MPLS Experts QoS
     
MPLS Compared with Frame Relay
    MPLS & Frame Relay
  AT&T is by far the largest Frame Relay provider, with an installed base estimated at $6 billion annually. This number is expected to change between 2008 and 2009 when most of these frame relay contracts expire.  With these expirations, companies will explore MPLS and other competitive offerings, which in many cases will reduce costs and improve manageability and performance of their wide area networks.
 


Limitations of Frame Relay

Frame Relay is networking service that until recently, was the primary service for Wide Area Networks.

   
  Relies on the underlying assumption by carriers that not all customers will be using the full bandwidth of their circuits at the same time.
   
  Frame Relay uses an over subscription model.
   
  Carriers will sell you a CIR or Committed Information Rate on their Frame Relay Network. This rate is the bandwidth you are GUARANTEED by the carrier. For example if you purchase a 256 Kbps CIR from a carrier, all traffic up to that point will be guaranteed to be delivered.
   
  You may burst above your purchased CIR but in times of heavy network congestion any packets you send above the CIR will be eligible for discard by the carrier.
   
  Frame Relay has no quality of service (QoS) manageability and is largely being replaced by the more cost effective MPLS VPN Solutions.
   
  Frame Relay is commonly configured as a hub and spoke network.
   
  Frame Relay can run over MPLS to obtain the benefits of traffic prioritization and management.
   
     
   

Why Switch to MPLS?

MPLS is a protocol that uses packet labels to prioritize network packets to optimize network performance.

     
  If you have Quality of Service (QoS) sensitive applications such as VoIP, video conferencing, SAP, Oracle, Citrix or other real time applications running across your WAN then you should consider MPLS.
     
  MPLS is a private networking technology similar to the concept of Frame Relay in that it is delivered in the "cloud".
   
  The primary difference with MPLS is that you can purchase quality of service for applications across your WAN.
   
  During the provisioning process the carrier will interview you in order to determine which applications are important to your business, they will then build a QoS template to service these applications on your WAN.
   
  These applications will be given priority over all other traffic in times of peak load. While MPLS may not be the least cost solution, it is the ONLY technology that will support QoS.
   
  For applications such as Citrix, SAP, Oracle, Siebel, Peoplesoft, VoIP and Video, performance using the QoS capabilities of MPLS can dramatically improve quality and productivity.
   
  If an application works well on a Frame Relay, it will work better using MPLS.
 
 

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