238 research outputs found

    CoShare: An Efficient Approach for Redundancy Allocation in NFV

    Full text link
    An appealing feature of Network Function Virtualization (NFV) is that in an NFV-based network, a network function (NF) instance may be placed at any node. On the one hand this offers great flexibility in allocation of redundant instances, but on the other hand it makes the allocation a unique and difficult challenge. One particular concern is that there is inherent correlation among nodes due to the structure of the network, thus requiring special care in this allocation. To this aim, our novel approach, called CoShare, is proposed. Firstly, its design takes into consideration the effect of network structural dependency, which might result in the unavailability of nodes of a network after failure of a node. Secondly, to efficiently make use of resources, CoShare proposes the idea of shared reservation, where multiple flows may be allowed to share the same reserved backup capacity at an NF instance. Furthermore, CoShare factors in the heterogeneity in nodes, NF instances and availability requirements of flows in the design. The results from a number of experiments conducted using realistic network topologies show that the integration of structural dependency allows meeting availability requirements for more flows compared to a baseline approach. Specifically, CoShare is able to meet diverse availability requirements in a resource-efficient manner, requiring, e.g., up to 85% in some studied cases, less resource overbuild than the baseline approach that uses the idea of dedicated reservation commonly adopted for redundancy allocation in NFV

    Dependability of the NFV Orchestrator: State of the Art and Research Challenges

    Get PDF
    © 2018 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.The introduction of network function virtualisation (NFV) represents a significant change in networking technology, which may create new opportunities in terms of cost efficiency, operations, and service provisioning. Although not explicitly stated as an objective, the dependability of the services provided using this technology should be at least as good as conventional solutions. Logical centralisation, off-the-shelf computing platforms, and increased system complexity represent new dependability challenges relative to the state of the art. The core function of the network, with respect to failure and service management, is orchestration. The failure and misoperation of the NFV orchestrator (NFVO) will have huge network-wide consequences. At the same time, NFVO is vulnerable to overload and design faults. Thus, the objective of this paper is to give a tutorial on the dependability challenges of the NFVO, and to give insight into the required future research. This paper provides necessary background information, reviews the available literature, outlines the proposed solutions, and identifies some design and research problems that must be addressed.acceptedVersio

    A Reliability Study of Parallelized VNF Chaining

    Full text link
    In this paper, we study end-to-end service reliability in Data Center Networks (DCN) with flow and Service Function Chains (SFCs) parallelism. In our approach, we consider large flows to i) be split into multiple parallel smaller sub-flows; ii) SFC along with their VNFs are replicated into at least as many VNF instances as there are sub-flows, resulting in parallel sub-SFCs; and iii) all sub-flows are distributed over multiple shortest paths and processed in parallel by parallel sub-SFCs. We study service reliability as a function of flow and SFC parallelism and placement of parallel active and backup sub-SFCs within DCN. Based on the probability theory and by considering both server and VNF failures, we analytically derive for each studied VNF placement method the probability that all sub-flows can be successfully processed by the parallelized SFC without service interruption. We evaluate the amount of backup VNFs required to protect the parallelized SFC with a certain level of service reliability. The results show that the proposed flow and SFC parallelism in DCN can significantly increase end-to-end service reliability, while reducing the amount of backup VNFs required, as compared to traditional SFCs with serial traffic flows

    Satellite gateway diversity in SDN/NFV-enabled satellite ground segment systems

    Get PDF
    © 2017 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes,creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.This paper explores how to use Software Defined Networking (SDN) and Network Functions Virtualization (NFV) as two emerging technologies to support Satellite Gateway Diversity (GWD) solution in the forward link to provide next generation satellite system with higher capacity enhancement, failover and resiliency management. In this context, the gateway handover along with efficient traffic steering techniques are used to cope with the cases where gateway feeder links experience outage due to meteorological conditions or gateway failure. The handover typically implies that additional traffic is addressed towards another satellite gateway to handle the capacity reduction. Toward this objective, we propose an architecture framework to support GWD using SDN/NFV-enabled satellite ground segment and we evaluate our solution on a proof of concept experimental testbed based on OpenSAND emulated satellite network. The results show that our proposal can provide reasonably flexibility to handle failover and resiliency.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Transforming Large-Scale Virtualized Networks: Advancements in Latency Reduction, Availability Enhancement, and Security Fortification

