professional audio, electrical utilities,
                building automation systems, radio/mobile access networks, automotive, and gaming. </t>

            <t>For each case, this document will identify the application, identify representative
                solutions used today, and what new uses an IETF DetNet solution may enable.</t>
        </abstract>
    </front>

    <middle>

        <section title="Introduction">
            <t> This draft presents use cases from diverse industries which have in common a need
                for deterministic streams, but which also differ notably in their network topologies
                and specific desired behavior. Together, they provide broad industry context for
                DetNet and a yardstick against which proposed DetNet designs can be measured (to
                what extent does a proposed design satisfy these various use cases?) </t>
            <t> For DetNet, use cases explicitly do not define requirements; The DetNet WG will
                consider the use cases, decide which elements are in scope for DetNet, and the
                results will be incorporated into future drafts. Similarly, the DetNet use case
                draft explicitly does not suggest any specific design, architecture or protocols,
                which will be topics of future drafts. </t>
            <t> We present for each use case the answers to the following questions: </t>
            <t>
                <list style="symbols">
                    <t> What is the use case? </t>
                    <t> How is it addressed today? </t>
                    <t> How would you like it to be addressed in the future? </t>
                    <t> What do you want the IETF to deliver? </t>
                </list>
            </t>
            <t> The level of detail in each use case should be sufficient to express the relevant
                elements of the use case, but not more. </t>
            <t> At the end we consider the use cases collectively, and examine the most significant
                goals they have in common. </t>

        </section>

        <section title="Pro Audio and Video">
            <section title="Use Case Description">
                <t>The professional audio and video industry ("ProAV") includes: <list
                        style="symbols">
                        <t> Music and film content creation </t>
                        <t> Broadcast </t>
                        <t> Cinema </t>
                        <t> Live sound </t>
                        <t> Public address, media and emergency systems at large venues (airports,
                            stadiums, churches, theme parks).</t>
                    </list>
                </t>
                <t> These industries have already transitioned audio and video signals from analog
                    to digital. However, the digital interconnect systems remain primarily
                    point-to-point with a single (or small number of) signals per link,
                    interconnected with purpose-built hardware.</t>
                <t>These industries are now transitioning to packet-based infrastructure to reduce
                    cost, increase routing flexibility, and integrate with existing IT
                    infrastructure. </t>
                <t>Today ProAV applications have no way to establish deterministic streams from a
                    standards-based Layer 3 (IP) interface, which is a fundamental limitation to the
                    use cases described here. Today deterministic streams can be created within
                    standards-based layer 2 LANs (e.g. using IEEE 802.1 AVB) however these are not
                    routable via IP and thus are not effective for distribution over wider areas
                    (for example broadcast events that span wide geographical areas).</t>
                <t>It would be highly desirable if such streams could be routed over the open
                    Internet, however solutions with more limited scope (e.g. enterprise networks)
                    would still provide a substantial improvement. </t>

                <t>The following sections describe specific ProAV use cases.</t>

                <section title="Uninterrupted Stream Playback">
                    <t>Transmitting audio and video streams for live playback is unlike common file
                        transfer because uninterrupted stream playback in the presence of network
                        errors cannot be achieved by re-trying the transmission; by the time the
                        missing or corrupt packet has been identified it is too late to execute a
                        re-try operation. Buffering can be used to provide enough delay to allow
                        time for one or more retries, however this is not an effective solution in
                        applications where large delays (latencies) are not acceptable (as discussed
                        below).</t>
                    <t>Streams with guaranteed bandwidth can eliminate congestion on the network as
                        a cause of transmission errors that would lead to playback interruption. Use
                        of redundant paths can further mitigate transmission errors to provide
                        greater stream reliability.</t>
                </section>

                <section title="Synchronized Stream Playback">
                    <t>Latency in this context is the time between when a signal is initially sent
                        over a stream and when it is received. A common example in ProAV is
                        time-synchronizing audio and video when they take separate paths through the
                        playback system. In this case the latency of both the audio and video
                        streams must be bounded and consistent if the sound is to remain matched to
                        the movement in the video. A common tolerance for audio/video sync is one
                        NTSC video frame (about 33ms) and to maintain the audience perception of
                        correct lip sync the latency needs to be consistent within some reasonable
                        tolerance, for example 10%.</t>
                    <t>A common architecture for synchronizing multiple streams that have different
                        paths through the network (and thus potentially different latencies) is to
                        enable measurement of the latency of each path, and have the data sinks (for
                        example speakers) delay (buffer) all packets on all but the slowest path.
                        Each packet of each stream is assigned a presentation time which is based on
                        the longest required delay. This implies that all sinks must maintain a
                        common time reference of sufficient accuracy, which can be achieved by any
                        of various techniques.</t>
                    <t>This type of architecture is commonly implemented using a central controller
                        that determines path delays and arbitrates buffering delays.</t>
                </section>

                <section title="Sound Reinforcement">
                    <t>Consider the latency (delay) from when a person speaks into a microphone to
                        when their voice emerges from the speaker. If this delay is longer than
                        about 10-15 milliseconds it is noticeable and can make a sound reinforcement
                        system unusable (see slide 6 of [SRP_LATENCY]). (If you have ever tried to
                        speak in the presence of a delayed echo of your voice you may know this
                        experience).</t>
                    <t>Note that the 15ms latency bound includes all parts of the signal path, not
                        just the network, so the network latency must be significantly less than
                        15ms.</t>
                    <t>In some cases local performers must perform in synchrony with a remote
                        broadcast. In such cases the latencies of the broadcast stream and the local
                        performer must be adjusted to match each other, with a worst case of one
                        video frame (33ms for NTSC video). </t>
                    <t>In cases where audio phase is a consideration, for example beam-forming using
                        multiple speakers, latency requirements can be in the 10 microsecond range
                        (1 audio sample at 96kHz).</t>
                </section>

                <section title="Deterministic Time to Establish Streaming">
                    <t>Note: It is still under WG discussion whether this topic (stream startup
                        time) is within scope of DetNet. </t>
                    <t>Some audio systems installed in public environments (airports, hospitals)
                        have unique requirements with regards to health, safety and fire concerns.
                        One such requirement is a maximum of 3 seconds for a system to respond to an
                        emergency detection and begin sending appropriate warning signals and alarms
                        without human intervention. For this requirement to be met, the system must
                        support a bounded and acceptable time from a notification signal to specific
                        stream establishment. For further details see [ISO7240-16].</t>
                    <t>Similar requirements apply when the system is restarted after a power cycle,
                        cable re-connection, or system reconfiguration.</t>
                    <t>In many cases such re-establishment of streaming state must be achieved by
                        the peer devices themselves, i.e. without a central controller (since such a
                        controller may only be present during initial network configuration).</t>
                    <t>Video systems introduce related requirements, for example when transitioning
                        from one camera feed (video stream) to another (see <xref target="STUDIO_IP"
                        /> and <xref target="ESPN_DC2"/>).</t>
                </section>

                <section title="Secure Transmission">
                    <section title="Safety">
                        <t>Professional audio systems can include amplifiers that are capable of
                            generating hundreds or thousands of watts of audio power which if used
                            incorrectly can cause hearing damage to those in the vicinity. Apart
                            from the usual care required by the systems operators to prevent such
                            incidents, the network traffic that controls these devices must be
                            secured (as with any sensitive application traffic). </t>
                    </section>

                </section>

            </section>

            <section title="Pro Audio Today">
                <t>Some proprietary systems have been created which enable deterministic streams at
                    Layer 3 however they are "engineered networks" which require careful
                    configuration to operate, often require that the system be over-provisioned, and
                    it is implied that all devices on the network voluntarily play by the rules of
                    that network. To enable these industries to successfully transition to an
                    interoperable multi-vendor packet-based infrastructure requires effective open
                    standards, and we believe that establishing relevant IETF standards is a crucial
                    factor.</t>
            </section>

            <section title="Pro Audio Future">

                <section title="Layer 3 Interconnecting Layer 2 Islands">
                    <t>It would be valuable to enable IP to connect multiple Layer 2 LANs. </t>
                    <t>As an example, ESPN recently constructed a state-of-the-art 194,000 sq ft,
                        $125 million broadcast studio called DC2. The DC2 network is capable of
                        handling 46 Tbps of throughput with 60,000 simultaneous signals. Inside the
                        facility are 1,100 miles of fiber feeding four audio control rooms (see
                            <xref target="ESPN_DC2"/> ).</t>
                    <t>In designing DC2 they replaced as much point-to-point technology as they
                        could with packet-based technology. They constructed seven individual
                        studios using layer 2 LANS (using IEEE 802.1 AVB) that were entirely
                        effective at routing audio within the LANs. However to interconnect these
                        layer 2 LAN islands together they ended up using dedicated paths in a custom
                        SDN (Software Defined Networking) router because there is no standards-based
                        routing solution available.</t>
                </section>

                <section title="High Reliability Stream Paths">
                    <t>On-air and other live media streams are often backed up with redundant links
                        that seamlessly act to deliver the content when the primary link fails for
                        any reason. In point-to-point systems this is provided by an additional
                        point-to-point link; the analogous requirement in a packet-based system is
                        to provide an alternate path through the network such that no individual
                        link can bring down the system. </t>
                </section>

                <section title="Integration of Reserved Streams into IT Networks">
                    <t>A commonly cited goal of moving to a packet based media infrastructure is
                        that costs can be reduced by using off the shelf, commodity network
                        hardware. In addition, economy of scale can be realized by combining media
                        infrastructure with IT infrastructure. In keeping with these goals, stream
                        reservation technology should be compatible with existing protocols, and not
                        compromise use of the network for best effort (non-time-sensitive)
                        traffic.</t>
                </section>

                <section title="Use of Unused Reservations by Best-Effort Traffic">
                    <t>In cases where stream bandwidth is reserved but not currently used (or is
                        under-utilized) that bandwidth must be available to best-effort (i.e.
                        non-time-sensitive) traffic. For example a single stream may be nailed up
                        (reserved) for specific media content that needs to be presented at
                        different times of the day, ensuring timely delivery of that content, yet in
                        between those times the full bandwidth of the network can be utilized for
                        best-effort tasks such as file transfers.</t>
                    <t>This also addresses a concern of IT network administrators that are
                        considering adding reserved bandwidth traffic to their networks that ("users
                        will reserve large quantities of bandwidth and then never un-reserve it even
                        though they are not using it, and soon the network will have no bandwidth
                        left").</t>
                </section>

                <section title="Traffic Segregation">
                    <t>Note: It is still under WG discussion whether this topic will be addressed by
                        DetNet.</t>
                    <t>Sink devices may be low cost devices with limited processing power. In order
                        to not overwhelm the CPUs in these devices it is important to limit the
                        amount of traffic that these devices must process.</t>
                    <t>As an example, consider the use of individual seat speakers in a cinema.
                        These speakers are typically required to be cost reduced since the
                        quantities in a single theater can reach hundreds of seats. Discovery
                        protocols alone in a one thousand seat theater can generate enough broadcast
                        traffic to overwhelm a low powered CPU. Thus an installation like this will
                        benefit greatly from some type of traffic segregation that can define groups
                        of seats to reduce traffic within each group. All seats in the theater must
                        still be able to communicate with a central controller.</t>
                    <t>There are many techniques that can be used to support this requirement
                        including (but not limited to) the following examples.</t>

                    <section title="Packet Forwarding Rules, VLANs and Subnets">
                        <t>Packet forwarding rules can be used to eliminate some extraneous
                            streaming traffic from reaching potentially low powered sink devices,
                            however there may be other types of broadcast traffic that should be
                            eliminated using other means for example VLANs or IP subnets.</t>
                    </section>

                    <section title="Multicast Addressing (IPv4 and IPv6)">
                        <t>Multicast addressing is commonly used to keep bandwidth utilization of
                            shared links to a minimum.</t>
                        <t>Because of the MAC Address forwarding nature of Layer 2 bridges it is
                            important that a multicast MAC address is only associated with one
                            stream. This will prevent reservations from forwarding packets from one
                            stream down a path that has no interested sinks simply because there is
                            another stream on that same path that shares the same multicast MAC
                            address.</t>
                        <t>Since each multicast MAC Address can represent 32 different IPv4
                            multicast addresses there must be a process put in place to make sure
                            this does not occur. Requiring use of IPv6 address can achieve this,
                            however due to their continued prevalence, solutions that are effective
                            for IPv4 installations are also required.</t>
                    </section>
                </section>

                <section title="Latency Optimization by a Central Controller">
                    <t>A central network controller might also perform optimizations based on the
                        individual path delays, for example sinks that are closer to the source can
                        inform the controller that they can accept greater latency since they will
                        be buffering packets to match presentation times of farther away sinks. The
                        controller might then move a stream reservation on a short path to a longer
                        path in order to free up bandwidth for other critical streams on that short
                        path. See slides 3-5 of <xref target="SRP_LATENCY"/>.</t>
                    <t>Additional optimization can be achieved in cases where sinks have differing
                        latency requirements, for example in a live outdoor concert the speaker
                        sinks have stricter latency requirements than the recording hardware sinks.
                        See slide 7 of <xref target="SRP_LATENCY"/>.</t>
                </section>

                <section title="Reduced Device Cost Due To Reduced Buffer Memory">
                    <t>Device cost can be reduced in a system with guaranteed reservations with a
                        small bounded latency due to the reduced requirements for buffering (i.e.
                        memory) on sink devices. For example, a theme park might broadcast a live
                        event across the globe via a layer 3 protocol; in such cases the size of the
                        buffers required is proportional to the latency bounds and jitter caused by
                        delivery, which depends on the worst case segment of the end-to-end network
                        path. For example on todays open internet the latency is typically
                        unacceptable for audio and video streaming without many seconds of
                        buffering. In such scenarios a single gateway device at the local network
                        that receives the feed from the remote site would provide the expensive
                        buffering required to mask the latency and jitter issues associated with
                        long distance delivery. Sink devices in the local location would have no
                        additional buffering requirements, and thus no additional costs, beyond
                        those required for delivery of local content. The sink device would be
                        receiving the identical packets as those sent by the source and would be
                        unaware that there were any latency or jitter issues along the path.</t>
                </section>
            </section>

            <section title="Pro Audio Asks">
                <t>
                    <list style="symbols">
                        <t>Layer 3 routing on top of AVB (and/or other high QoS networks)</t>
                        <t>Content delivery with bounded, lowest possible latency</t>
                        <t>IntServ and DiffServ integration with AVB (where practical)</t>
                        <t>Single network for A/V and IT traffic</t>
                        <t>Standards-based, interoperable, multi-vendor</t>
                        <t>IT department friendly</t>
                        <t>Enterprise-wide networks (e.g. size of San Francisco but not the whole
                            Internet (yet...)) </t>
                    </list>
                </t>
            </section>

        </section>

        <section title="Electrical Utilities">
            <section title="Use Case Description">
                <t> Many systems that an electrical utility deploys today rely on high availability
                    and deterministic behavior of the underlying networks. Here we present use cases
                    in Transmission, Generation and Distribution, including key timing and
                    reliability metrics. We also discuss security issues and industry trends which
                    affect the architecture of next generation utility networks</t>

