833 research outputs found

    Connectivity Management for HetNets based on the Principles of Autonomicity and Context-Awareness

    Get PDF
    Στο περιβάλλον του Διαδικτύου του Μέλλοντος, η Πέμπτη γενιά (5G) δικτύων έχει ήδη αρχίσει να καθιερώνεται. Τα δίκτυα 5G αξιοποιούν υψηλότερες συχνότητες παρέχοντας μεγαλύτερο εύρος ζώνης, ενώ υποστηρίζουν εξαιρετικά μεγάλη πυκνότητα σε σταθμούς βάσης και κινητές συσκευές, σχηματίζοντας ένα περιβάλλον ετερογενών δικτύων, το οποίο στοχεύει στο να καλυφθούν οι απαιτήσεις της απόδοσης ως προς την μικρότερη δυνατή συνολική χρονοκαθυστέρηση και κατανάλωση ενέργειας. Η αποδοτική διαχείριση της συνδεσιμότητας σε ένα τόσο ετερογενές δικτυακό περιβάλλον αποτελεί ανοιχτό πρόβλημα, με σκοπό να υποστηρίζεται η κινητικότητα των χρηστών σε δίκτυα διαφορετικών τεχνολογιών και βαθμίδων, αντιμετωπίζοντας θέματα πολυπλοκότητας και διαλειτουργικότητας, υποστηρίζοντας τις απαιτήσεις των τρεχουσών εφαρμογών και των προτιμήσεων των χρηστών και διαχειρίζοντας ταυτόχρονα πολλαπλές δικτυακές διεπαφές. Η συλλογή, η μοντελοποίηση, η διεξαγωγή συμπερασμάτων και η κατανομή πληροφορίας περιεχομένου σε σχέση με δεδομένα αισθητήρων θα παίξουν κρίσιμο ρόλο σε αυτήν την πρόκληση. Με βάση τα παραπάνω, κρίνεται σκόπιμη η αξιοποίηση των αρχών της επίγνωσης περιεχομένου και της αυτονομικότητας, καθώς επιτρέπουν στις δικτυακές οντότητες να είναι ενήμερες του εαυτού τους και του περιβάλλοντός τους, καθώς και να αυτοδιαχειρίζονται τις λειτουργίες τους ώστε να πετυχαίνουν συγκεκριμένους στόχους. Επιπλέον, χρειάζεται ακριβής ποσοτική αξιολόγηση της απόδοσης λύσεων διαχείρισης της συνδεσιμότητας για ετερογενή δίκτυα, οι οποίες παρουσιάζουν διαφορετικές στρατηγικές επίγνωσης περιβάλλοντος, απαιτώντας μια μεθοδολογία που να είναι περιεκτική και γενικά εφαρμόσιμη ώστε να καλύπτει διαφορετικές προσεγγίσεις, καθώς οι υπάρχουσες μεθοδολογίες στην βιβλιογραφία είναι σχετικά περιορισμένες. Tο σύνολο της μελέτης επικεντρώνεται σε δύο θεματικούς άξονες. Στο πρώτο θεματικό μέρος της διατριβής, αναλύεται ο ρόλος της επίγνωσης περιβάλλοντος και της αυτονομικότητας, σε σχέση με την διαχείριση της συνδεσιμότητας, αναπτύσσοντας ένα πλαίσιο ταξινόμησης και κατηγοριοποίησης, επεκτείνοντας την τρέχουσα βιβλιογραφία. Με βάση το προαναφερθέν πλαίσιο, ταξινομήθηκαν και αξιολογήθηκαν λύσεις για την υποστήριξη της κινητικότητας σε ετερογενή δίκτυα, οι οποίες δύνανται να θεωρηθούν ότι παρουσιάζουν επίγνωση περιβάλλοντος και αυτο-διαχειριστικά χαρακτηριστικά. Επιπλέον, μελετήθηκε κατά πόσον οι αποφάσεις που λαμβάνονται ως προς την επιλογή του κατάλληλου δικτύου, σύμφωνα με την κάθε λύση, είναι αποτελεσματικές και προτάθηκαν τρόποι βελτιστοποίησης των υπαρχουσών αρχιτεκτονικών, καθώς και προτάσεων προς περαιτέρω ανάπτυξη σχετικών μελλοντικών λύσεων. Στο δεύτερο θεματικό μέρος της διατριβής, αναπτύχθηκε μια ευέλικτη αναλυτική μεθοδολογία, περιλαμβάνοντας όλους τους παράγοντες που μπορούν να συνεισφέρουν στην συνολική χρονοκαθυστέρηση, λαμβάνοντας υπόψιν την σηματοδοσία, την επεξεργαστική επιβάρυνση και την συμφόρηση (μελέτη ουράς), επεκτείνοντας την τρέχουσα βιβλιογραφία. Η μεθοδολογία είναι περιεκτική, ενώ ταυτόχρονα προσφέρει κλειστού τύπου λύσεις και έχει την δυνατότητα να προσαρμόζεται σε διαφορετικές προσεγγίσεις. Προς απόδειξη αυτού, εφαρμόσαμε την μεθοδολογία σε δύο λύσεις με διαφορετική στρατηγική επίγνωσης περιβάλλοντος (μια μεταδραστική και μια προδραστική). Και για τις δύο προσεγγίσεις, τα αναλυτικά αποτελέσματα επιβεβαιώθηκαν από προσομοιώσεις, επιβεβαιώνοντας την αποτελεσματικότητα και την ακρίβεια της αναλυτικής μεθοδολογίας. Επιπλέον, αποδείχθηκε ότι η προδραστική προσέγγιση εμφανίζει καλύτερη απόδοση ως προς την συνολική χρονοκαθυστέρηση, ενώ χρειάζεται σημαντικά λιγότερους επεξεργαστικούς πόρους, παρουσιάζοντας πιθανά οφέλη και στην συνολική ενεργειακή κατανάλωση και στα λειτουργικά και κεφαλαιουχικά κόστη (OPEX και CAPEX)

