958 research outputs found
Joint Energy Efficient and QoS-aware Path Allocation and VNF Placement for Service Function Chaining
Service Function Chaining (SFC) allows the forwarding of a traffic flow along
a chain of Virtual Network Functions (VNFs, e.g., IDS, firewall, and NAT).
Software Defined Networking (SDN) solutions can be used to support SFC reducing
the management complexity and the operational costs. One of the most critical
issues for the service and network providers is the reduction of energy
consumption, which should be achieved without impact to the quality of
services. In this paper, we propose a novel resource (re)allocation
architecture which enables energy-aware SFC for SDN-based networks. To this
end, we model the problems of VNF placement, allocation of VNFs to flows, and
flow routing as optimization problems. Thereafter, heuristic algorithms are
proposed for the different optimization problems, in order find near-optimal
solutions in acceptable times. The performance of the proposed algorithms are
numerically evaluated over a real-world topology and various network traffic
patterns. The results confirm that the proposed heuristic algorithms provide
near optimal solutions while their execution time is applicable for real-life
networks.Comment: Extended version of submitted paper - v7 - July 201
Online Admission Control and Embedding of Service Chains
The virtualization and softwarization of modern computer networks enables the
definition and fast deployment of novel network services called service chains:
sequences of virtualized network functions (e.g., firewalls, caches, traffic
optimizers) through which traffic is routed between source and destination.
This paper attends to the problem of admitting and embedding a maximum number
of service chains, i.e., a maximum number of source-destination pairs which are
routed via a sequence of to-be-allocated, capacitated network functions. We
consider an Online variant of this maximum Service Chain Embedding Problem,
short OSCEP, where requests arrive over time, in a worst-case manner. Our main
contribution is a deterministic O(log L)-competitive online algorithm, under
the assumption that capacities are at least logarithmic in L. We show that this
is asymptotically optimal within the class of deterministic and randomized
online algorithms. We also explore lower bounds for offline approximation
algorithms, and prove that the offline problem is APX-hard for unit capacities
and small L > 2, and even Poly-APX-hard in general, when there is no bound on
L. These approximation lower bounds may be of independent interest, as they
also extend to other problems such as Virtual Circuit Routing. Finally, we
present an exact algorithm based on 0-1 programming, implying that the general
offline SCEP is in NP and by the above hardness results it is NP-complete for
constant L.Comment: early version of SIROCCO 2015 pape
Online VNF Scaling in Datacenters
Network Function Virtualization (NFV) is a promising technology that promises
to significantly reduce the operational costs of network services by deploying
virtualized network functions (VNFs) to commodity servers in place of dedicated
hardware middleboxes. The VNFs are typically running on virtual machine
instances in a cloud infrastructure, where the virtualization technology
enables dynamic provisioning of VNF instances, to process the fluctuating
traffic that needs to go through the network functions in a network service. In
this paper, we target dynamic provisioning of enterprise network services -
expressed as one or multiple service chains - in cloud datacenters, and design
efficient online algorithms without requiring any information on future traffic
rates. The key is to decide the number of instances of each VNF type to
provision at each time, taking into consideration the server resource
capacities and traffic rates between adjacent VNFs in a service chain. In the
case of a single service chain, we discover an elegant structure of the problem
and design an efficient randomized algorithm achieving a e/(e-1) competitive
ratio. For multiple concurrent service chains, an online heuristic algorithm is
proposed, which is O(1)-competitive. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our
algorithms using solid theoretical analysis and trace-driven simulations.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Effectiveness of segment routing technology in reducing the bandwidth and cloud resources provisioning times in network function virtualization architectures
Network Function Virtualization is a new technology allowing for a elastic cloud and bandwidth resource allocation. The technology requires an orchestrator whose role is the service and resource orchestration. It receives service requests, each one characterized by a Service Function Chain, which is a set of service functions to be executed according to a given order. It implements an algorithm for deciding where both to allocate the cloud and bandwidth resources and to route the SFCs. In a traditional orchestration algorithm, the orchestrator has a detailed knowledge of the cloud and network infrastructures and that can lead to high computational complexity of the SFC Routing and Cloud and Bandwidth resource Allocation (SRCBA) algorithm. In this paper, we propose and evaluate the effectiveness of a scalable orchestration architecture inherited by the one proposed within the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) and based on the functional separation of an NFV orchestrator in Resource Orchestrator (RO) and Network Service Orchestrator (NSO). Each cloud domain is equipped with an RO whose task is to provide a simple and abstract representation of the cloud infrastructure. These representations are notified of the NSO that can apply a simplified and less complex SRCBA algorithm. In addition, we show how the segment routing technology can help to simplify the SFC routing by means of an effective addressing of the service functions. The scalable orchestration solution has been investigated and compared to the one of a traditional orchestrator in some network scenarios and varying the number of cloud domains. We have verified that the execution time of the SRCBA algorithm can be drastically reduced without degrading the performance in terms of cloud and bandwidth resource costs
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