30 research outputs found

    Exploring traffic and QoS management mechanisms to support mobile cloud computing using service localisation in heterogeneous environments

    Get PDF
    In recent years, mobile devices have evolved to support an amalgam of multimedia applications and content. However, the small size of these devices poses a limit the amount of local computing resources. The emergence of Cloud technology has set the ground for an era of task offloading for mobile devices and we are now seeing the deployment of applications that make more extensive use of Cloud processing as a means of augmenting the capabilities of mobiles. Mobile Cloud Computing is the term used to describe the convergence of these technologies towards applications and mechanisms that offload tasks from mobile devices to the Cloud. In order for mobile devices to access Cloud resources and successfully offload tasks there, a solution for constant and reliable connectivity is required. The proliferation of wireless technology ensures that networks are available almost everywhere in an urban environment and mobile devices can stay connected to a network at all times. However, user mobility is often the cause of intermittent connectivity that affects the performance of applications and ultimately degrades the user experience. 5th Generation Networks are introducing mechanisms that enable constant and reliable connectivity through seamless handovers between networks and provide the foundation for a tighter coupling between Cloud resources and mobiles. This convergence of technologies creates new challenges in the areas of traffic management and QoS provisioning. The constant connectivity to and reliance of mobile devices on Cloud resources have the potential of creating large traffic flows between networks. Furthermore, depending on the type of application generating the traffic flow, very strict QoS may be required from the networks as suboptimal performance may severely degrade an application’s functionality. In this thesis, I propose a new service delivery framework, centred on the convergence of Mobile Cloud Computing and 5G networks for the purpose of optimising service delivery in a mobile environment. The framework is used as a guideline for identifying different aspects of service delivery in a mobile environment and for providing a path for future research in this field. The focus of the thesis is placed on the service delivery mechanisms that are responsible for optimising the QoS and managing network traffic. I present a solution for managing traffic through dynamic service localisation according to user mobility and device connectivity. I implement a prototype of the solution in a virtualised environment as a proof of concept and demonstrate the functionality and results gathered from experimentation. Finally, I present a new approach to modelling network performance by taking into account user mobility. The model considers the overall performance of a persistent connection as the mobile node switches between different networks. Results from the model can be used to determine which networks will negatively affect application performance and what impact they will have for the duration of the user's movement. The proposed model is evaluated using an analytical approac

    Infrastructure sharing of 5G mobile core networks on an SDN/NFV platform

    Get PDF
    When looking towards the deployment of 5G network architectures, mobile network operators will continue to face many challenges. The number of customers is approaching maximum market penetration, the number of devices per customer is increasing, and the number of non-human operated devices estimated to approach towards the tens of billions, network operators have a formidable task ahead of them. The proliferation of cloud computing techniques has created a multitude of applications for network services deployments, and at the forefront is the adoption of Software-Defined Networking (SDN) and Network Functions Virtualisation (NFV). Mobile network operators (MNO) have the opportunity to leverage these technologies so that they can enable the delivery of traditional networking functionality in cloud environments. The benefit of this is reductions seen in the capital and operational expenditures of network infrastructure. When going for NFV, how a Virtualised Network Function (VNF) is designed, implemented, and placed over physical infrastructure can play a vital role on the performance metrics achieved by the network function. Not paying careful attention to this aspect could lead to the drastically reduced performance of network functions thus defeating the purpose of going for virtualisation solutions. The success of mobile network operators in the 5G arena will depend heavily on their ability to shift from their old operational models and embrace new technologies, design principles and innovation in both the business and technical aspects of the environment. The primary goal of this thesis is to design, implement and evaluate the viability of data centre and cloud network infrastructure sharing use case. More specifically, the core question addressed by this thesis is how virtualisation of network functions in a shared infrastructure environment can be achieved without adverse performance degradation. 5G should be operational with high penetration beyond the year 2020 with data traffic rates increasing exponentially and the number of connected devices expected to surpass tens of billions. Requirements for 5G mobile networks include higher flexibility, scalability, cost effectiveness and energy efficiency. Towards these goals, Software Defined Networking (SDN) and Network Functions Virtualisation have been adopted in recent proposals for future mobile networks architectures because they are considered critical technologies for 5G. A Shared Infrastructure Management Framework was designed and implemented for this purpose. This framework was further enhanced for performance optimisation of network functions and underlying physical infrastructure. The objective achieved was the identification of requirements for the design and development of an experimental testbed for future 5G mobile networks. This testbed deploys high performance virtualised network functions (VNFs) while catering for the infrastructure sharing use case of multiple network operators. The management and orchestration of the VNFs allow for automation, scalability, fault recovery, and security to be evaluated. The testbed developed is readily re-creatable and based on open-source software