                <section title="Transmission Use Cases">
                    <section title="Protection">
                        <t> Protection means not only the protection of human operators but also the
                            protection of the electrical equipment and the preservation of the
                            stability and frequency of the grid. If a fault occurs in the
                            transmission or distribution of electricity then severe damage can occur
                            to human operators, electrical equipment and the grid itself, leading to
                            blackouts. </t>
                        <t> Communication links in conjunction with protection relays are used to
                            selectively isolate faults on high voltage lines, transformers, reactors
                            and other important electrical equipment. The role of the teleprotection
                            system is to selectively disconnect a faulty part by transferring
                            command signals within the shortest possible time.</t>
                        <section title="Key Criteria">
                            <t>The key criteria for measuring teleprotection performance are command
                                transmission time, dependability and security. These criteria are
                                defined by the IEC standard 60834 as follows: </t>
                            <t><list style="symbols">
                                    <t>Transmission time (Speed): The time between the moment where
                                        state changes at the transmitter input and the moment of the
                                        corresponding change at the receiver output, including
                                        propagation delay. Overall operating time for a
                                        teleprotection system includes the time for initiating the
                                        command at the transmitting end, the propagation delay over
                                        the network (including equipments) and the selection and
                                        decision time at the receiving end, including any additional
                                        delay due to a noisy environment. </t>
                                    <t>Dependability: The ability to issue and receive valid
                                        commands in the presence of interference and/or noise, by
                                        minimizing the probability of missing command (PMC).
                                        Dependability targets are typically set for a specific bit
                                        error rate (BER) level. </t>
                                    <t>Security: The ability to prevent false tripping due to a
                                        noisy environment, by minimizing the probability of unwanted
                                        commands (PUC). Security targets are also set for a specific
                                        bit error rate (BER) level. </t>
                                </list>
                            </t>
                            <t>Additional elements of the the teleprotection system that impact its
                                performance include:</t>
                            <t><list style="symbols">
                                    <t> Network bandwidth</t>
                                    <t> Failure recovery capacity (aka resiliency)</t>
                                </list>
                            </t>
                        </section>
                        <section title="Fault Detection and Clearance Timing">
                            <t> Most power line equipment can tolerate short circuits or faults for
                                up to approximately five power cycles before sustaining irreversible
                                damage or affecting other segments in the network. This translates
                                to total fault clearance time of 100ms. As a safety precaution,
                                however, actual operation time of protection systems is limited to
                                70- 80 percent of this period, including fault recognition time,
                                command transmission time and line breaker switching time. </t>
                            <t>Some system components, such as large electromechanical switches,
                                require particularly long time to operate and take up the majority
                                of the total clearance time, leaving only a 10ms window for the
                                telecommunications part of the protection scheme, independent of the
                                distance to travel. Given the sensitivity of the issue, new networks
                                impose requirements that are even more stringent: IEC standard 61850
                                limits the transfer time for protection messages to 1/4 - 1/2 cycle
                                or 4 - 8ms (for 60Hz lines) for the most critical messages.</t>
                        </section>

                        <section title="Symmetric Channel Delay">
                            <t>Note: It is currently under WG discussion whether symmetric path
                                delays are to be guaranteed by DetNet.</t>
                            <t> Teleprotection channels which are differential must be synchronous,
                                which means that any delays on the transmit and receive paths must
                                match each other. Teleprotection systems ideally support zero
                                asymmetric delay; typical legacy relays can tolerate delay
                                discrepancies of up to 750us.</t>
                            <t> Some tools available for lowering delay variation below this
                                threshold are: </t>
                            <t>
                                <list style="symbols">
                                    <t>For legacy systems using Time Division Multiplexing (TDM),
                                        jitter buffers at the multiplexers on each end of the line
                                        can be used to offset delay variation by queuing sent and
                                        received packets. The length of the queues must balance the
                                        need to regulate the rate of transmission with the need to
                                        limit overall delay, as larger buffers result in increased
                                        latency. </t>
                                    <t>For jitter-prone IP packet networks, traffic management tools
                                        can ensure that the teleprotection signals receive the
                                        highest transmission priority to minimize jitter. </t>
                                    <t>Standard packet-based synchronization technologies, such as
                                        1588-2008 Precision Time Protocol (PTP) and Synchronous
                                        Ethernet (Sync-E), can help keep networks stable by
                                        maintaining a highly accurate clock source on the various
                                        network devices.</t>
                                </list>
                            </t>
                        </section>

                        <section title="Teleprotection Network Requirements (IEC 61850)">
                            <t>The following table captures the main network metrics as based on the
                                IEC 61850 standard.</t>
                            <texttable align="center" anchor="table1" style="full"
                                suppress-title="false" title="Teleprotection network requirements">
                                <preamble/>
                                <ttcol align="center">Teleprotection Requirement</ttcol>
                                <ttcol align="center">Attribute</ttcol>
                                <c>One way maximum delay</c>
                                <c>4-10 ms</c>
                                <c>Asymetric delay required</c>
                                <c>Yes</c>
                                <c>Maximum jitter</c>
                                <c>less than 250 us (750 us for legacy IED)</c>
                                <c>Topology</c>
                                <c>Point to point, point to Multi-point</c>
                                <c>Availability</c>
                                <c>99.9999</c>
                                <c>precise timing required</c>
                                <c>Yes</c>
                                <c>Recovery time on node failure</c>
                                <c>less than 50ms - hitless</c>
                                <c>performance management</c>
                                <c>Yes, Mandatory</c>
                                <c>Redundancy</c>
                                <c>Yes</c>
                                <c>Packet loss</c>
                                <c>0.1% to 1%</c>
                                <postamble/>
                            </texttable>
                        </section>
                        <section title="Inter-Trip Protection scheme">
                            <t>"Inter-tripping" is the signal-controlled tripping of a circuit
                                breaker to complete the isolation of a circuit or piece of apparatus
                                in concert with the tripping of other circuit breakers. </t>
                            <texttable align="center" anchor="table2" style="full"
                                suppress-title="false"
                                title="Inter-Trip protection network requirements">
                                <preamble/>
                                <ttcol align="center">Inter-Trip protection Requirement</ttcol>
                                <ttcol align="center">Attribute</ttcol>
                                <c>One way maximum delay</c>
                                <c>5 ms</c>
                                <c>Asymetric delay required</c>
                                <c>No</c>
                                <c>Maximum jitter</c>
                                <c>Not critical</c>
                                <c>Topology</c>
                                <c>Point to point, point to Multi-point</c>
                                <c>Bandwidth</c>
                                <c>64 Kbps</c>
                                <c>Availability</c>
                                <c>99.9999</c>
                                <c>precise timing required</c>
                                <c>Yes</c>
                                <c>Recovery time on node failure</c>
                                <c>less than 50ms - hitless</c>
                                <c>performance management</c>
                                <c>Yes, Mandatory</c>
                                <c>Redundancy</c>
                                <c>Yes</c>
                                <c>Packet loss</c>
                                <c>0.1%</c>
                                <postamble/>
                            </texttable>
                        </section>
                        <section title="Current Differential Protection Scheme">
                            <t>Current differential protection is commonly used for line protection,
                                and is typical for protecting parallel circuits. At both end of the
                                lines the current is measured by the differential relays, and both
                                relays will trip the circuit breaker if the current going into the
                                line does not equal the current going out of the line. This type of
                                protection scheme assumes some form of communications being present
                                between the relays at both end of the line, to allow both relays to
                                compare measured current values. Line differential protection
                                schemes assume a very low telecommunications delay between both
                                relays, often as low as 5ms. Moreover, as those systems are often
                                not time-synchronized, they also assume symmetric telecommunications
                                paths with constant delay, which allows comparing current
                                measurement values taken at the exact same time.</t>
                            <texttable align="center" anchor="table3" style="full"
                                suppress-title="false"
                                title="Current Differential Protection metrics">
                                <preamble/>
                                <ttcol align="center">Current Differential protection
                                    Requirement</ttcol>
                                <ttcol align="center">Attribute</ttcol>
                                <c>One way maximum delay</c>
                                <c>5 ms</c>
                                <c>Asymetric delay Required</c>
                                <c>Yes</c>
                                <c>Maximum jitter</c>
                                <c>less than 250 us (750us for legacy IED)</c>
                                <c>Topology</c>
                                <c>Point to point, point to Multi-point</c>
                                <c>Bandwidth</c>
                                <c>64 Kbps</c>
                                <c>Availability</c>
                                <c>99.9999</c>
                                <c>precise timing required</c>
                                <c>Yes</c>
                                <c>Recovery time on node failure</c>
                                <c>less than 50ms - hitless</c>
                                <c>performance management</c>
                                <c>Yes, Mandatory</c>
                                <c>Redundancy</c>
                                <c>Yes</c>
                                <c>Packet loss</c>
                                <c>0.1%</c>
                                <postamble/>
                            </texttable>
                        </section>
                        <section title="Distance Protection Scheme">
                            <t>Distance (Impedance Relay) protection scheme is based on voltage and
                                current measurements. The network metrics are similar (but not
                                identical to) Current Differential protection.</t>
                            <texttable align="center" anchor="table4" style="full"
                                suppress-title="false" title="Distance Protection requirements">
                                <preamble/>
                                <ttcol align="center">Distance protection Requirement</ttcol>
                                <ttcol align="center">Attribute</ttcol>
                                <c>One way maximum delay</c>
                                <c>5 ms</c>
                                <c>Asymetric delay Required</c>
                                <c>No</c>
                                <c>Maximum jitter</c>
                                <c>Not critical</c>
                                <c>Topology</c>
                                <c>Point to point, point to Multi-point</c>
                                <c>Bandwidth</c>
                                <c>64 Kbps</c>
                                <c>Availability</c>
                                <c>99.9999</c>
                                <c>precise timing required</c>
                                <c>Yes</c>
                                <c>Recovery time on node failure</c>
                                <c>less than 50ms - hitless</c>
                                <c>performance management</c>
                                <c>Yes, Mandatory</c>
                                <c>Redundancy</c>
                                <c>Yes</c>
                                <c>Packet loss</c>
                                <c>0.1%</c>
                                <postamble/>
                            </texttable>
                        </section>

                        <section title="Inter-Substation Protection Signaling">
                            <t>This use case describes the exchange of Sampled Value and/or GOOSE
                                (Generic Object Oriented Substation Events) message between
                                Intelligent Electronic Devices (IED) in two substations for
                                protection and tripping coordination. The two IEDs are in a
                                master-slave mode. </t>
                            <t>The Current Transformer or Voltage Transformer (CT/VT) in one
                                substation sends the sampled analog voltage or current value to the
                                Merging Unit (MU) over hard wire. The MU sends the time-synchronized
                                61850-9-2 sampled values to the slave IED. The slave IED forwards
                                the information to the Master IED in the other substation. The
                                master IED makes the determination (for example based on sampled
                                value differentials) to send a trip command to the originating IED.
                                Once the slave IED/Relay receives the GOOSE trip for breaker
                                tripping, it opens the breaker. It then sends a confirmation message
                                back to the master. All data exchanges between IEDs are either
                                through Sampled Value and/or GOOSE messages. </t>
                            <texttable align="center" anchor="table5" style="full"
                                suppress-title="false"
                                title="Inter-Substation Protection requirements">
                                <preamble/>
                                <ttcol align="center">Inter-Substation protection
                                    Requirement</ttcol>
                                <ttcol align="center">Attribute</ttcol>
                                <c>One way maximum delay</c>
                                <c>5 ms</c>
                                <c>Asymetric delay Required</c>
                                <c>No</c>
                                <c>Maximum jitter</c>
                                <c>Not critical</c>
                                <c>Topology</c>
                                <c>Point to point, point to Multi-point</c>
                                <c>Bandwidth</c>
                                <c>64 Kbps</c>
                                <c>Availability</c>
                                <c>99.9999</c>
                                <c>precise timing required</c>
                                <c>Yes</c>
                                <c>Recovery time on node failure</c>
                                <c>less than 50ms - hitless</c>
                                <c>performance management</c>
                                <c>Yes, Mandatory</c>
                                <c>Redundancy</c>
                                <c>Yes</c>
                                <c>Packet loss</c>
                                <c>1%</c>
                                <postamble/>
                            </texttable>
                        </section>
                    </section>
                    <section title="Intra-Substation Process Bus Communications">
                        <t>This use case describes the data flow from the CT/VT to the IEDs in the
                            substation via the MU. The CT/VT in the substation send the sampled
                            value (analog voltage or current) to the MU over hard wire. The MU sends
                            the time-synchronized 61850-9-2 sampled values to the IEDs in the
                            substation in GOOSE message format. The GPS Master Clock can send 1PPS
                            or IRIG-B format to the MU through a serial port or IEEE 1588 protocol
                            via a network. Process bus communication using 61850 simplifies
                            connectivity within the substation and removes the requirement for
                            multiple serial connections and removes the slow serial bus
                            architectures that are typically used. This also ensures increased
                            flexibility and increased speed with the use of multicast messaging
                            between multiple devices. </t>
                        <texttable align="center" anchor="table6" style="full"
                            suppress-title="false" title="Intra-Substation Protection requirements">
                            <preamble/>
                            <ttcol align="center">Intra-Substation protection Requirement</ttcol>
                            <ttcol align="center">Attribute</ttcol>
                            <c>One way maximum delay</c>
                            <c>5 ms</c>
                            <c>Asymetric delay Required</c>
                            <c>No</c>
                            <c>Maximum jitter</c>
                            <c>Not critical</c>
                            <c>Topology</c>
                            <c>Point to point, point to Multi-point</c>
                            <c>Bandwidth</c>
                            <c>64 Kbps</c>
                            <c>Availability</c>
                            <c>99.9999</c>
                            <c>precise timing required</c>
                            <c>Yes</c>
                            <c>Recovery time on Node failure</c>
                            <c>less than 50ms - hitless</c>
                            <c>performance management</c>
                            <c>Yes, Mandatory</c>
                            <c>Redundancy</c>
                            <c>Yes - No</c>
                            <c>Packet loss</c>
                            <c>0.1%</c>
                            <postamble/>
                        </texttable>
                    </section>

