L3 Multicast VPN over GRE VPN for Radio Site Backhaul
In the USA it is very common that two-way radio sites have poor connectivity. Traditionally most have use a LTE/cellular router (ie. cradle-points) with various VPN overlays, or even single provider static IP full IPSEC mesh. These solutions are poor at best, and almost unscaleable beyond 10 sites due to the n-1 unique configurations needed to add or delete site.
Newer SDWAN technologies such as Cisco Meraki, have been used, but these are a monthly fee, and do not support multicast. This last point is very important as more and more multicast is being used in the two-way radio world. This had been difficult for many providers as there's no easy way to transport multicast over a LTE soultion. SDWAN VPLS services are able to do this, but again the Meraki doesn't support l2, and those that do, treat multicast as broadcast at layer 2. When additional sites are added, the "noise" of the network (ARP, MDP, IGMP, etc.) is flooded to every site. As more sites grow this grows exponentially.
L3VPN (VRPN) with multicast is really the way to support this. The design presented is focused on small bit rate voip multicast, with a many to many support of sending and receiving multicast. With modern routers it should scale to a hundreds of sites. Fast reroute is not considered here, as the network underlay is the general internet which is not highly available, nor is it needed for a two-way radio network. Network resiliency is provided via normal routing protocols, which even at high scale restore connectivity in under a second.
As this soultion uses BGP with label switching over a DMVPN network, other services may be configured which may ride on this. VPLS, VPRN and Multicast VPRN are presented here.
The inherent separation of customer vs provider services allows running this across multiple customers, all with disparate two-way radio networks. Service Provider here is referring to the two-way radio vendor or VAR, and Customer is their customer or different radio networks. Example: Tom's two-way radio operates a DMR system for a customer in Colorado, and tt