    View on 5G Architecture: Version 2.0

    Get PDF
    The 5G Architecture Working Group as part of the 5GPPP Initiative is looking at capturing novel trends and key technological enablers for the realization of the 5G architecture. It also targets at presenting in a harmonized way the architectural concepts developed in various projects and initiatives (not limited to 5GPPP projects only) so as to provide a consolidated view on the technical directions for the architecture design in the 5G era. The first version of the white paper was released in July 2016, which captured novel trends and key technological enablers for the realization of the 5G architecture vision along with harmonized architectural concepts from 5GPPP Phase 1 projects and initiatives. Capitalizing on the architectural vision and framework set by the first version of the white paper, this Version 2.0 of the white paper presents the latest findings and analyses with a particular focus on the concept evaluations, and accordingly it presents the consolidated overall architecture design

    Design and Implementation of a Distributed Mobility Management Entity (MME) on OpenStack

    Get PDF
    Network Functions Virtualisation (NFV) involves the implementation of network functions, for example firewalls and routers, as software applications that can run on general-purpose servers. In present-day networks, each network function is typically implemented on dedicated and proprietary hardware. By utilising virtualisation technologies, NFV enables network functions to be deployed on cloud computing infrastructure in data centers. This thesis discusses the application of NFV to the Evolved Packet Core (EPC) in Long Term Evolution (LTE) networks; specifically to the Mobility Management Entity (MME), a control plane entity in the EPC. With the convergence of cloud computing and mobile networks, conventional architectures of network elements need to be re-designed in order to fully harness benefits such as scalability and elasticity. To this end, we design and implement a distributed MME with a three-tier architecture common to web applications. We highlight design considerations for moving MME functionality to the cloud and compare our new distributed design to that of a standalone MME. We deploy and test the distributed MME on two separate OpenStack clouds. Our results indicate that the benefits of scalability and resilience can outweigh the marginal increase in latency for EPC procedures. We find that the latency is dependent on the actual placement of MME components within the data center. Also, we believe that extensions to the OpenStack platform are required before it can meet performance and availability requirements for telecommunication applications

    On-demand offloading collaboration framework based on LTE network virtualisation

    Get PDF
    Recently, there has been a significant increase in data traffic on mobile networks, due to the growth in the numbers of users and the average data volume per user. In a context of traffic surge and reduced revenues, operators face the challenge of finding costless solutions to increase capacity and coverage. Such a solution should necessarily rule out any physical expansion, and mainly conceive real-time strategies to utilise the spectrum more efficiently, such as network offload and Long-term Evolution (LTE) network virtualisation. Virtualisation is playing a significant role in shaping the way of networking now and in future, since it is being devised as one of the available technologies heading towards the upcoming 5G mobile broadband. Now, the successful utilisation of such innovative techniques relies critically on an efficient call admission control (CAC) algorithm. In this work, framework is proposed to manage the operation of a system in which CAC, virtualisation and Local break out (LBO) strategies are collaboratively implemented to avoid congestion in a mobile network, while simultaneously guaranteeing that measures of quality of service (QoS) are kept above desired thresholds. In order to evaluate the proposed framework, two simulation stages were carried out. In the first stage, MATLAB was used to run a numerical example, with the purpose of verifying the mathematical model of the proposed framework in air interface level. The second stage involved of using open source applications such as, Emulated Virtual Environment (EVE) and Wireshark, for emulating the traffic in the network for different scenarios inside the core network. The results confirm the effectiveness of the proposed framework

    Enable advanced QoS-aware network slicing in 5G networks for slice-based media use cases

    Get PDF
    © 2019 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.Media use cases for emergency services require mission-critical levels of reliability for the delivery of media-rich services, such as video streaming. With the upcoming deployment of the fifth generation (5G) networks, a wide variety of applications and services with heterogeneous performance requirements are expected to be supported, and any migration of mission-critical services to 5G networks presents significant challenges in the quality of service (QoS), for emergency service operators. This paper presents a novel SliceNet framework, based on advanced and customizable network slicing to address some of the highlighted challenges in migrating eHealth telemedicine services to 5G networks. An overview of the framework outlines the technical approaches in beyond the state-of-the-art network slicing. Subsequently, this paper emphasizes the design and prototyping of a media-centric eHealth use case, focusing on a set of innovative enablers toward achieving end-to-end QoS-aware network slicing capabilities, required by this demanding use case. Experimental results empirically validate the prototyped enablers and demonstrate the applicability of the proposed framework in such media-rich use cases.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
    corecore