                    <section title="Wide Area Monitoring and Control Systems">
                        <t>The application of synchrophasor measurement data from Phasor Measurement
                            Units (PMU) to Wide Area Monitoring and Control Systems promises to
                            provide important new capabilities for improving system stability.
                            Access to PMU data enables more timely situational awareness over larger
                            portions of the grid than what has been possible historically with
                            normal SCADA (Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition) data. Handling
                            the volume and real-time nature of synchrophasor data presents unique
                            challenges for existing application architectures. Wide Area management
                            System (WAMS) makes it possible for the condition of the bulk power
                            system to be observed and understood in real-time so that protective,
                            preventative, or corrective action can be taken. Because of the very
                            high sampling rate of measurements and the strict requirement for time
                            synchronization of the samples, WAMS has stringent telecommunications
                            requirements in an IP network that are captured in the following table: </t>
                        <texttable align="center" anchor="table10" style="full"
                            suppress-title="false" title="WAMS Special Communication Requirements">
                            <preamble/>
                            <ttcol align="center">WAMS Requirement</ttcol>
                            <ttcol align="center">Attribute</ttcol>
                            <c>One way maximum delay</c>
                            <c>50 ms</c>
                            <c>Asymetric delay Required</c>
                            <c>No</c>
                            <c>Maximum jitter</c>
                            <c>Not critical</c>
                            <c>Topology</c>
                            <c>Point to point, point to Multi-point, Multi-point to Multi-point</c>
                            <c>Bandwidth</c>
                            <c>100 Kbps</c>
                            <c>Availability</c>
                            <c>99.9999</c>
                            <c>precise timing required</c>
                            <c>Yes</c>
                            <c>Recovery time on Node failure</c>
                            <c>less than 50ms - hitless</c>
                            <c>performance management</c>
                            <c>Yes, Mandatory</c>
                            <c>Redundancy</c>
                            <c>Yes</c>
                            <c>Packet loss</c>
                            <c>1%</c>
                            <postamble/>
                        </texttable>
                    </section>
                    <section title="IEC 61850 WAN engineering guidelines requirement classification">
                        <t>The IEC (International Electrotechnical Commission) has recently
                            published a Technical Report which offers guidelines on how to define
                            and deploy Wide Area Networks for the interconnections of electric
                            substations, generation plants and SCADA operation centers. The IEC
                            61850-90-12 is providing a classification of WAN communication
                            requirements into 4 classes. <xref target="table11"/> summarizes these
                            requirements: </t>
                        <texttable align="center" anchor="table11" style="full"
                            suppress-title="false"
                            title="61850-90-12 Communication Requirements; Courtesy of IEC">
                            <preamble/>
                            <ttcol align="center">WAN Requirement</ttcol>
                            <ttcol align="center">Class WA</ttcol>
                            <ttcol align="center">Class WB</ttcol>
                            <ttcol align="center">Class WC</ttcol>
                            <ttcol align="center">Class WD</ttcol>
                            <c>Application field</c>
                            <c>EHV (Extra High Voltage)</c>
                            <c>HV (High Voltage)</c>
                            <c>MV (Medium Voltage)</c>
                            <c>General purpose</c>
                            <c>Latency</c>
                            <c>5 ms</c>
                            <c>10 ms</c>
                            <c>100 ms</c>
                            <c>&gt; 100 ms</c>
                            <c>Jitter</c>
                            <c>10 us</c>
                            <c>100 us</c>
                            <c>1 ms</c>
                            <c>10 ms</c>
                            <c>Latency Asymetry</c>
                            <c>100 us</c>
                            <c>1 ms</c>
                            <c>10 ms</c>
                            <c>100 ms</c>
                            <c>Time Accuracy</c>
                            <c>1 us</c>
                            <c>10 us</c>
                            <c>100 us</c>
                            <c>10 to 100 ms</c>
                            <c>Bit Error rate</c>
                            <c>10-7 to 10-6</c>
                            <c>10-5 to 10-4</c>
                            <c>10-3</c>
                            <c> </c>
                            <c>Unavailability</c>
                            <c>10-7 to 10-6</c>
                            <c>10-5 to 10-4</c>
                            <c>10-3</c>
                            <c> </c>
                            <c>Recovery delay</c>
                            <c>Zero</c>
                            <c>50 ms</c>
                            <c>5 s</c>
                            <c>50 s</c>
                            <c>Cyber security</c>
                            <c>extremely high</c>
                            <c>High</c>
                            <c>Medium</c>
                            <c>Medium</c>
                            <postamble/>
                        </texttable>
                    </section>

                </section>

                <section title="Generation Use Case">
                    <t> The electrical power generation frequency should be maintained within a very
                        narrow band. Deviations from the acceptable frequency range are detected and
                        the required signals are sent to the power plants for frequency regulation. </t>
                    <t> Automatic generation control (AGC) is a system for adjusting the power
                        output of generators at different power plants, in response to changes in
                        the load. </t>
                    <texttable align="center" anchor="table8" style="full" suppress-title="false"
                        title="FCAG Communication Requirements">
                        <preamble/>
                        <ttcol align="center">FCAG (Frequency Control Automatic Generation)
                            Requirement</ttcol>
                        <ttcol align="center">Attribute</ttcol>
                        <c>One way maximum delay</c>
                        <c>500 ms</c>
                        <c>Asymetric delay Required</c>
                        <c>No</c>
                        <c>Maximum jitter</c>
                        <c>Not critical</c>
                        <c>Topology</c>
                        <c>Point to point</c>
                        <c>Bandwidth</c>
                        <c>20 Kbps</c>
                        <c>Availability</c>
                        <c>99.999</c>
                        <c>precise timing required</c>
                        <c>Yes</c>
                        <c>Recovery time on Node failure</c>
                        <c>N/A</c>
                        <c>performance management</c>
                        <c>Yes, Mandatory</c>
                        <c>Redundancy</c>
                        <c>Yes</c>
                        <c>Packet loss</c>
                        <c>1%</c>
                        <postamble/>
                    </texttable>
                </section>

                <section title="Distribution use case">
                    <section title="Fault Location Isolation and Service Restoration (FLISR)">
                        <t> Fault Location, Isolation, and Service Restoration (FLISR) refers to the
                            ability to automatically locate the fault, isolate the fault, and
                            restore service in the distribution network. This will likely be the
                            first widespread application of distributed intelligence in the grid. </t>
                        <t> Static power switch status (open/closed) in the network dictates the
                            power flow to secondary substations. Reconfiguring the network in the
                            event of a fault is typically done manually on site to
                            energize/de-energize alternate paths. Automating the operation of
                            substation switchgear allows the flow of power to be altered
                            automatically under fault conditions.</t>
                        <t> FLISR can be managed centrally from a Distribution Management System
                            (DMS) or executed locally through distributed control via intelligent
                            switches and fault sensors. </t>

                        <texttable align="center" anchor="table7" style="full"
                            suppress-title="false" title="FLISR Communication Requirements">
                            <preamble/>
                            <ttcol align="center">FLISR Requirement</ttcol>
                            <ttcol align="center">Attribute</ttcol>
                            <c>One way maximum delay</c>
                            <c>80 ms</c>
                            <c>Asymetric delay Required</c>
                            <c>No</c>
                            <c>Maximum jitter</c>
                            <c>40 ms</c>
                            <c>Topology</c>
                            <c>Point to point, point to Multi-point, Multi-point to Multi-point</c>
                            <c>Bandwidth</c>
                            <c>64 Kbps</c>
                            <c>Availability</c>
                            <c>99.9999</c>
                            <c>precise timing required</c>
                            <c>Yes</c>
                            <c>Recovery time on Node failure</c>
                            <c>Depends on customer impact</c>
                            <c>performance management</c>
                            <c>Yes, Mandatory</c>
                            <c>Redundancy</c>
                            <c>Yes</c>
                            <c>Packet loss</c>
                            <c>0.1%</c>
                            <postamble/>
                        </texttable>
                    </section>
                </section>
            </section>

            <section title="Electrical Utilities Today">
                <t> Many utilities still rely on complex environments formed of multiple
                    application-specific proprietary networks, including TDM networks. </t>
                <t> In this kind of environment there is no mixing of OT and IT applications on the
                    same network, and information is siloed between operational areas. </t>
                <t> Specific calibration of the full chain is required, which is costly. </t>
                <t> This kind of environment prevents utility operations from realizing the
                    operational efficiency benefits, visibility, and functional integration of
                    operational information across grid applications and data networks. </t>
                <t> In addition, there are many security-related issues as discussed in the
                    following section.</t>

                <section title="Security Current Practices and Limitations">
                    <t>Grid monitoring and control devices are already targets for cyber attacks,
                        and legacy telecommunications protocols have many intrinsic network-related
                        vulnerabilities. For example, DNP3, Modbus, PROFIBUS/PROFINET, and other
                        protocols are designed around a common paradigm of request and respond. Each
                        protocol is designed for a master device such as an HMI (Human Machine
                        Interface) system to send commands to subordinate slave devices to retrieve
                        data (reading inputs) or control (writing to outputs). Because many of these
                        protocols lack authentication, encryption, or other basic security measures,
                        they are prone to network-based attacks, allowing a malicious actor or
                        attacker to utilize the request-and-respond system as a mechanism for
                        command-and-control like functionality. Specific security concerns common to
                        most industrial control, including utility telecommunication protocols
                        include the following: </t>
                    <t>
                        <list style="symbols">
                            <t>Network or transport errors (e.g. malformed packets or excessive
                                latency) can cause protocol failure.</t>
                            <t>Protocol commands may be available that are capable of forcing slave
                                devices into inoperable states, including powering-off devices,
                                forcing them into a listen-only state, disabling alarming.</t>
                            <t>Protocol commands may be available that are capable of restarting
                                communications and otherwise interrupting processes.</t>
                            <t>Protocol commands may be available that are capable of clearing,
                                erasing, or resetting diagnostic information such as counters and
                                diagnostic registers.</t>
                            <t>Protocol commands may be available that are capable of requesting
                                sensitive information about the controllers, their configurations,
                                or other need-to-know information.</t>
                            <t>Most protocols are application layer protocols transported over TCP;
                                therefore it is easy to transport commands over non-standard ports
                                or inject commands into authorized traffic flows.</t>
                            <t>Protocol commands may be available that are capable of broadcasting
                                messages to many devices at once (i.e. a potential DoS).</t>
                            <t>Protocol commands may be available to query the device network to
                                obtain defined points and their values (i.e. a configuration
                                scan).</t>
                            <t>Protocol commands may be available that will list all available
                                function codes (i.e. a function scan).</t>
                        </list>
                    </t>
                    <t> These inherent vulnerabilities, along with increasing connectivity between
                        IT an OT networks, make network-based attacks very feasible. Simple
                        injection of malicious protocol commands provides control over the target
                        process. Altering legitimate protocol traffic can also alter information
                        about a process and disrupt the legitimate controls that are in place over
                        that process. A man-in-the-middle attack could provide both control over a
                        process and misrepresentation of data back to operator consoles. </t>

                </section>
            </section>
            <section title="Electrical Utilities Future">
                <t> The business and technology trends that are sweeping the utility industry will
                    drastically transform the utility business from the way it has been for many
                    decades. At the core of many of these changes is a drive to modernize the
                    electrical grid with an integrated telecommunications infrastructure. However,
                    interoperability concerns, legacy networks, disparate tools, and stringent
                    security requirements all add complexity to the grid transformation. Given the
                    range and diversity of the requirements that should be addressed by the next
                    generation telecommunications infrastructure, utilities need to adopt a holistic
                    architectural approach to integrate the electrical grid with digital
                    telecommunications across the entire power delivery chain. </t>
                <t>The key to modernizing grid telecommunications is to provide a common, adaptable,
                    multi-service network infrastructure for the entire utility organization. Such a
                    network serves as the platform for current capabilities while enabling future
                    expansion of the network to accommodate new applications and services.</t>
                <t> To meet this diverse set of requirements, both today and in the future, the next
                    generation utility telecommunnications network will be based on
                    open-standards-based IP architecture. An end-to-end IP architecture takes
                    advantage of nearly three decades of IP technology development, facilitating
                    interoperability across disparate networks and devices, as it has been already
                    demonstrated in many mission-critical and highly secure networks. </t>
                <t> IPv6 is seen as a future telecommunications technology for the Smart Grid; the
                    IEC (International Electrotechnical Commission) and different National
                    Committees have mandated a specific adhoc group (AHG8) to define the migration
                    strategy to IPv6 for all the IEC TC57 power automation standards. </t>

                <section title="Migration to Packet-Switched Network">
                    <t>Throughout the world, utilities are increasingly planning for a future based
                        on smart grid applications requiring advanced telecommunications systems.
                        Many of these applications utilize packet connectivity for communicating
                        information and control signals across the utility's Wide Area Network
                        (WAN), made possible by technologies such as multiprotocol label switching
                        (MPLS). The data that traverses the utility WAN includes: <list
                            style="symbols">
                            <t>Grid monitoring, control, and protection data</t>
                            <t>Non-control grid data (e.g. asset data for condition-based
                                monitoring)</t>
                            <t>Physical safety and security data (e.g. voice and video)</t>
                            <t>Remote worker access to corporate applications (voice, maps,
                                schematics, etc.)</t>
                            <t>Field area network backhaul for smart metering, and distribution grid
                                management</t>
                            <t>Enterprise traffic (email, collaboration tools, business
                                applications)</t>
                        </list> WANs support this wide variety of traffic to and from substations,
                        the transmission and distribution grid, generation sites, between control
                        centers, and between work locations and data centers. To maintain this
                        rapidly expanding set of applications, many utilities are taking steps to
                        evolve present time-division multiplexing (TDM) based and frame relay
                        infrastructures to packet systems. Packet-based networks are designed to
                        provide greater functionalities and higher levels of service for
                        applications, while continuing to deliver reliability and deterministic
                        (real-time) traffic support. </t>
                </section>

                <section title="Telecommunications Trends">
                    <t>These general telecommunications topics are in addition to the use cases that
                        have been addressed so far. These include both current and future
                        telecommunications related topics that should be factored into the network
                        architecture and design. </t>
                    <section title="General Telecommunications Requirements">
                        <t>
                            <list style="symbols">
                                <t>IP Connectivity everywhere</t>
                                <t>Monitoring services everywhere and from different remote
                                    centers</t>
                                <t>Move services to a virtual data center</t>
                                <t>Unify access to applications / information from the corporate
                                    network</t>
                                <t>Unify services</t>
                                <t>Unified Communications Solutions</t>
                                <t>Mix of fiber and microwave technologies - obsolescence of
                                    SONET/SDH or TDM</t>
                                <t>Standardize grid telecommunications protocol to opened standard
                                    to ensure interoperability</t>
                                <t>Reliable Telecommunications for Transmission and Distribution
                                    Substations</t>
                                <t>IEEE 1588 time synchronization Client / Server Capabilities</t>
                                <t>Integration of Multicast Design</t>
                                <t>QoS Requirements Mapping</t>
                                <t>Enable Future Network Expansion</t>
                                <t>Substation Network Resilience</t>
                                <t>Fast Convergence Design</t>
                                <t>Scalable Headend Design</t>
                                <t>Define Service Level Agreements (SLA) and Enable SLA
                                    Monitoring</t>
                                <t>Integration of 3G/4G Technologies and future technologies</t>
                                <t>Ethernet Connectivity for Station Bus Architecture</t>
                                <t>Ethernet Connectivity for Process Bus Architecture</t>
                                <t>Protection, teleprotection and PMU (Phaser Measurement Unit) on
                                    IP</t>
                            </list>
                        </t>
                    </section>

