- University of New Hampshire InterOperability Laboratory
The
University of New Hampshire InterOperability Laboratory (UNH-IOL) tests networking and data communications products. The university established the laboratory in 1988, "with the dual mission of providing a neutral environment to foster multi-vendor interoperability and conformance to data communications networking standards while educating students for future employment in the industry." [http://www.iol.unh.edu/general/]The UNH-IOL is an example of how commercial and academic interests can work together for mutual benefits. Companies get access to low-cost, high skilled labor and students get access to training opportunities beyond what a normal academic curriculum offers. Students typically work there during the undergradute study, although some continue to work there after graduation, either as staff or graduate students. The IOL also sponsors a annual summer intern ship program for upcoming high school seniors.
More than 100 graduate and undergraduate student-employees work with full-time UNH-IOL staff, gaining hands-on experience with developing technologies and products from hundreds of major companies. The laboratory operates independently of the university's academic departments at its 32,000+ square foot facility in Durham,
New Hampshire .From UNH-IOL's site:"The UNH-IOL is the only full-scale, non-profit test lab in the world dedicated to fostering cooperation and understanding within the data communications industry while at the same time providing hands-on experience to future engineers. The laboratory performs testing in two different scenarios interoperability group tests (plugfests) and private one-on-one testing and debugging."
Consortia
The UNH-IOL currently runs over 20 consortia and groups that offer testing services, each involved in a different technology:
*10BASE-T Testing Service
*10 Gigabit Ethernet
*Backplane Ethernet
* Bridge Functions
*DLNA ICV Test Services
*xDSL
*Fast Ethernet
*Fibre Channel
*Gigabit Ethernet
* IMS
* IP Routing
*IPv4
*IPv6
*iSCSI
*iWARP
*MPLS Services
*OpenFabrics Alliance Interoperability testing
*Power over Ethernet
* SAS
*SATA
*VoIP
*Wireless LAN Over time, as interest in a particular area of technology fades (such as with ATM or
token ring ), the consortium may be disbanded, or made into a testing service. Likewise, as interest in a new technology grows, a consortium may be founded in order to start testing devices of that type. Testing services are not consortia, and offer testingà la carte rather than through an annual membership fee.Each group has a series of
test suite s that they use in order to test a specific aspect of a device's functions. For example, on aFast Ethernet device, a customer may ask thatflow control functionality be tested. Test suites can be found at each group's section of the IOL webpage, such as [http://www.iol.unh.edu/testsuites/wireless/ Wireless LAN Consortium] .External links
* [http://www.iol.unh.edu/ UNH-IOL main page]
* [http://www.reed-electronics.com/tmworld/article/CA6319675.html Cover article] in April, 2006 issue ofTest & Measurement World
* [http://www.moonv6.org/ MOONv6] US-based academic, commercial and government IPv6 network
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