    Get PDF
    In today’s digital age, the increasing demand for networks, driven by the proliferation of connected devices, data-intensive applications, and transformative technologies, necessitates robust and efficient network infrastructure. This thesis addresses the challenges posed by virtualization in 5G networking and focuses on enhancing next-generation Radio Access Networks (RANs), particularly Open-RAN (O-RAN). The objective is to transform virtualized networks into highly reliable, secure, and latency-aware systems. To achieve this, the thesis proposes novel strategies for virtual function placement, traffic steering, and virtual function security within O-RAN. These solutions utilize optimization techniques such as binary integer programming, mixed integer binary programming, column generation, and machine learning algorithms, including supervised learning and deep reinforcement learning. By implementing these contributions, network service providers can deploy O-RAN with enhanced reliability, speed, and security, specifically tailored for Ultra-Reliable and Low Latency Communications use cases. The optimized RAN virtualization achieved through this research unlocks a new era in network architecture that can confidently support URLLC applications, including Autonomous Vehicles, Industrial Automation and Robotics, Public Safety and Emergency Services, and Smart Grids

    On the Design of Future Communication Systems with Coded Transport, Storage, and Computing

    Get PDF
    Communication systems are experiencing a fundamental change. There are novel applications that require an increased performance not only of throughput but also latency, reliability, security, and heterogeneity support from these systems. To fulfil the requirements, future systems understand communication not only as the transport of bits but also as their storage, processing, and relation. In these systems, every network node has transport storage and computing resources that the network operator and its users can exploit through virtualisation and softwarisation of the resources. It is within this context that this work presents its results. We proposed distributed coded approaches to improve communication systems. Our results improve the reliability and latency performance of the transport of information. They also increase the reliability, flexibility, and throughput of storage applications. Furthermore, based on the lessons that coded approaches improve the transport and storage performance of communication systems, we propose a distributed coded approach for the computing of novel in-network applications such as the steering and control of cyber-physical systems. Our proposed approach can increase the reliability and latency performance of distributed in-network computing in the presence of errors, erasures, and attackers

    Towards Tactile Internet in Beyond 5G Era: Recent Advances, Current Issues and Future Directions

    Get PDF
    Tactile Internet (TI) is envisioned to create a paradigm shift from the content-oriented communications to steer/control-based communications by enabling real-time transmission of haptic information (i.e., touch, actuation, motion, vibration, surface texture) over Internet in addition to the conventional audiovisual and data traffics. This emerging TI technology, also considered as the next evolution phase of Internet of Things (IoT), is expected to create numerous opportunities for technology markets in a wide variety of applications ranging from teleoperation systems and Augmented/Virtual Reality (AR/VR) to automotive safety and eHealthcare towards addressing the complex problems of human society. However, the realization of TI over wireless media in the upcoming Fifth Generation (5G) and beyond networks creates various non-conventional communication challenges and stringent requirements in terms of ultra-low latency, ultra-high reliability, high data-rate connectivity, resource allocation, multiple access and quality-latency-rate tradeoff. To this end, this paper aims to provide a holistic view on wireless TI along with a thorough review of the existing state-of-the-art, to identify and analyze the involved technical issues, to highlight potential solutions and to propose future research directions. First, starting with the vision of TI and recent advances and a review of related survey/overview articles, we present a generalized framework for wireless TI in the Beyond 5G Era including a TI architecture, the main technical requirements, the key application areas and potential enabling technologies. Subsequently, we provide a comprehensive review of the existing TI works by broadly categorizing them into three main paradigms; namely, haptic communications, wireless AR/VR, and autonomous, intelligent and cooperative mobility systems. Next, potential enabling technologies across physical/Medium Access Control (MAC) and network layers are identified and discussed in detail. Also, security and privacy issues of TI applications are discussed along with some promising enablers. Finally, we present some open research challenges and recommend promising future research directions
    corecore