                    <section title="Specific Network topologies of Smart Grid Applications">
                        <t>Utilities often have very large private telecommunications networks. It
                            covers an entire territory / country. The main purpose of the network,
                            until now, has been to support transmission network monitoring, control,
                            and automation, remote control of generation sites, and providing FCAPS
                            (Fault, Configuration, Accounting, Performance, Security) services from
                            centralized network operation centers. </t>
                        <t> Going forward, one network will support operation and maintenance of
                            electrical networks (generation, transmission, and distribution), voice
                            and data services for ten of thousands of employees and for exchange
                            with neighboring interconnections, and administrative services. To meet
                            those requirements, utility may deploy several physical networks
                            leveraging different technologies across the country: an optical network
                            and a microwave network for instance. Each protection and automatism
                            system between two points has two telecommunications circuits, one on
                            each network. Path diversity between two substations is key. Regardless
                            of the event type (hurricane, ice storm, etc.), one path shall stay
                            available so the system can still operate.</t>
                        <t>In the optical network, signals are transmitted over more than tens of
                            thousands of circuits using fiber optic links, microwave and telephone
                            cables. This network is the nervous system of the utility's power
                            transmission operations. The optical network represents ten of thousands
                            of km of cable deployed along the power lines, with individual runs as
                            long as 280 km.</t>
                    </section>
                    <section title="Precision Time Protocol">
                        <t>Some utilities do not use GPS clocks in generation substations. One of
                            the main reasons is that some of the generation plants are 30 to 50
                            meters deep under ground and the GPS signal can be weak and unreliable.
                            Instead, atomic clocks are used. Clocks are synchronized amongst each
                            other. Rubidium clocks provide clock and 1ms timestamps for IRIG-B. </t>
                        <t> Some companies plan to transition to the Precision Time Protocol (PTP,
                                <xref target="IEEE1588"/>), distributing the synchronization signal
                            over the IP/MPLS network. PTP provides a mechanism for synchronizing the
                            clocks of participating nodes to a high degree of accuracy and
                            precision. </t>
                        <t>PTP operates based on the following assumptions: </t>
                        <t>
                            <list>
                                <t>It is assumed that the network eliminates cyclic forwarding of
                                    PTP messages within each communication path (e.g. by using a
                                    spanning tree protocol). </t>
                                <t>PTP is tolerant of an occasional missed message, duplicated
                                    message, or message that arrived out of order. However, PTP
                                    assumes that such impairments are relatively rare. </t>
                                <t>PTP was designed assuming a multicast communication model,
                                    however PTP also supports a unicast communication model as long
                                    as the behavior of the protocol is preserved. </t>
                                <t>Like all message-based time transfer protocols, PTP time accuracy
                                    is degraded by delay asymmetry in the paths taken by event
                                    messages. Asymmetry is not detectable by PTP, however, if such
                                    delays are known a priori, PTP can correct for asymmetry. </t>
                            </list>
                        </t>
                        <t>IEC 61850 will recommend the use of the IEEE PTP 1588 Utility Profile (as
                            defined in <xref target="IEC62439-3:2012"/> Annex B) which offers the
                            support of redundant attachment of clocks to Parallel Redundancy Protcol
                            (PRP) and High-availability Seamless Redundancy (HSR) networks.</t>
                    </section>
                </section>

                <section title="Security Trends in Utility Networks" toc="default">
                    <t> Although advanced telecommunications networks can assist in transforming the
                        energy industry by playing a critical role in maintaining high levels of
                        reliability, performance, and manageability, they also introduce the need
                        for an integrated security infrastructure. Many of the technologies being
                        deployed to support smart grid projects such as smart meters and sensors can
                        increase the vulnerability of the grid to attack. Top security concerns for
                        utilities migrating to an intelligent smart grid telecommunications platform
                        center on the following trends: </t>
                    <t>
                        <list style="symbols">
                            <t>Integration of distributed energy resources</t>
                            <t>Proliferation of digital devices to enable management, automation,
                                protection, and control</t>
                            <t>Regulatory mandates to comply with standards for critical
                                infrastructure protection</t>
                            <t>Migration to new systems for outage management, distribution
                                automation, condition-based maintenance, load forecasting, and smart
                                metering</t>
                            <t>Demand for new levels of customer service and energy management</t>
                        </list>
                    </t>
                    <t> This development of a diverse set of networks to support the integration of
                        microgrids, open-access energy competition, and the use of
                        network-controlled devices is driving the need for a converged security
                        infrastructure for all participants in the smart grid, including utilities,
                        energy service providers, large commercial and industrial, as well as
                        residential customers. Securing the assets of electric power delivery
                        systems (from the control center to the substation, to the feeders and down
                        to customer meters) requires an end-to-end security infrastructure that
                        protects the myriad of telecommunications assets used to operate, monitor,
                        and control power flow and measurement. </t>
                    <t> "Cyber security" refers to all the security issues in automation and
                        telecommunications that affect any functions related to the operation of the
                        electric power systems. Specifically, it involves the concepts of:</t>
                    <t>
                        <list style="symbols">
                            <t>Integrity : data cannot be altered undetectably </t>
                            <t>Authenticity : the telecommunications parties involved must be
                                validated as genuine </t>
                            <t>Authorization : only requests and commands from the authorized users
                                can be accepted by the system </t>
                            <t>Confidentiality : data must not be accessible to any unauthenticated
                                users </t>
                        </list>
                    </t>
                    <t>When designing and deploying new smart grid devices and telecommunications
                        systems, it is imperative to understand the various impacts of these new
                        components under a variety of attack situations on the power grid.
                        Consequences of a cyber attack on the grid telecommunications network can be
                        catastrophic. This is why security for smart grid is not just an ad hoc
                        feature or product, it's a complete framework integrating both physical and
                        Cyber security requirements and covering the entire smart grid networks from
                        generation to distribution. Security has therefore become one of the main
                        foundations of the utility telecom network architecture and must be
                        considered at every layer with a defense-in-depth approach. Migrating to IP
                        based protocols is key to address these challenges for two reasons:</t>
                    <t>
                        <list style="symbols">
                            <t>IP enables a rich set of features and capabilities to enhance the
                                security posture </t>
                            <t>IP is based on open standards, which allows interoperability between
                                different vendors and products, driving down the costs associated
                                with implementing security solutions in OT networks. </t>
                        </list>
                    </t>
                    <t>Securing OT (Operation technology) telecommunications over packet-switched IP
                        networks follow the same principles that are foundational for securing the
                        IT infrastructure, i.e., consideration must be given to enforcing electronic
                        access control for both person-to-machine and machine-to-machine
                        communications, and providing the appropriate levels of data privacy, device
                        and platform integrity, and threat detection and mitigation. </t>
                </section>
            </section>
            <section title="Electrical Utilities Asks">
                <t>
                    <list style="symbols">
                        <t>Mixed L2 and L3 topologies</t>
                        <t>Deterministic behavior</t>
                        <t>Bounded latency and jitter</t>
                        <t>High availability, low recovery time</t>
                        <t>Redundancy, low packet loss</t>
                        <t>Precise timing</t>
                        <t>Centralized computing of deterministic paths</t>
                        <t>Distributed configuration may also be useful</t>
                    </list>
                </t>
            </section>
        </section>

        <section title="Building Automation Systems">
            <section title="Use Case Description">
                <t> A Building Automation System (BAS) manages equipment and sensors in a building
                    for improving residents' comfort, reducing energy consumption, and responding to
                    failures and emergencies. For example, the BAS measures the temperature of a
                    room using sensors and then controls the HVAC (heating, ventilating, and air
                    conditioning) to maintain a set temperature and minimize energy consumption. </t>

                <t> A BAS primarily performs the following functions: <list style="symbols">
                        <t> Periodically measures states of devices, for example humidity and
                            illuminance of rooms, open/close state of doors, FAN speed, etc. </t>
                        <t> Stores the measured data. </t>
                        <t> Provides the measured data to BAS systems and operators. </t>
                        <t> Generates alarms for abnormal state of devices. </t>
                        <t>Controls devices (e.g. turn off room lights at 10:00 PM).</t>
                    </list>
                </t>

            </section>

            <section title="Building Automation Systems Today">

                <section title="BAS Architecture">
                    <t> A typical BAS architecture of today is shown in <xref target="localbas"/>. </t>

                    <figure title="BAS architecture" anchor="localbas">
                        <artwork align="center"><![CDATA[
        +----------------------------+
        |                            |
        |       BMS        HMI       |
        |        |          |        |
        |  +----------------------+  |
        |  |  Management Network  |  |
        |  +----------------------+  |
        |        |          |        |
        |        LC         LC       |
        |        |          |        |
        |  +----------------------+  |
        |  |     Field Network    |  |
        |  +----------------------+  |
        |     |     |     |     |    |
        |    Dev   Dev   Dev   Dev   |
        |                            |
        +----------------------------+
        
        BMS := Building Management Server
        HMI := Human Machine Interface
        LC  := Local Controller
        ]]></artwork>
                    </figure>

                    <t> There are typically two layers of network in a BAS. The upper one is called
                        the Management Network and the lower one is called the Field Network. In
                        management networks an IP-based communication protocol is used, while in
                        field networks non-IP based communication protocols ("field protocols") are
                        mainly used. Field networks have specific timing requirements, whereas
                        management networks can be best-effort. </t>

                    <t> A Human Machine Interface (HMI) is typically a desktop PC used by operators
                        to monitor and display device states, send device control commands to Local
                        Controllers (LCs), and configure building schedules (for example "turn off
                        all room lights in the building at 10:00 PM"). </t>

                    <t> A Building Management Server (BMS) performs the following operations. <list
                            style="symbols">
                            <t> Collect and store device states from LCs at regular intervals. </t>
                            <t> Send control values to LCs according to a building schedule. </t>
                            <t> Send an alarm signal to operators if it detects abnormal devices
                                states.</t>
                        </list>
                    </t>
                    <t> The BMS and HMI communicate with LCs via IP-based "management protocols"
                        (see standards <xref target="bacnetip"/>, <xref target="knx"/>). </t>

                    <t> A LC is typically a Programmable Logic Controller (PLC) which is connected
                        to several tens or hundreds of devices using "field protocols". An LC
                        performs the following kinds of operations: <list style="symbols">
                            <t> Measure device states and provide the information to BMS or HMI.</t>
                            <t> Send control values to devices, unilaterally or as part of a
                                feedback control loop.</t>
                        </list>
                    </t>

                    <t> There are many field protocols used today; some are standards-based and
                        others are proprietary (see standards <xref target="lontalk"/>, <xref
                            target="modbus"/>, <xref target="profibus"/> and <xref target="flnet"
                        />). The result is that BASs have multiple MAC/PHY modules and interfaces.
                        This makes BASs more expensive, slower to develop, and can result in "vendor
                        lock-in" with multiple types of management applications. </t>

                </section>

                <section title="BAS Deployment Model">
                    <t> An example BAS for medium or large buildings is shown in <xref
                            target="deploy-localbas"/>. The physical layout spans multiple floors,
                        and there is a monitoring room where the BAS management entities are
                        located. Each floor will have one or more LCs depending upon the number of
                        devices connected to the field network. </t>

                    <figure title="BAS Deployment model for Medium/Large Buildings"
                        anchor="deploy-localbas">
                        <artwork align="center"><![CDATA[
        +--------------------------------------------------+
        |                                          Floor 3 |
        |     +----LC~~~~+~~~~~+~~~~~+                     |
        |     |          |     |     |                     |
        |     |         Dev   Dev   Dev                    |
        |     |                                            |
        |---  |  ------------------------------------------|
        |     |                                    Floor 2 |
        |     +----LC~~~~+~~~~~+~~~~~+  Field Network      |
        |     |          |     |     |                     |
        |     |         Dev   Dev   Dev                    |
        |     |                                            |
        |---  |  ------------------------------------------|
        |     |                                    Floor 1 |
        |     +----LC~~~~+~~~~~+~~~~~+   +-----------------|
        |     |          |     |     |   | Monitoring Room |
        |     |         Dev   Dev   Dev  |                 |
        |     |                          |    BMS   HMI    |
        |     |   Management Network     |     |     |     |
        |     +--------------------------------+-----+     |
        |                                |                 |
        +--------------------------------------------------+
        ]]></artwork>
                    </figure>

                    <t> Each LC is connected to the monitoring room via the Management network, and
                        the management functions are performed within the building. In most cases,
                        fast Ethernet (e.g. 100BASE-T) is used for the management network. Since the
                        management network is non-realtime, use of Ethernet without quality of
                        service is sufficient for today's deployment.</t>

                    <t> In the field network a variety of physical interfaces such as RS232C and
                        RS485 are used, which have specific timing requirements. Thus if a field
                        network is to be replaced with an Ethernet or wireless network, such
                        networks must support time-critical deterministic flows. </t>

                    <t> In <xref target="deploy-remotebas"/>, another deployment model is presented
                        in which the management system is hosted remotely. This is becoming popular
                        for small office and residential buildings in which a standalone monitoring
                        system is not cost-effective. </t>

                    <figure title="Deployment model for Small Buildings" anchor="deploy-remotebas">
                        <artwork align="center"><![CDATA[
                                                 +---------------+
                                                 | Remote Center |
                                                 |               |
                                                 |  BMS     HMI  |
        +------------------------------------+   |   |       |   |
        |                            Floor 2 |   |   +---+---+   |
        |    +----LC~~~~+~~~~~+ Field Network|   |       |       |
        |    |          |     |              |   |     Router    |
        |    |         Dev   Dev             |   +-------|-------+
        |    |                               |           |
        |--- | ------------------------------|           |
        |    |                       Floor 1 |           |
        |    +----LC~~~~+~~~~~+              |           |
        |    |          |     |              |           |
        |    |         Dev   Dev             |           |
        |    |                               |           |
        |    |   Management Network          |     WAN   |
        |    +------------------------Router-------------+
        |                                    |
        +------------------------------------+
        ]]></artwork>
                    </figure>

                    <t> Some interoperability is possible today in the Management Network, but not
                        in today's field networks due to their non-IP-based design. </t>
                </section>

                <section title="Use Cases for Field Networks">
                    <t> Below are use cases for Environmental Monitoring, Fire Detection, and
                        Feedback Control, and their implications for field network performance. </t>

                    <section title="Environmental Monitoring">
                        <t> The BMS polls each LC at a maximum measurement interval of 100ms (for
                            example to draw a historical chart of 1 second granularity with a 10x
                            sampling interval) and then performs the operations as specified by the
                            operator. Each LC needs to measure each of its several hundred sensors
                            once per measurement interval. Latency is not critical in this scenario
                            as long as all sensor values are completed in the measurement interval.
                            Availability is expected to be 99.999 %.</t>
                    </section>

                    <section title="Fire Detection">
                        <t> On detection of a fire, the BMS must stop the HVAC, close the fire
                            shutters, turn on the fire sprinklers, send an alarm, etc. There are
                            typically ~10s of sensors per LC that BMS needs to manage. In this
                            scenario the measurement interval is 10-50ms, the communication delay is
                            10ms, and the availability must be 99.9999 %. </t>
                    </section>

                    <section title="Feedback Control">
                        <t> BAS systems utilize feedback control in various ways; the most
                            time-critial is control of DC motors, which require a short feedback
                            interval (1-5ms) with low communication delay (10ms) and jitter (1ms).
                            The feedback interval depends on the characteristics of the device and a
                            target quality of control value. There are typically ~10s of such
                            devices per LC. </t>
                        <t> Communication delay is expected to be less than 10 ms, jitter less than
                            1 sec while the availability must be 99.9999% .</t>
                    </section>