    Mobility-aware Software-Defined Service-Centric Networking for Service Provisioning in Urban Environments

    Get PDF
    Disruptive applications for mobile devices, such as the Internet of Things, Connected and Autonomous Vehicles, Immersive Media, and others, have requirements that the current Cloud Computing paradigm cannot meet. These unmet requirements bring the necessity to deploy geographically distributed computing architectures, such as Fog and Mobile Edge Computing. However, bringing computing close to users has its costs. One example of cost is the complexity introduced by the management of the mobility of the devices at the edge. This mobility may lead to issues, such as interruption of the communication with service instances hosted at the edge or an increase in communication latency during mobility events, e.g., handover. These issues, caused by the lack of mobility-aware service management solutions, result in degradation in service provisioning. The present thesis proposes a series of protocols and algorithms to handle user and service mobility at the edge of the network. User mobility is characterized when user change access points of wireless networks, while service mobility happens when services have to be provisioned from different hosts. It assembles them in a solution for mobility-aware service orchestration based on Information-Centric Networking (ICN) and runs on top of Software-Defined Networking (SDN). This solution addresses three issues related to handling user mobility at the edge: (i) proactive support for user mobility events, (ii) service instance addressing management, and (iii) distributed application state data management. For (i), we propose a proactive SDN-based handover scheme. For (ii), we propose an ICN addressing strategy to remove the necessity of updating addresses after service mobility events. For (iii), we propose a graph-based framework for state data placement in the network nodes that accounts for user mobility and latency requirements. The protocols and algorithms proposed in this thesis were compared with different approaches from the literature through simulation. Our results show that the proposed solution can reduce service interruption and latency in the presence of user and service mobility events while maintaining reasonable overhead costs regarding control messages sent in the network by the SDN controller

