Help us improve your experience.

Let us know what you think.

Do you have time for a two-minute survey?

 
 

Paragon Pathfinder Overview

As more content and applications are migrated to the cloud and as new services are delivered over the network, network operators are expanding their networks to meet the increase in bandwidth demand. This expansion and the growing number of features in the network are increasing the complexity of traffic management. Therefore, network operators need to find a way to manage this complexity and to deliver increased speed and agility in their networks.

The high bandwidth demand and the increase in the number of latency-sensitive applications also means that network operators must meet stringent service-level agreements (SLAs). Further, to ensure that they reduce costs (CapEx and OpEx) and maximize revenue, network operators must run their networks hotter and more efficiently to make greater use of network bandwidth, potentially eliminating the need for redundant paths. Network operators must also design, implement, and operate their networks to make them operationally efficient. To achieve these outcomes, network operators are using automation.

Software-defined networking (SDN) controllers help network operators to visualize, monitor, and automate their network by using closed-loop automation. In addition, segment routing (SR) simplifies traffic management of IP-MPLS networks while integrating application awareness into the network control plane, thus providing the best possible application quality of experience (AppQoE) without increasing network complexity.

Juniper's Paragon Pathfinder (formerly NorthStar Controller) is a standards-based, stateful SDN and segment routing controller, which enables granular visibility and control of IP-MPLS and SR traffic flows in large service provider, cloud provider, and enterprise networks. Paragon Pathfinder collects topology and performance statistics, and provides network operators with a view of the network through real-time topology view and events, traffic and latency graphs, and traffic reports.

Table 1 displays the key functions of Paragon Pathfinder.

Table 1: Key Functions of Paragon Pathfinder

Category

Description

Analyze

Discovers the network topology by gathering data using routing protocols such as BGP and OSPF.

Optimize

Computes the path for services by using topology and user-defined constraints and by analyzing data to take intelligent decisions, thereby ensuring that applications follow the most efficient path across the network and meet SLA requirements.

Deploy

Installs the path by using protocols such as Path Computation Element Protocol (PCEP), BGP Segment Routing-Traffic Engineering (SR-TE), NETCONF, or YANG.

Key Features

  • Provides real-time topology view and view of events in the network by using BGP Link State (BGP-LS), PCEP, gRPC, and NETCONF.

  • Enables centralized discovery and provisioning, monitoring, and management of label-switched paths (LSPs).

  • Enables complex, inter-domain path computation by using sophisticated algorithms.

  • Facilitates the archival of network data, which can then be used for network planning (by using Paragon Planner).

  • Integrates with Paragon Insights to monitor and manage device and network health.

  • Provides open southbound (for example, PCEP, BGP-LS, NETCONF) and northbound interfaces (for example, REST, YANG)

Key Use Cases

  • Visualization: Visualize and monitor MPLS networks running RSVP-Traffic Engineering (RSVP-TE), LDP, or SR-TE.

  • Path diversity: Use traffic engineering to achieve a diverse path through the network. For example, if you have a critical service and want to guarantee SLAs on that service, you can specify a diverse path through the network, so that if one path fails, the traffic can move to a different path as quickly as possible.

  • Rerouting LSPs based on different criteria:

    • End-to-end utilization threshold violation: Paragon Pathfinder tracks the threshold for each interface. If the thresholds are violated (compared to user-defined global threshold values), the LSPs are rerouted based on priority, bandwidth, and so on.

    • Delay threshold violation: Paragon Pathfinder collects the measured delay and reroutes LSPs that are transiting on links that violate a configured maximum delay.

    • Packet loss threshold violation: Paragon Pathfinder collects packet loss data and compares it with the user-defined global threshold values. Any link that violates the packet loss threshold is placed in maintenance mode for an hour, and LSPs that transit the link are rerouted based on priority, bandwidth, and so on.

    • Node maintenance: If a user puts a node in maintenance (thereby triggering a maintenance event), Paragon Pathfinder excludes all nodes placed under maintenance from path computations, and automatically reroutes the affected LSPs.

  • Bandwidth calendaring: Schedule future bandwidth needs.

Benefits of Paragon Pathfinder

  • Provides better service experience by enabling network operators to monitor their networks for real-time topology and bandwidth changes, and optimizes network services to deliver high-quality customer experience.

  • Simplifies the operational experience because network operators can see an overview of their entire MPLS or segment routed networks and then drill down to view the detailed state of a path, link, or node.

  • Enables the network to operate more autonomously by enabling MPLS and segment-routed networks to self-learn changes in topology, bandwidth usage, and traffic patterns and then to take appropriate action to maintain SLAs.