                </section>

                <section title="Security Considerations">
                    <t> When BAS field networks were developed it was assumed that the field
                        networks would always be physically isolated from external networks and
                        therefore security was not a concern. In today's world many BASs are managed
                        remotely and are thus connected to shared IP networks and so security is
                        definitely a concern, yet security features are not available in the
                        majority of BAS field network deployments .</t>
                    <t> The management network, being an IP-based network, has the protocols
                        available to enable network security, but in practice many BAS systems do
                        not implement even the available security features such as device
                        authentication or encryption for data in transit.</t>
                </section>

            </section>

            <section title="BAS Future">
                <t> In the future we expect more fine-grained environmental monitoring and lower
                    energy consumption, which will require more sensors and devices, thus requiring
                    larger and more complex building networks. </t>
                <t> We expect building networks to be connected to or converged with other networks
                    (Enterprise network, Home network, and Internet). </t>
                <t> Therefore better facilities for network management, control, reliability and
                    security are critical in order to improve resident and operator convenience and
                    comfort. For example the ability to monitor and control building devices via the
                    internet would enable (for example) control of room lights or HVAC from a
                    resident's desktop PC or phone application. </t>
            </section>

            <section title="BAS Asks">
                <t> The community would like to see an interoperable protocol specification that can
                    satisfy the timing, security, availability and QoS constraints described above,
                    such that the resulting converged network can replace the disparate field
                    networks. Ideally this connectivity could extend to the open Internet.</t>
                <t> This would imply an architecture that can guarantee <list style="symbols">
                        <t> Low communication delays (from &lt;10ms to 100ms in a network of several
                            hundred devices)</t>
                        <t> Low jitter (&lt; 1 ms)</t>
                        <t> Tight feedback intervals (1ms - 10ms)</t>
                        <t> High network availability (up to 99.9999% ) </t>
                        <t> Availability of network data in disaster scenario </t>
                        <t> Authentication between management and field devices (both local and
                            remote) </t>
                        <t> Integrity and data origin authentication of communication data between
                            field and management devices </t>
                        <t> Confidentiality of data when communicated to a remote device </t>
                    </list>
                </t>
            </section>

        </section>

        <section title="Wireless for Industrial">

            <section title="Use Case Description">
                <t> Wireless networks are useful for industrial applications, for example when
                    portable, fast-moving or rotating objects are involved, and for the
                    resource-constrained devices found in the Internet of Things (IoT).</t>

                <t> Such network-connected sensors, actuators, control loops (etc.) typically
                    require that the underlying network support real-time quality of service (QoS),
                    as well as specific classes of other network properties such as reliability,
                    redundancy, and security.</t>

                <t> These networks may also contain very large numbers of devices, for example for
                    factories, "big data" acquisition, and the IoT. Given the large numbers of
                    devices installed, and the potential pervasiveness of the IoT, this is a huge
                    and very cost-sensitive market. For example, a 1% cost reduction in some areas
                    could save $100B</t>

                <section title="Network Convergence using 6TiSCH">
                    <t> Some wireless network technologies support real-time QoS, and are thus
                        useful for these kinds of networks, but others do not. For example WiFi is
                        pervasive but does not provide guaranteed timing or delivery of packets, and
                        thus is not useful in this context. </t>

                    <t> In this use case we focus on one specific wireless network technology which
                        does provide the required deterministic QoS, which is "IPv6 over the TSCH
                        mode of IEEE 802.15.4e" (6TiSCH, where TSCH stands for "Time-Slotted Channel
                        Hopping", see <xref target="I-D.ietf-6tisch-architecture"/>, <xref
                            target="IEEE802154"/>, <xref target="IEEE802154e"/>, and <xref
                            target="RFC7554"/>). </t>

                    <t> There are other deterministic wireless busses and networks available today,
                        however they are imcompatible with each other, and incompatible with IP
                        traffic (for example <xref target="ISA100"/>, <xref target="WirelessHART"
                        />). </t>

                    <t> Thus the primary goal of this use case is to apply 6TiSH as a converged IP-
                        and standards-based wireless network for industrial applications, i.e. to
                        replace multiple proprietary and/or incompatible wireless networking and
                        wireless network management standards.</t>
                </section>

                <section title="Common Protocol Development for 6TiSCH">
                    <t> Today there are a number of protocols required by 6TiSCH which are still in
                        development, and a second intent of this use case is to highlight the ways
                        in which these "missing" protocols share goals in common with DetNet. Thus
                        it is possible that some of the protocol technology developed for DetNet
                        will also be applicable to 6TiSCH. </t>
                    <t> These protocol goals are identified here, along with their relationship to
                        DetNet. It is likely that ultimately the resulting protocols will not be
                        identical, but will share design principles which contribute to the
                        eficiency of enabling both DetNet and 6TiSCH.</t>
                    <t> One such commonality is that although at a different time scale, in both TSN
                            <xref target="IEEE802.1TSNTG"/> and TSCH a packet crosses the network
                        from node to node follows a precise schedule, as a train that leaves
                        intermediate stations at precise times along its path. This kind of
                        operation reduces collisions, saves energy, and enables engineering the
                        network for deterministic properties. </t>
                    <t> Another commonality is remote monitoring and scheduling management of a TSCH
                        network by a Path Computation Element (PCE) and Network Management Entity
                        (NME). The PCE/NME manage timeslots and device resources in a manner that
                        minimizes the interaction with and the load placed on resource-constrained
                        devices. For example, a tiny IoT device may have just enough buffers to
                        store one or a few IPv6 packets, and will have limited bandwidth between
                        peers such that it can maintain only a small amount of peer information, and
                        will not be able to store many packets waiting to be forwarded. It is
                        advantageous then for it to only be required to carry out the specific
                        behavior assigned to it by the PCE/NME (as opposed to maintaining its own IP
                        stack, for example). </t>
                    <t>Note: Current WG discussion indicates that some peer-to-peer communication
                        must be assumed, i.e. the PCE may communicate only indirectly with any given
                        device, enabling hierarchical configuration of the system.</t>
                    <t> 6TiSCH depends on <xref target="PCE"/> and <xref
                            target="I-D.finn-detnet-architecture"/>. </t>
                    <t> 6TiSCH also depends on the fact that DetNet will maintain consistency with
                            <xref target="IEEE802.1TSNTG"/>.</t>
                </section>

            </section>

            <section title="Wireless Industrial Today">
                <t> Today industrial wireless is accomplished using multiple deterministic wireless
                    networks which are incompatible with each other and with IP traffic. </t>
                <t> 6TiSCH is not yet fully specified, so it cannot be used in today's
                    applications.</t>
            </section>

            <section title="Wireless Industrial Future">
                <section title="Unified Wireless Network and Management">
                    <t> We expect DetNet and 6TiSCH together to enable converged transport of
                        deterministic and best-effort traffic flows between real-time industrial
                        devices and wide area networks via IP routing. A high level view of a basic
                        such network is shown in <xref target="wi_fig1"/>.</t>
                    <t>
                        <figure anchor="wi_fig1" title="Basic 6TiSCH Network">
                            <artwork><![CDATA[
            ---+-------- ............ ------------
               |      External Network       |
               |                          +-----+
            +-----+                       | NME |
            |     | LLN Border            |     |
            |     | router                +-----+
            +-----+
          o    o   o
   o     o   o     o
      o   o LLN   o    o     o
         o   o   o       o
                 o
]]></artwork>
                        </figure>
                    </t>
                    <t>
                        <xref target="wi_fig2"/> shows a backbone router federating multiple
                        synchronized 6TiSCH subnets into a single subnet connected to the external
                        network. </t>
                    <t>
                        <figure anchor="wi_fig2" title="Extended 6TiSCH Network">
                            <artwork><![CDATA[
               ---+-------- ............ ------------
                  |      External Network       |
                  |                          +-----+
                  |             +-----+      | NME |
               +-----+          |  +-----+   |     |
               |     | Router   |  | PCE |   +-----+
               |     |          +--|     |
               +-----+             +-----+
                  |                   |
                  | Subnet Backbone   |
            +--------------------+------------------+
            |                    |                  |
         +-----+             +-----+             +-----+
         |     | Backbone    |     | Backbone    |     | Backbone
    o    |     | router      |     | router      |     | router
         +-----+             +-----+             +-----+
    o                  o                   o                 o   o
        o    o   o         o   o  o   o         o  o   o    o
   o             o        o  LLN      o      o         o      o
      o   o    o      o      o o     o  o   o    o    o     o
]]></artwork>
                        </figure>
                    </t>

                    <t> The backbone router must ensure end-to-end deterministic behavior between
                        the LLN and the backbone. We would like to see this accomplished in
                        conformance with the work done in <xref
                            target="I-D.finn-detnet-architecture"/> with respect to Layer-3 aspects
                        of deterministic networks that span multiple Layer-2 domains. </t>

                    <t> The PCE must compute a deterministic path end-to-end across the TSCH network
                        and IEEE802.1 TSN Ethernet backbone, and DetNet protocols are expected to
                        enable end-to-end deterministic forwarding. </t>
                    <t>
                        <figure anchor="wi_fig3" title="6TiSCH Network with PRE">
                            <artwork><![CDATA[
                                
                  +-----+
                  | IoT |
                  | G/W |
                  +-----+
                     ^  <---- Elimination
                    | |
     Track branch   | |
            +-------+ +--------+ Subnet Backbone
            |                  |
         +--|--+            +--|--+
         |  |  | Backbone   |  |  | Backbone
    o    |  |  | router     |  |  | router
         +--/--+            +--|--+
    o     /    o     o---o----/       o
        o    o---o--/   o      o   o  o   o
   o     \  /     o               o   LLN    o
      o   v  <---- Replication
          o
          
]]></artwork>
                        </figure>
                    </t>

                    <section title="PCE and 6TiSCH ARQ Retries">
                        <t>Note: The possible use of ARQ techniques in DetNet is currently
                            considered a possible design alternative.</t>
                        <t> 6TiSCH uses the IEEE802.15.4 Automatic Repeat-reQuest (ARQ) mechanism to
                            provide higher reliability of packet delivery. ARQ is related to packet
                            replication and elimination because there are two independent paths for
                            packets to arrive at the destination, and if an expected packed does not
                            arrive on one path then it checks for the packet on the second path. </t>
                        <t> Although to date this mechanism is only used by wireless networks, this
                            may be a technique that would be appropriate for DetNet and so aspects
                            of the enabling protocol could be co-developed. </t>
                        <t> For example, in <xref target="wi_fig3"/>, a Track is laid out from a
                            field device in a 6TiSCH network to an IoT gateway that is located on a
                            IEEE802.1 TSN backbone. </t>
                        <t> In ARQ the Replication function in the field device sends a copy of each
                            packet over two different branches, and the PCE schedules each hop of
                            both branches so that the two copies arrive in due time at the gateway.
                            In case of a loss on one branch, hopefully the other copy of the packet
                            still arrives within the allocated time. If two copies make it to the
                            IoT gateway, the Elimination function in the gateway ignores the extra
                            packet and presents only one copy to upper layers. </t>
                        <t> At each 6TiSCH hop along the Track, the PCE may schedule more than one
                            timeSlot for a packet, so as to support Layer-2 retries (ARQ). </t>
                        <t> In current deployments, a TSCH Track does not necessarily support PRE
                            but is systematically multi-path. This means that a Track is scheduled
                            so as to ensure that each hop has at least two forwarding solutions, and
                            the forwarding decision is to try the preferred one and use the other in
                            case of Layer-2 transmission failure as detected by ARQ. </t>
                    </section>

                </section>

                <section title="Schedule Management by a PCE">
                    <t> A common feature of 6TiSCH and DetNet is the action of a PCE to configure
                        paths through the network. Specifically, what is needed is a protocol and
                        data model that the PCE will use to get/set the relevant configuration
                        from/to the devices, as well as perform operations on the devices. We expect
                        that this protocol will be developed by DetNet with consideration for its
                        reuse by 6TiSCH. The remainder of this section provides a bit more context
                        from the 6TiSCH side.</t>
                    <section title="PCE Commands and 6TiSCH CoAP Requests">
                        <t> The 6TiSCH device does not expect to place the request for bandwidth
                            between itself and another device in the network. Rather, an operation
                            control system invoked through a human interface specifies the required
                            traffic specification and the end nodes (in terms of latency and
                            reliability). Based on this information, the PCE must compute a path
                            between the end nodes and provision the network with per-flow state that
                            describes the per-hop operation for a given packet, the corresponding
                            timeslots, and the flow identification that enables recognizing that a
                            certain packet belongs to a certain path, etc. </t>
                        <t> For a static configuration that serves a certain purpose for a long
                            period of time, it is expected that a node will be provisioned in one
                            shot with a full schedule, which incorporates the aggregation of its
                            behavior for multiple paths. 6TiSCH expects that the programing of the
                            schedule will be done over COAP as discussed in <xref
                                target="I-D.ietf-6tisch-coap"/>. </t>
                        <t> 6TiSCH expects that the PCE commands will be mapped back and forth into
                            CoAP by a gateway function at the edge of the 6TiSCH network. For
                            instance, it is possible that a mapping entity on the backbone
                            transforms a non-CoAP protocol such as PCEP into the RESTful interfaces
                            that the 6TiSCH devices support. This architecture will be refined to
                            comply with <xref target="I-D.finn-detnet-architecture">DetNet</xref>
                            when the work is formalized. Related information about 6TiSCH can be
                            found at <xref target="I-D.ietf-6tisch-6top-interface"/> and <xref
                                target="RFC6550">RPL</xref>. </t>
                        <t> A protocol may be used to update the state in the devices during
                            runtime, for example if it appears that a path through the network has
                            ceased to perform as expected, but in 6TiSCH that flow was not designed
                            and no protocol was selected. We would like to see DetNet define the
                            appropriate end-to-end protocols to be used in that case. The
                            implication is that these state updates take place once the system is
                            configured and running, i.e. they are not limited to the initial
                            communication of the configuration of the system. </t>
                        <t> A "slotFrame" is the base object that a PCE would manipulate to program
                            a schedule into an LLN node (<xref target="I-D.ietf-6tisch-architecture"
                            />). </t>
                        <t> We would like to see the PCE read energy data from devices, and compute
                            paths that will implement policies on how energy in devices is consumed,
                            for instance to ensure that the spent energy does not exceeded the
                            available energy over a period of time. Note: this statement implies
                            that an extensible protocol for communicating device info to the PCE and
                            enabling the PCE to act on it will be part of the DetNet architecture,
                            however for subnets with specific protocols (e.g. CoAP) a gateway may be
                            required.</t>
                        <t> 6TiSCH devices can discover their neighbors over the radio using a
                            mechanism such as beacons, but even though the neighbor information is
                            available in the 6TiSCH interface data model, 6TiSCH does not describe a
                            protocol to proactively push the neighborhood information to a PCE. We
                            would like to see DetNet define such a protocol; one possible design
                            alternative is that it could operate over CoAP, alternatively it could
                            be converted to/from CoAP by a gateway. We would like to see such a
                            protocol carry multiple metrics, for example similar to those used for
                            RPL operations <xref target="RFC6551"/></t>
                    </section>

