Multiprotocol Label Switching
Multiprotocol Label Switching
Multiprotocol Label Switching
(MPLS)
Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) is a protocol-agnostic routing
technique designed to speed up and shape traffic flows across
enterprise wide area and service provider networks.
Components of MPLS
One of the defining features of MPLS is its use of labels -- the L in MPLS.
Sandwiched between Layers 2 and 3, a label is a four-byte -- 32-bit --
identifier that conveys the packet's predetermined forwarding path in an
MPLS network. Labels can also contain information related to quality of
service (QoS), indicating a packet's priority level.
1. The Label: The label holds all of the information for the MPLS routers
to determine where the packet should be forwarded.
2. Experimental: Experimental bits are used for Quality of Service (QoS)
to set the priority that the labeled packet should have.
4. Time-To-Live: This identifies how many hops the packet can make
before it is discarded.
The paths, which are called label-switched paths (LSPs), enable service
providers to decide ahead of time the best way for certain types of traffic to
flow within a private or public network.
In an MPLS network, each packet gets labeled on entry into the service
provider's network by the ingress router, also known as the label edge
router (LER). This is also the router that decides the LSP the packet will
take until it reaches its destination address.
A visual of
how MPLS networks use path labels to direct traffic.
Benefits of MPLS
MPLS also supports traffic separation and the creation of virtual private
networks (VPNs), virtual private LAN services and virtual leased lines.
One of the most notable benefits of MPLS is that it is not tied to any one
protocol or transport medium. It supports transport over IP, Ethernet,
asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) and frame relay; any of these protocols
can be used to create an LSP. Generalized MPLS (GMPLS) extends MPLS
to manage time-division multiplexing (TDM), lambda switching and other
classes of switching technologies beyond packet switching.
Other benefits of MPLS include the following:
It's good for real-time applications that can't tolerate latency, such as
video, voice and mission-critical data.
Data and voice apps can all be run on the same MPLS network.