                    <section title="6TiSCH IP Interface">
                        <t> "6top" (<xref target="I-D.wang-6tisch-6top-sublayer"/>) is a logical
                            link control sitting between the IP layer and the TSCH MAC layer which
                            provides the link abstraction that is required for IP operations. The
                            6top data model and management interfaces are further discussed in <xref
                                target="I-D.ietf-6tisch-6top-interface"/> and <xref
                                target="I-D.ietf-6tisch-coap"/>. </t>
                        <t> An IP packet that is sent along a 6TiSCH path uses the Differentiated
                            Services Per-Hop-Behavior Group called Deterministic Forwarding, as
                            described in <xref target="I-D.svshah-tsvwg-deterministic-forwarding"/>.
                        </t>
                    </section>
                </section>
                <section title="6TiSCH Security Considerations">
                    <t> On top of the classical requirements for protection of control signaling, it
                        must be noted that 6TiSCH networks operate on limited resources that can be
                        depleted rapidly in a DoS attack on the system, for instance by placing a
                        rogue device in the network, or by obtaining management control and setting
                        up unexpected additional paths. </t>
                </section>
            </section>
            <section title="Wireless Industrial Asks">
                <t>6TiSCH depends on DetNet to define:</t>
                <t>
                    <list style="symbols">
                        <t> Configuration (state) and operations for deterministic paths </t>
                        <t> End-to-end protocols for deterministic forwarding (tagging, IP)</t>
                        <t> Protocol for packet replication and elimination</t>
                    </list>
                </t>
            </section>
        </section>

        <section title="Cellular Radio">
            <section title="Use Case Description">
                <t> This use case describes the application of deterministic networking in the
                    context of cellular telecom transport networks. Important elements include time
                    synchronization, clock distribution, and ways of establishing time-sensitive
                    streams for both Layer-2 and Layer-3 user plane traffic. </t>

                <section title="Network Architecture">
                    <t>
                        <xref target="cr_arch"/> illustrates a typical 3GPP-defined cellular network
                        architecture, which includes "Fronthaul" and "Midhaul" network segments. The
                        "Fronthaul" is the network connecting base stations (baseband processing
                        units) to the remote radio heads (antennas). The "Midhaul" is the network
                        inter-connecting base stations (or small cell sites). </t>

                    <t> In <xref target="cr_arch"/> "eNB" ("E-UTRAN Node B") is the hardware that is
                        connected to the mobile phone network which communicates directly with
                        mobile handsets (<xref target="TS36300"/>).</t>

                    <figure title="Generic 3GPP-based Cellular Network Architecture"
                        anchor="cr_arch">
                        <artwork><![CDATA[
           Y (remote radio heads (antennas))
            \
        Y__  \.--.                   .--.       +------+
           \_(    `.     +---+     _(Back`.     | 3GPP |
    Y------( Front  )----|eNB|----(  Haul  )----| core |
          ( `  .Haul )   +---+   ( `  .  )  )   | netw |
          /`--(___.-'      \      `--(___.-'    +------+
       Y_/     /            \.--.       \
            Y_/            _( Mid`.      \
                          (   Haul )      \
                         ( `  .  )  )      \
                          `--(___.-'\_____+---+    (small cell sites)
                                \         |SCe|__Y
                               +---+      +---+
                            Y__|eNB|__Y
                               +---+
                             Y_/   \_Y ("local" radios)
]]></artwork>
                    </figure>

                </section>

                <section title="Delay Constraints">

                    <t> The available processing time for Fronthaul networking overhead is limited
                        to the available time after the baseband processing of the radio frame has
                        completed. For example in Long Term Evolution (LTE) radio, processing of a
                        radio frame is allocated 3ms but typically the processing uses most of it,
                        allowing only a small fraction to be used by the Fronthaul network (e.g. up
                        to 250us one-way delay, though the existing spec (<xref target="NGMN-fronth"
                        />) supports delay only up to 100us). This ultimately determines the
                        distance the remote radio heads can be located from the base stations (e.g.,
                        100us equals roughly 20 km of optical fiber-based transport). Allocation
                        options of the available time budget between processing and transport are
                        under heavy discussions in the mobile industry. </t>

                    <t> For packet-based transport the allocated transport time (e.g. CPRI would
                        allow for 100us delay <xref target="CPRI"/>) is consumed by all nodes and
                        buffering between the remote radio head and the baseband processing unit,
                        plus the distance-incurred delay.</t>

                    <t> The baseband processing time and the available "delay budget" for the
                        fronthaul is likely to change in the forthcoming "5G" due to reduced radio
                        round trip times and other architectural and service requirements <xref
                            target="NGMN"/>. </t>

                    <t>
                        <xref target="METIS"/> documents the fundamental challenges as well as
                        overall technical goals of the future 5G mobile and wireless system as the
                        starting point. These future systems should support much higher data volumes
                        and rates and significantly lower end-to-end latency for 100x more connected
                        devices (at similar cost and energy consumption levels as today's
                        system).</t>

                    <t> For Midhaul connections, delay constraints are driven by Inter-Site radio
                        functions like Coordinated Multipoint Processing (CoMP, see <xref
                            target="CoMP"/>). CoMP reception and transmission is a framework in
                        which multiple geographically distributed antenna nodes cooperate to improve
                        the performance of the users served in the common cooperation area. The
                        design principal of CoMP is to extend the current single-cell to multi-UE
                        (User Equipment) transmission to a multi-cell-to-multi-UEs transmission by
                        base station cooperation. </t>

                    <t> CoMP has delay-sensitive performance parameters, which are "midhaul latency"
                        and "CSI (Channel State Information) reporting and accuracy". The essential
                        feature of CoMP is signaling between eNBs, so Midhaul latency is the
                        dominating limitation of CoMP performance. Generally, CoMP can benefit from
                        coordinated scheduling (either distributed or centralized) of different
                        cells if the signaling delay between eNBs is within 1-10ms. This delay
                        requirement is both rigid and absolute because any uncertainty in delay will
                        degrade the performance significantly. </t>

                    <t> Inter-site CoMP is one of the key requirements for 5G and is also a
                        near-term goal for the current 4.5G network architecture.</t>

                </section>

                <section title="Time Synchronization Constraints" anchor="cr_sync">
                    <t> Fronthaul time synchronization requirements are given by <xref
                            target="TS25104"/>, <xref target="TS36104"/>, <xref target="TS36211"/>,
                        and <xref target="TS36133"/>. These can be summarized for the current 3GPP
                        LTE-based networks as: <list style="hanging">

                            <t hangText="Delay Accuracy:">
                                <vspace blankLines="0"/> +-8ns (i.e. +-1/32 Tc, where Tc is the UMTS
                                Chip time of 1/3.84 MHz) resulting in a round trip accuracy of
                                +-16ns. The value is this low to meet the 3GPP Timing Alignment
                                Error (TAE) measurement requirements. Note: performance guarantees
                                of low nanosecond values such as these are considered to be below
                                the DetNet layer - it is assumed that the underlying implementation,
                                e.g. the hardware, will provide sufficient support (e.g. buffering)
                                to enable this level of accuracy. These values are maintained in the
                                use case to give an indication of the overall application.</t>

                            <t hangText="Timing Alignment Error:">
                                <vspace blankLines="0"/> Timing Alignment Error (TAE) is problematic
                                to Fronthaul networks and must be minimized. If the transport
                                network cannot guarantee low enough TAE then additional buffering
                                has to be introduced at the edges of the network to buffer out the
                                jitter. Buffering is not desirable as it reduces the total available
                                delay budget. Packet Delay Variation (PDV) requirements can be
                                derived from TAE for packet based Fronthaul networks.</t>
                            <t>
                                <list style="symbols">
                                    <t>For multiple input multiple output (MIMO) or TX diversity
                                        transmissions, at each carrier frequency, TAE shall not
                                        exceed 65 ns (i.e. 1/4 Tc).</t>
                                    <t>For intra-band contiguous carrier aggregation, with or
                                        without MIMO or TX diversity, TAE shall not exceed 130 ns
                                        (i.e. 1/2 Tc).</t>
                                    <t>For intra-band non-contiguous carrier aggregation, with or
                                        without MIMO or TX diversity, TAE shall not exceed 260 ns
                                        (i.e. one Tc).</t>
                                    <t>For inter-band carrier aggregation, with or without MIMO or
                                        TX diversity, TAE shall not exceed 260 ns.</t>
                                </list>
                            </t>
                            <t hangText="Transport link contribution to radio frequency error:">
                                <vspace blankLines="0"/>+-2 PPB. This value is considered to be
                                "available" for the Fronthaul link out of the total 50 PPB budget
                                reserved for the radio interface. Note: the reason that the
                                transport link contributes to radio frequency error is as follows.
                                The current way of doing Fronthaul is from the radio unit to remote
                                radio head directly. The remote radio head is essentially a passive
                                device (without buffering etc.) The transport drives the antenna
                                directly by feeding it with samples and everything the transport
                                adds will be introduced to radio as-is. So if the transport causes
                                additional frequency error that shows immediately on the radio as
                                well. Note: performance guarantees of low nanosecond values such as
                                these are considered to be below the DetNet layer - it is assumed
                                that the underlying implementation, e.g. the hardware, will provide
                                sufficient support to enable this level of performance. These values
                                are maintained in the use case to give an indication of the overall
                                application.</t>
                        </list>
                    </t>
                    <t> The above listed time synchronization requirements are difficult to meet
                        with point-to-point connected networks, and more difficult when the network
                        includes multiple hops. It is expected that networks must include buffering
                        at the ends of the connections as imposed by the jitter requirements, since
                        trying to meet the jitter requirements in every intermediate node is likely
                        to be too costly. However, every measure to reduce jitter and delay on the
                        path makes it easier to meet the end-to-end requirements. </t>

                    <t> In order to meet the timing requirements both senders and receivers must
                        remain time synchronized, demanding very accurate clock distribution, for
                        example support for IEEE 1588 transparent clocks in every intermediate node. </t>

                    <t> In cellular networks from the LTE radio era onward, phase synchronization is
                        needed in addition to frequency synchronization (<xref target="TS36300"/>,
                            <xref target="TS23401"/>). </t>
                </section>

                <section title="Transport Loss Constraints">

                    <t>Fronthaul and Midhaul networks assume almost error-free transport. Errors can
                        result in a reset of the radio interfaces, which can cause reduced
                        throughput or broken radio connectivity for mobile customers. </t>

                    <t> For packetized Fronthaul and Midhaul connections packet loss may be caused
                        by BER, congestion, or network failure scenarios. Current tools for
                        elminating packet loss for Fronthaul and Midhaul networks have serious
                        challenges, for example retransmitting lost packets and/or using forward
                        error correction (FEC) to circumvent bit errors is practically impossible
                        due to the additional delay incurred. Using redundant streams for better
                        guarantees for delivery is also practically impossible in many cases due to
                        high bandwidth requirements of Fronthaul and Midhaul networks. Protection
                        switching is also a candidate but current technologies for the path switch
                        are too slow to avoid reset of mobile interfaces. </t>

                    <t> Fronthaul links are assumed to be symmetric, and all Fronthaul streams (i.e.
                        those carrying radio data) have equal priority and cannot delay or pre-empt
                        each other. This implies that the network must guarantee that each
                        time-sensitive flow meets their schedule. </t>


                </section>

                <section title="Security Considerations">
                    <t> Establishing time-sensitive streams in the network entails reserving
                        networking resources for long periods of time. It is important that these
                        reservation requests be authenticated to prevent malicious reservation
                        attempts from hostile nodes (or accidental misconfiguration). This is
                        particularly important in the case where the reservation requests span
                        administrative domains. Furthermore, the reservation information itself
                        should be digitally signed to reduce the risk of a legitimate node pushing a
                        stale or hostile configuration into another networking node. </t>
                    <t>Note: This is considered important for the security policy of the network,
                        but does not affect the core DetNet architecture and design.</t>
                </section>

            </section>

            <section title="Cellular Radio Networks Today">

                <section title="Fronthaul">
                    <t> Today's Fronthaul networks typically consist of:</t>
                    <t>
                        <list style="symbols">
                            <t> Dedicated point-to-point fiber connection is common </t>
                            <t> Proprietary protocols and framings </t>
                            <t> Custom equipment and no real networking</t>
                        </list>
                    </t>
                    <t> Current solutions for Fronthaul are direct optical cables or
                        Wavelength-Division Multiplexing (WDM) connections.</t>
                </section>

                <section title="Midhaul and Backhaul">
                    <t> Today's Midhaul and Backhaul networks typically consist of:</t>
                    <t>
                        <list style="symbols">
                            <t> Mostly normal IP networks, MPLS-TP, etc.</t>
                            <t> Clock distribution and sync using 1588 and SyncE</t>
                        </list>
                    </t>

                    <t> Telecommunication networks in the Mid- and Backhaul are already heading
                        towards transport networks where precise time synchronization support is one
                        of the basic building blocks. While the transport networks themselves have
                        practically transitioned to all-IP packet-based networks to meet the
                        bandwidth and cost requirements, highly accurate clock distribution has
                        become a challenge. </t>

                    <t> In the past, Mid- and Backhaul connections were typically based on Time
                        Division Multiplexing (TDM-based) and provided frequency synchronization
                        capabilities as a part of the transport media. Alternatively other
                        technologies such as Global Positioning System (GPS) or Synchronous Ethernet
                        (SyncE) are used <xref target="SyncE"/>. </t>

                    <t>Both Ethernet and IP/MPLS <xref target="RFC3031"/> (and PseudoWires (PWE)
                            <xref target="RFC3985"/> for legacy transport support) have become
                        popular tools to build and manage new all-IP Radio Access Networks (RANs)
                            <xref target="I-D.kh-spring-ip-ran-use-case"/>. Although various timing
                        and synchronization optimizations have already been proposed and implemented
                        including 1588 PTP enhancements <xref target="I-D.ietf-tictoc-1588overmpls"
                        /> and <xref target="I-D.ietf-mpls-residence-time"/>, these solution are not
                        necessarily sufficient for the forthcoming RAN architectures nor do they
                        guarantee the more stringent time-synchronization requirements such as <xref
                            target="CPRI"/>. </t>
                    <t>There are also existing solutions for TDM over IP such as <xref
                            target="RFC5087"/> and <xref target="RFC4553"/>, as well as TDM over
                        Ethernet transports such as <xref target="RFC5086"/>. </t>

                </section>

            </section>

            <section title="Cellular Radio Networks Future">
                <t> Future Cellular Radio Networks will be based on a mix of different xHaul
                    networks (xHaul = front-, mid- and backhaul), and future transport networks
                    should be able to support all of them simultaneously. It is already envisioned
                    today that:</t>
                <t>
                    <list style="symbols">
                        <t> Not all "cellular radio network" traffic will be IP, for example some
                            will remain at Layer 2 (e.g. Ethernet based). DetNet solutions must
                            address all traffic types (Layer 2, Layer 3) with the same tools and
                            allow their transport simultaneously. </t>
                        <t> All form of xHaul networks will need some form of DetNet solutions. For
                            example with the advent of 5G some Backhaul traffic will also have
                            DetNet requirements (e.g. traffic belonging to time-critical 5G
                            applications).</t>
                    </list>
                </t>

                <t> We would like to see the following in future Cellular Radio networks:</t>
                <t>
                    <list style="symbols">
                        <t> Unified standards-based transport protocols and standard networking
                            equipment that can make use of underlying deterministic link-layer
                            services </t>
                        <t> Unified and standards-based network management systems and protocols in
                            all parts of the network (including Fronthaul)</t>
                    </list>
                </t>

                <t> New radio access network deployment models and architectures may require time-
                    sensitive networking services with strict requirements on other parts of the
                    network that previously were not considered to be packetized at all. Time and
                    synchronization support are already topical for Backhaul and Midhaul packet
                    networks <xref target="MEF"/> and are becoming a real issue for Fronthaul
                    networks also. Specifically in Fronthaul networks the timing and synchronization
                    requirements can be extreme for packet based technologies, for example, on the
                    order of sub +-20 ns packet delay variation (PDV) and frequency accuracy of
                    +0.002 PPM <xref target="Fronthaul"/>. </t>

                <t> The actual transport protocols and/or solutions to establish required transport
                    "circuits" (pinned-down paths) for Fronthaul traffic are still undefined. Those
                    are likely to include (but are not limited to) solutions directly over Ethernet,
                    over IP, and using MPLS/PseudoWire transport. </t>

                <t> Even the current time-sensitive networking features may not be sufficient for
                    Fronthaul traffic. Therefore, having specific profiles that take the
                    requirements of Fronthaul into account is desirable <xref target="IEEE8021CM"/>. </t>

                <t> Interesting and important work for time-sensitive networking has been done for
                    Ethernet <xref target="TSNTG"/>, which specifies the use of IEEE 1588 time
                    precision protocol (PTP) <xref target="IEEE1588"/> in the context of IEEE 802.1D
                    and IEEE 802.1Q. <xref target="IEEE8021AS"/> specifies a Layer 2 time
                    synchronizing service, and other specifications such as IEEE 1722 <xref
                        target="IEEE1722"/> specify Ethernet-based Layer-2 transport for
                    time-sensitive streams. </t>

                <t> New promising work seeks to enable the transport of time-sensitive fronthaul
                    streams in Ethernet bridged networks <xref target="IEEE8021CM"/>. Analogous to
                    IEEE 1722 there is an ongoing standardization effort to define the Layer-2
                    transport encapsulation format for transporting radio over Ethernet (RoE) in the
                    IEEE 1904.3 Task Force <xref target="IEEE19043"/>. </t>

                <t> All-IP RANs and xHhaul networks would benefit from time synchronization and
                    time-sensitive transport services. Although Ethernet appears to be the unifying
                    technology for the transport, there is still a disconnect providing Layer 3
                    services. The protocol stack typically has a number of layers below the Ethernet
                    Layer 2 that shows up to the Layer 3 IP transport. It is not uncommon that on
                    top of the lowest layer (optical) transport there is the first layer of Ethernet
                    followed one or more layers of MPLS, PseudoWires and/or other tunneling
                    protocols finally carrying the Ethernet layer visible to the user plane IP
                    traffic. </t>

                <t>While there are existing technologies to establish circuits through the routed
                    and switched networks (especially in MPLS/PWE space), there is still no way to
                    signal the time synchronization and time-sensitive stream
                    requirements/reservations for Layer-3 flows in a way that addresses the entire
                    transport stack, including the Ethernet layers that need to be configured.</t>

                <t> Furthermore, not all "user plane" traffic will be IP. Therefore, the same
                    solution also must address the use cases where the user plane traffic is a
                    different layer, for example Ethernet frames. </t>

                <t>There is existing work describing the problem statement <xref
                        target="I-D.finn-detnet-problem-statement"/> and the architecture <xref
                        target="I-D.finn-detnet-architecture"/> for deterministic networking
                    (DetNet) that targets solutions for time-sensitive (IP/transport) streams with
                    deterministic properties over Ethernet-based switched networks. </t>

            </section>

            <section title="Cellular Radio Networks Asks">

                <t> A standard for data plane transport specification which is:</t>
                <t>
                    <list style="symbols">
                        <t> Unified among all xHauls (meaning that different flows with diverse
                            DetNet requirements can coexist in the same network and traverse the
                            same nodes without interfering with each other) </t>
                        <t> Deployed in a highly deterministic network environment </t>
                    </list>
                </t>
                <t> A standard for data flow information models that are:</t>
                <t>
                    <list style="symbols">
                        <t> Aware of the time sensitivity and constraints of the target networking
                            environment </t>
                        <t> Aware of underlying deterministic networking services (e.g., on the
                            Ethernet layer) </t>
                    </list>
                </t>

            </section>

        </section>

        <section title="Industrial M2M">

            <section title="Use Case Description">

                <t> Industrial Automation in general refers to automation of manufacturing, quality
                    control and material processing. In this "machine to machine" (M2M) use case we
                    consider machine units in a plant floor which periodically exchange data with
                    upstream or downstream machine modules and/or a supervisory controller within a
                    local area network. </t>

                <t> The actors of M2M communication are Programmable Logic Controllers (PLCs).
                    Communication between PLCs and between PLCs and the supervisory PLC (S-PLC) is
                    achieved via critical control/data streams <xref target="fig_indm2m"/>. </t>

                <figure title="Current Generic Industrial M2M Network Architecture"
                    anchor="fig_indm2m">
                    <artwork><![CDATA[
           S (Sensor)
            \                                  +-----+
      PLC__  \.--.                   .--.   ---| MES |      
           \_(    `.               _(    `./   +-----+
    A------( Local  )-------------(  L2    )
          (      Net )           (      Net )    +-------+
          /`--(___.-'             `--(___.-' ----| S-PLC |
       S_/     /       PLC   .--. /              +-------+
            A_/           \_(    `.      
         (Actuator)       (  Local )      
                         (       Net )      
                          /`--(___.-'\
                         /       \    A
                        S         A
                        
]]></artwork>
                </figure>

                <t> This use case focuses on PLC-related communications; communication to
                    Manufacturing-Execution-Systems (MESs) are not addressed. </t>

                <t> This use case covers only critical control/data streams; non-critical traffic
                    between industrial automation applications (such as communication of state,
                    configuration, set-up, and database communication) are adequately served by
                    currently available prioritizing techniques. Such traffic can use up to 80% of
                    the total bandwidth required. There is also a subset of non-time-critical
                    traffic that must be reliable even though it is not time sensitive. </t>

                <t> In this use case the primary need for deterministic networking is to provide
                    end-to-end delivery of M2M messages within specific timing constraints, for
                    example in closed loop automation control. Today this level of determinism is
                    provided by proprietary networking technologies. In addition, standard
                    networking technologies are used to connect the local network to remote
                    industrial automation sites, e.g. over an enterprise or metro network which also
                    carries other types of traffic. Therefore, flows that should be forwarded with
                    deterministic guarantees need to be sustained regardless of the amount of other
                    flows in those networks.</t>

            </section>

            <section title="Industrial M2M Communication Today">

                <t>Today, proprietary networks fulfill the needed timing and availability for M2M
                    networks.</t>

                <t> The network topologies used today by industrial automation are similar to those
                    used by telecom networks: Daisy Chain, Ring, Hub and Spoke, and Comb (a subset
                    of Daisy Chain). </t>

                <t> PLC-related control/data streams are transmitted periodically and carry either a
                    pre-configured payload or a payload configured during runtime.</t>

                <t> Some industrial applications require time synchronization at the end nodes. For
                    such time-coordinated PLCs, accuracy of 1 microsecond is required. Even in the
                    case of "non-time-coordinated" PLCs time sync may be needed e.g. for
                    timestamping of sensor data.</t>

                <t> Industrial network scenarios require advanced security solutions. Many of the
                    current industrial production networks are physically separated. Preventing
                    critical flows from be leaked outside a domain is handled today by filtering
                    policies that are typically enforced in firewalls. </t>

                <section anchor="sec_m2mtr" title="Transport Parameters">

                    <t> The Cycle Time defines the frequency of message(s) between industrial
                        actors. The Cycle Time is application dependent, in the range of 1ms - 100ms
                        for critical control/data streams.</t>

                    <t> Because industrial applications assume deterministic transport for critical
                        Control-Data-Stream parameters (instead of defining latency and delay
                        variation parameters) it is sufficient to fulfill the upper bound of latency
                        (maximum latency). The underlying networking infrastructure must ensure a
                        maximum end-to-end delivery time of messages in the range of 100
                        microseconds to 50 milliseconds depending on the control loop
                        application.</t>

                    <t> The bandwidth requirements of control/data streams are usually calculated
                        directly from the bytes-per-cycle parameter of the control loop. For
                        PLC-to-PLC communication one can expect 2 - 32 streams with packet size in
                        the range of 100 - 700 bytes. For S-PLC to PLCs the number of streams is
                        higher - up to 256 streams. Usually no more than 20% of available bandwidth
                        is used for critical control/data streams. In today's networks 1Gbps links
                        are commonly used.</t>

                    <t> Most PLC control loops are rather tolerant of packet loss, however critical
                        control/data streams accept no more than 1 packet loss per consecutive
                        communication cycle (i.e. if a packet gets lost in cycle "n", then the next
                        cycle ("n+1") must be lossless). After two or more consecutive packet losses
                        the network may be considered to be "down" by the Application.</t>

                    <t> As network downtime may impact the whole production system the required
                        network availability is rather high (99,999%).</t>

                    <t> Based on the above parameters we expect that some form of redundancy will be
                        required for M2M communications, however any individual solution depends on
                        several parameters including cycle time, delivery time, etc. </t>

                </section>

                <section anchor="sec_m2mfm" title="Stream Creation and Destruction">

                    <t> In an industrial environment, critical control/data streams are created
                        rather infrequently, on the order of ~10 times per day / week / month. Most
                        of these critical control/data streams get created at machine startup,
                        however flexibility is also needed during runtime, for example when adding
                        or removing a machine. Going forward as production systems become more
                        flexible, we expect a significant increase in the rate at which streams are
                        created, changed and destroyed. </t>

                </section>

            </section>

            <section title="Industrial M2M Future">
                <t>We would like to see a converged IP-standards-based network with deterministic
                    properties that can satisfy the timing, security and reliability constraints
                    described above. Today's proprietary networks could then be interfaced to such a
                    network via gateways or, in the case of new installations, devices could be
                    connected directly to the converged network.</t>
                <t>For this use case we expect time synchronization accuracy on the order of
                    1us.</t>

            </section>

            <section title="Industrial M2M Asks">
                <t>
                    <list style="symbols">
                        <t> Converged IP-based network </t>
                        <t> Deterministic behavior (bounded latency and jitter )</t>
                        <t> High availability (presumably through redundancy) (99.999 %)</t>
                        <t> Low message delivery time (100us - 50ms) </t>
                        <t> Low packet loss (burstless, 0.1-1 %)</t>
                        <t> Security (e.g. prevent critical flows from being leaked between
                            physically separated networks) </t>
                    </list>
                </t>
            </section>

        </section>

        <section title="Use Case Common Elements">

            <t>Looking at the use cases collectively, the following common desires for the
                DetNet-based networks of the future emerge: </t>
            <t>
                <list style="symbols">
                    <t>Open standards-based network (replace various proprietary networks, reduce
                        cost, create multi-vendor market)</t>
                    <t>Centrally administered (though such administration may be distributed for
                        scale and resiliency)</t>
                    <t>Integrates L2 (bridged) and L3 (routed) environments (independent of the Link
                        layer, e.g. can be used with Ethernet, 6TiSCH, etc.)</t>
                    <t>Carries both deterministic and best-effort traffic (guaranteed end-to-end
                        delivery of deterministic flows, deterministic flows isolated from each
                        other and from best-effort traffic congestion, unused deterministic BW
                        available to best-effort traffic)</t>
                    <t>Ability to add or remove systems from the network with minimal, bounded
                        service interruption (applications include replacement of failed devices as
                        well as plug and play)</t>
                    <t>Uses standardized data flow information models capable of expressing
                        deterministic properties (models express device capabilities, flow
                        properties. Protocols for pushing models from controller to devices, devices
                        to controller)</t>
                    <t>Scalable size (long distances (many km) and short distances (within a single
                        machine), many hops (radio repeaters, microwave links, fiber links...) and
                        short hops (single machine))</t>
                    <t>Scalable timing parameters and accuracy (bounded latency, guaranteed worst
                        case maximum, minimum. Low latency, e.g. control loops may be less than 1ms,
                        but larger for wide area networks)</t>
                    <t>High availability (99.9999 percent up time requested, but may be up to twelve
                        9s)</t>
                    <t>Reliability, redundancy (lives at stake)</t>
                    <t>Security (from failures, attackers, misbehaving devices - sensitive to both
                        packet content and arrival time) </t>
                </list>
            </t>
        </section>

        <section title="Use Cases Explicitly Out of Scope for DetNet">
            <t>This section contains use case text that has been determined to be outside of the
                scope of the present DetNet work. </t>

            <section title="DetNet Scope Limitations">
                <t>The scope of DetNet is deliberately limited to specific use cases that are
                    consistent with the WG charter, subject to the interpretation of the WG. At the
                    time the DetNet Use Cases were solicited and provided by the authors the scope
                    of DetNet was not clearly defined, and as that clarity has emerged, certain of
                    the use cases have been determined to be outside the scope of the present DetNet
                    work. Such text has been moved into this section to clarify that these use cases
                    will not be supported by the DetNet work. </t>

                <t>The text in this section was moved here based on the following "exclusion"
                    principles. Or, as an alternative to moving all such text to this section, some
                    draft text has been modified in situ to reflect these same principles.</t>

                <t>The following principles have been established to clarify the scope of the
                    present DetNet work.</t>
                <t>
                    <list style="symbols">
                        <t>The scope of network addressed by DetNet is limited to networks that can
                            be centrally controlled, i.e. an "enterprise" aka "corporate" network.
                            This explicitly excludes "the open Internet".</t>
                        <t>Maintaining synchronized time across a DetNet network is crucial to its
                            operation, however DetNet assumes that time is to be maintained using
                            other means, for example (but not limited to) Precision Time Protocol
                                (<xref target="IEEE1588"/>). A use case may state the accuracy and
                            reliability that it expects from the DetNet network as part of a whole
                            system, however it is understood that such timing properties are not
                            guaranteed by DetNet itself. It is currently an open question as to
                            whether DetNet protocols will include a way for an application to
                            communicate such timing expectations to the network, and if so whether
                            they would be expected to materially affect the performance they would
                            receive from the network as a result.</t>
                    </list>
                </t>
            </section>

            <section title="Internet-based Applications">
                <section title="Use Case Description">
                    <t> There are many applications that communicate across the open Internet that
                        could benefit from guaranteed delivery and bounded latency. The following
                        are some representative examples.</t>

                    <section title="Media Content Delivery">
                        <t> Media content delivery continues to be an important use of the Internet,
                            yet users often experience poor quality audio and video due to the delay
                            and jitter inherent in today's Internet. </t>
                    </section>

                    <section title="Online Gaming">
                        <t> Online gaming is a significant part of the gaming market, however
                            latency can degrade the end user experience. For example "First Person
                            Shooter" (FPS) games are highly delay-sensitive. </t>
                    </section>

                    <section title="Virtual Reality">
                        <t>Virtual reality (VR) has many commercial applications including real
                            estate presentations, remote medical procedures, and so on. Low latency
                            is critical to interacting with the virtual world because perceptual
                            delays can cause motion sickness. </t>
                    </section>
                </section>

                <section title="Internet-Based Applications Today">
                    <t> Internet service today is by definition "best effort", with no guarantees on
                        delivery or bandwidth. </t>
                </section>

                <section title="Internet-Based Applications Future">
                    <t> We imagine an Internet from which we will be able to play a video without
                        glitches and play games without lag.</t>
                    <t> For online gaming, the maximum round-trip delay can be 100ms and stricter
                        for FPS gaming which can be 10-50ms. Transport delay is the dominate part
                        with a 5-20ms budget. </t>
                    <t> For VR, 1-10ms maximum delay is needed and total network budget is 1-5ms if
                        doing remote VR.</t>
                    <t> Flow identification can be used for gaming and VR, i.e. it can recognize a
                        critical flow and provide appropriate latency bounds. </t>
                </section>

                <section title="Internet-Based Applications Asks">
                    <t>
                        <list style="symbols">
                            <t> Unified control and management protocols to handle time-critical
                                data flow </t>
                            <t> Application-aware flow filtering mechanism to recognize the timing
                                critical flow without doing 5-tuple matching </t>
                            <t> Unified control plane to provide low latency service on Layer-3
                                without changing the data plane </t>
                            <t> OAM system and protocols which can help to provide E2E-delay
                                sensitive service provisioning </t>
                        </list>
                    </t>
                </section>
            </section>
            <section title="Pro Audio and Video - Digital Rights Management (DRM)">
                <t>This section was moved here because this is considered a Link layer topic, not
                    direct responsibility of DetNet.</t>
                <t>Digital Rights Management (DRM) is very important to the audio and video
                    industries. Any time protected content is introduced into a network there are
                    DRM concerns that must be maintained (see [CONTENT_PROTECTION]). Many aspects of
                    DRM are outside the scope of network technology, however there are cases when a
                    secure link supporting authentication and encryption is required by content
                    owners to carry their audio or video content when it is outside their own secure
                    environment (for example see <xref target="DCI"/>).</t>
                <t>As an example, two techniques are Digital Transmission Content Protection (DTCP)
                    and High-Bandwidth Digital Content Protection (HDCP). HDCP content is not
                    approved for retransmission within any other type of DRM, while DTCP may be
                    retransmitted under HDCP. Therefore if the source of a stream is outside of the
                    network and it uses HDCP protection it is only allowed to be placed on the
                    network with that same HDCP protection.</t>
            </section>

            <section title="Pro Audio and Video - Link Aggregation">
                <t>Note: The term "Link Aggregation" is used here as defined by the text in the
                    following paragraph, i.e. not following a more common Network Industry
                    definition. Current WG consensus is that this item won't be directly supported
                    by the DetNet architecture, for example because it implies guarantee of in-order
                    delivery of packets which conflicts with the core goal of achieving the lowest
                    possible latency.</t>
                <t>For transmitting streams that require more bandwidth than a single link in the
                    target network can support, link aggregation is a technique for combining
                    (aggregating) the bandwidth available on multiple physical links to create a
                    single logical link of the required bandwidth. However, if aggregation is to be
                    used, the network controller (or equivalent) must be able to determine the
                    maximum latency of any path through the aggregate link. </t>
            </section>

        </section>

        <section title="Acknowledgments">

            <section title="Pro Audio">
                <t> This section was derived from draft-gunther-detnet-proaudio-req-01. </t>
                <t>The editors would like to acknowledge the help of the following individuals and
                    the companies they represent:</t>
                <t>Jeff Koftinoff, Meyer Sound</t>
                <t>Jouni Korhonen, Associate Technical Director, Broadcom</t>
                <t>Pascal Thubert, CTAO, Cisco</t>
                <t>Kieran Tyrrell, Sienda New Media Technologies GmbH</t>
            </section>

            <section title="Utility Telecom">
                <t> This section was derived from draft-wetterwald-detnet-utilities-reqs-02. </t>
                <t>Faramarz Maghsoodlou, Ph. D. IoT Connected Industries and Energy Practice Cisco </t>
                <t>Pascal Thubert, CTAO Cisco</t>
            </section>

            <section title="Building Automation Systems">
                <t> This section was derived from draft-bas-usecase-detnet-00. </t>
            </section>

            <section title="Wireless for Industrial">
                <t> This section was derived from draft-thubert-6tisch-4detnet-01. </t>
                <t>This specification derives from the 6TiSCH architecture, which is the result of
                    multiple interactions, in particular during the 6TiSCH (bi)Weekly Interim call,
                    relayed through the 6TiSCH mailing list at the IETF. </t>
                <t> The authors wish to thank: Kris Pister, Thomas Watteyne, Xavier Vilajosana, Qin
                    Wang, Tom Phinney, Robert Assimiti, Michael Richardson, Zhuo Chen, Malisa
                    Vucinic, Alfredo Grieco, Martin Turon, Dominique Barthel, Elvis Vogli, Guillaume
                    Gaillard, Herman Storey, Maria Rita Palattella, Nicola Accettura, Patrick
                    Wetterwald, Pouria Zand, Raghuram Sudhaakar, and Shitanshu Shah for their
                    participation and various contributions. </t>
            </section>

            <section title="Cellular Radio">
                <t> This section was derived from draft-korhonen-detnet-telreq-00. </t>
            </section>

            <section title="Industrial M2M">
                <t>The authors would like to thank Feng Chen and Marcel Kiessling for their comments
                    and suggestions.</t>
            </section>

            <section title="Internet Applications and CoMP">
                <t> This section was derived from draft-zha-detnet-use-case-00. </t>
                <t> This document has benefited from reviews, suggestions, comments and proposed
                    text provided by the following members, listed in alphabetical order: Jing
                    Huang, Junru Lin, Lehong Niu and Oilver Huang. </t>
            </section>

        </section>

    </middle>

    <!--  *****BACK MATTER ***** -->

    <back>
        <!-- References (all are considered informative for a use case draft) -->

        <references title="Informative References">
            <!--?rfc include="http://xml.resource.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.2119.xml"?-->
            &RFC2119; <reference anchor="ISO7240-16"
                target="http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail.htm?csnumber=42978">
                <front>
                    <title>ISO 7240-16:2007 Fire detection and alarm systems -- Part 16: Sound
                        system control and indicating equipment</title>
                    <author>
                        <organization>ISO</organization>
                    </author>
                    <date year="2007"/>
                </front>
            </reference>
            <reference anchor="CONTENT_PROTECTION"
                target="http://grouper.ieee.org/groups/1722/contributions/2012/avtp_dolsen_1722a_content_protection.pdf">
                <front>
                    <title>1722a Content Protection</title>
                    <author initials="D" surname="Olsen">
                        <organization>Harman</organization>
                    </author>
                    <date year="2012"/>
                </front>
            </reference>
            <reference anchor="ESPN_DC2"
                target="http://sportsvideo.org/main/blog/2014/06/espns-dc2-scales-avb-large">
                <front>
                    <title>ESPN's DC2 Scales AVB Large</title>
                    <author initials="D" surname="Daley">
                        <organization>Sports Video Group</organization>
                    </author>
                    <date year="2014"/>
                </front>
            </reference>
            <reference anchor="SRP_LATENCY"
                target="http://www.ieee802.org/1/files/public/docs2014/cc-cgunther-acceptable-latency-0314-v01.pdf">
                <front>
                    <title>Specifying SRP Latency</title>
                    <author initials="C" surname="Gunther">
                        <organization>Harman International</organization>
                    </author>
                    <date year="2014"/>
                </front>
            </reference>
            <reference anchor="STUDIO_IP"
                target="http://www.ieee802.org/1/files/public/docs2047/avb-mace-ip-networked-studio-infrastructure-0107.pdf">
                <front>
                    <title>IP Networked Studio Infrastructure for Synchronized &amp; Real-Time
                        Multimedia Transmissions</title>
                    <author initials="G" surname="Mace">
                        <organization>CR / CP&amp;M Lab (Rennes / France)</organization>
                    </author>
                    <date year="2007"/>
                </front>
            </reference>
            <reference anchor="DCI" target="http://www.dcimovies.com/">
                <front>
                    <title>DCI Specification, Version 1.2</title>
                    <author>
                        <organization>Digital Cinema Initiatives, LLC</organization>
                    </author>
                    <date year="2012"/>
                </front>
            </reference>
            <!-- 6TiSCH -->
            <?rfc include="reference.RFC.7554"?>
            <?rfc include='reference.I-D.ietf-6tisch-terminology'?>
            <?rfc include='reference.I-D.ietf-6tisch-architecture'?>
            <?rfc include='reference.I-D.ietf-6tisch-6top-interface'?>
            <?rfc include='reference.I-D.ietf-6tisch-coap'?>
            <!-- others -->
            <!-- rfc include="reference.RFC.2119"?-->
            <!-- MUST HAVE -->
            <?rfc include="reference.RFC.2460"?>
            <!-- Internet Protocol, Version 6 (IPv6) Specification -->
            <?rfc include="reference.RFC.2474"?>
            <!-- Differentiated Services Field -->
            <?rfc include="reference.RFC.3209"?>
            <!-- RSVP TE -->
            <?rfc include="reference.RFC.4291"?>
            <!-- IP Version 6 Addressing Architecture -->
            <?rfc include="reference.RFC.3444"?>
            <!-- On the Difference between Information Models and Data Models -->
            <?rfc include="reference.RFC.3972"?>
            <!-- Cryptographically Generated Addresses  -->
            <?rfc include="reference.RFC.4919"?>
            <!-- IPv6 over Low-Power Wireless Personal Area Networks  -->
            <?rfc include="reference.RFC.4903"?>
            <!-- IPv6  Multi-Link Subnet Issues   -->
            <?rfc include="reference.RFC.6282"?>
            <!-- Compression Format for IPv6 Datagrams over IEEE 802.15.4-Based Networks -->
            <?rfc include="reference.RFC.6550"?>
            <!-- RPL: IPv6 Routing Protocol for Low-Power and Lossy Networks -->
            <?rfc include="reference.RFC.6551"?>
            <!-- RPL: IPv6 Routing Protocol for Low-Power and Lossy Networks -->
            <?rfc include="reference.RFC.6775"?>
            <!-- neighbor Discovery Optimization for IPv6 over Low-Power Wireless Personal Area Networks -->
            <!-- others -->
            <?rfc include='reference.I-D.finn-detnet-architecture'?>
            <?rfc include='reference.I-D.ietf-ipv6-multilink-subnets'?>
            <?rfc include='reference.I-D.ietf-roll-rpl-industrial-applicability'?>
            <?rfc include='reference.I-D.thubert-6lowpan-backbone-router'?>
            <?rfc include='reference.I-D.svshah-tsvwg-deterministic-forwarding'?>
            <?rfc include='reference.I-D.wang-6tisch-6top-sublayer'?>
            <reference anchor="IEEE802154">
                <front>
                    <title>IEEE std. 802.15.4, Part. 15.4: Wireless Medium Access Control (MAC) and
                        Physical Layer (PHY) Specifications for Low-Rate Wireless Personal Area
                        Networks </title>
                    <author>
                        <organization>IEEE standard for Information Technology</organization>
                    </author>
                    <date/>
                </front>
            </reference>
            <reference anchor="IEEE802154e">
                <front>
                    <title>IEEE standard for Information Technology, IEEE std. 802.15.4, Part. 15.4:
                        Wireless Medium Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer (PHY) Specifications
                        for Low-Rate Wireless Personal Area Networks, June 2011 as amended by IEEE
                        std. 802.15.4e, Part. 15.4: Low-Rate Wireless Personal Area Networks
                        (LR-WPANs) Amendment 1: MAC sublayer </title>
                    <author>
                        <organization>IEEE standard for Information Technology</organization>
                    </author>
                    <date month="April" year="2012"/>
                </front>
            </reference>
            <reference anchor="IEEE802.1TSNTG"
                target="http://www.ieee802.org/1/pages/avbridges.html">
                <front>
                    <title>IEEE 802.1 Time-Sensitive Networks Task Group</title>
                    <author>
                        <organization>IEEE Standards Association</organization>
                    </author>
                    <date day="08" month="March" year="2013"/>
                </front>
            </reference>
            <reference anchor="WirelessHART">
                <front>
                    <title>Industrial Communication Networks - Wireless Communication Network and
                        Communication Profiles - WirelessHART - IEC 62591</title>
                    <author>
                        <organization>www.hartcomm.org</organization>
                    </author>
                    <date year="2010"/>
                </front>
            </reference>
            <reference anchor="HART">
                <front>
                    <title>Highway Addressable remote Transducer, a group of specifications for
                        industrial process and control devices administered by the HART
                        Foundation</title>
                    <author>
                        <organization>www.hartcomm.org</organization>
                    </author>
                    <date/>
                </front>
            </reference>
            <reference anchor="ISA100.11a"
                target="http://www.isa.org/Community/SP100WirelessSystemsforAutomation">
                <front>
                    <title>Wireless Systems for Industrial Automation: Process Control and Related
                        Applications - ISA100.11a-2011 - IEC 62734</title>
                    <author>
                        <organization>ISA/ANSI</organization>
                    </author>
                    <date year="2011"/>
                </front>
            </reference>
            <reference anchor="ISA100" target="https://www.isa.org/isa100/">
                <front>
                    <title>ISA100, Wireless Systems for Automation</title>
                    <author>
                        <organization>ISA/ANSI</organization>
                    </author>
                    <date/>
                </front>
            </reference>
            <reference anchor="TEAS" target="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/charter-ietf-teas/">
                <front>
                    <title>Traffic Engineering Architecture and Signaling</title>
                    <author>
                        <organization>IETF</organization>
                    </author>
                    <date/>
                </front>
            </reference>
            <reference anchor="PCE" target="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/charter-ietf-pce/">
                <front>
                    <title>Path Computation Element</title>
                    <author>
                        <organization>IETF</organization>
                    </author>
                    <date/>
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        <!-- Change Log
v01 2016-02-09  EAG   Add Industrial M2M section from Varga et al.
v02 2016-02-10  EAG   Edit M2M section.
v03 2016-02-16  EAG   Edit BAS and Cellular Radio sections.
v04 2016-02-22  EAG   Other Use Cases section: remove V2V and Industrial Automation, refactor remainder into Internet-based and CoMP sections.
v05 2016-02-22  EAG   Edit Industrial Wireless section.
v06 2016-03-04  EAG   Edit Electrical Utilities section. Address "replace" vs "interwork" in M2M Future.
v07 2016-03-04  EAG   Edit Pro Audio section.
v08 2016-03-07  EAG   Incorporate Cellular Radio review items per Varga/Korhonen, including subsuming CoMP section as subtopic of this chapter. 
v09 2016-03-21  EAG   Fix various typos and minor updates.     
v10 2016-07-04  EAG   Clarify scope questions raised at IETF95 based on conclusions drawn from DetNet list discussions.     
        -->

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