    Data Movement Challenges and Solutions with Software Defined Networking

    Get PDF
    With the recent rise in cloud computing, applications are routinely accessing and interacting with data on remote resources. Interaction with such remote resources for the operation of media-rich applications in mobile environments is also on the rise. As a result, the performance of the underlying network infrastructure can have a significant impact on the quality of service experienced by the user. Despite receiving significant attention from both academia and industry, computer networks still face a number of challenges. Users oftentimes report and complain about poor experiences with their devices and applications, which can oftentimes be attributed to network performance when downloading or uploading application data. This dissertation investigates problems that arise with data movement across computer networks and proposes novel solutions to address these issues through software defined networking (SDN). SDN is lauded to be the paradigm of choice for next generation networks. While academia explores use cases in various contexts, industry has focused on data center and wide area networks. There is a significant range of complex and application-specific network services that can potentially benefit from SDN, but introduction and adoption of such solutions remains slow in production networks. One impeding factor is the lack of a simple yet expressive enough framework applicable to all SDN services across production network domains. Without a uniform framework, SDN developers create disjoint solutions, resulting in untenable management and maintenance overhead. The SDN-based solutions developed in this dissertation make use of a common agent-based approach. The architecture facilitates application-oriented SDN design with an abstraction composed of software agents on top of the underlying network. There are three key components modern and future networks require to deliver exceptional data transfer performance to the end user: (1) user and application mobility, (2) high throughput data transfer, and (3) efficient and scalable content distribution. Meeting these key components will not only ensure the network can provide robust and reliable end-to-end connectivity, but also that network resources will be used efficiently. First, mobility support is critical for user applications to maintain connectivity to remote, cloud-based resources. Today\u27s network users are frequently accessing such resources while on the go, transitioning from network to network with the expectation that their applications will continue to operate seamlessly. As users perform handovers between heterogeneous networks or between networks across administrative domains, the application becomes responsible for maintaining or establishing new connections to remote resources. Although application developers often account for such handovers, the result is oftentimes visible to the user through diminished quality of service (e.g. rebuffering in video streaming applications). Many intra-domain handover solutions exist for handovers in WiFi and cellular networks, such as mobile IP, but they are architecturally complex and have not been integrated to form a scalable, inter-domain solution. A scalable framework is proposed that leverages SDN features to implement both horizontal and vertical handovers for heterogeneous wireless networks within and across administrative domains. User devices can select an appropriate network using an on-board virtual SDN implementation that manages available network interfaces. An SDN-based counterpart operates in the network core and edge to handle user migrations as they transition from one edge attachment point to another. The framework was developed and deployed as an extension to the Global Environment for Network Innovations (GENI) testbed; however, the framework can be deployed on any OpenFlow enabled network. Evaluation revealed users can maintain existing application connections without breaking the sockets and requiring the application to recover. Second, high throughput data transfer is essential for user applications to acquire large remote data sets. As data sizes become increasingly large, often combined with their locations being far from the applications, the well known impact of lower Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) throughput over large delay-bandwidth product paths becomes more significant to these applications. While myriads of solutions exist to alleviate the problem, they require specialized software and/or network stacks at both the application host and the remote data server, making it hard to scale up to a large range of applications and execution environments. This results in high throughput data transfer that is available to only a select subset of network users who have access to such specialized software. An SDN based solution called Steroid OpenFlow Service (SOS) has been proposed as a network service that transparently increases the throughput of TCP-based data transfers across large networks. SOS shifts the complexity of high performance data transfer from the end user to the network; users do not need to configure anything on the client and server machines participating in the data transfer. The SOS architecture supports seamless high performance data transfer at scale for multiple users and for high bandwidth connections. Emphasis is placed on the use of SOS as a part of a larger, richer data transfer ecosystem, complementing and compounding the efforts of existing data transfer solutions. Non-TCP-based solutions, such as Aspera, can operate seamlessly alongside an SOS deployment, while those based on TCP, such as wget, curl, and GridFTP, can leverage SOS for throughput improvement beyond what a single TCP connection can provide. Through extensive evaluation in real-world environments, the SOS architecture is proven to be flexibly deployable on a variety of network architectures, from cloud-based, to production networks, to scaled up, high performance data center environments. Evaluation showed that the SOS architecture scales linearly through the addition of SOS “agents†to the SOS deployment, providing data transfer performance improvement to multiple users simultaneously. An individual data transfer enhanced by SOS was shown to have increased throughput nearly forty times the same data transfer without SOS assistance. Third, efficient and scalable video content distribution is imperative as the demand for multimedia content over the Internet increases. Current state of the art solutions consist of vast content distribution networks (CDNs) where content is oftentimes hosted in duplicate at various geographically distributed locations. Although CDNs are useful for the dissemination of static content, they do not provide a clear and scalable model for the on demand production and distribution of live, streaming content. IP multicast is a popular solution to scalable video content distribution; however, it is seldom used due to deployment and operational complexity. Inspired from the distributed design of todays CDNs and the distribution trees used by IP multicast, a SDN based framework called GENI Cinema (GC) is proposed to allow for the distribution of live video content at scale. GC allows for the efficient management and distribution of live video content at scale without the added architectural complexity and inefficiencies inherent to contemporary solutions such as IP multicast. GC has been deployed as an experimental, nation-wide live video distribution service using the GENI network, broadcasting live and prerecorded video streams from conferences for remote attendees, from the classroom for distance education, and for live sporting events. GC clients can easily and efficiently switch back and forth between video streams with improved switching latency latency over cable, satellite, and other live video providers. The real world dep loyments and evaluation of the proposed solutions show how SDN can be used as a novel way to solve current data transfer problems across computer networks. In addition, this dissertation is expected to provide guidance for designing, deploying, and debugging SDN-based applications across a variety of network topologies

    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

    An integrated approach to QoS and security in future mobile networks using the Y-Comm framework

    Get PDF
    Future networks will comprise a wide variety of wireless networks. Users will expect to be always connected from anywhere and at any time as connections will be switched to available networks using vertical handover techniques. However, different networks have different Qualities-of-Service (QoS) so a QoS framework is needed to help applications and services deal with this new environment. In addition, since these networks must work together, future mobile systems will have an open, instead of the currently closed, architecture. Therefore new mechanisms will be needed to protect users, servers and network infrastructure. This means that future mobile networks will have to integrate communications, mobility, quality-of-service and security. However, in order to achieve this integration without affecting the flexibility of future networks, there is a need for novel methods that address QoS and security in a targeted manner within specific situations. Also, there is a need for a communication framework wherein these methods along with the communication and handover mechanisms could be integrated together. Therefore, this research uses the Y-Comm framework, which is a communication architecture to support vertical handover in Next Generations Networks, as an example of future communication frameworks that integrate QoS, security, communication and mobility mechanisms. Within the context of Y-Comm, research has been conducted to address QoS and security in heterogeneous networks. To preserve the flexibility of future network, the research in this thesis proposes the concept of Targeted Models to address security and QoS in specific scenarios: to address the QoS issue, a new QoS framework is introduced in this thesis, which will define targeted QoS models that will provide QoS in different situations such as connection initiation and in the case of handover. Similarly, to deal with the security side, targeted security models are proposed to address security in situations like connection initiation and handover. To define the targeted models and map them to actual network entities, research has been conducted to define a potential structure for future networks along with the main operational entities. The cooperation among these entities will define the targeted models. Furthermore, in order to specify the security protocols used by the targeted security models, an Authentication and Key Agreement framework is introduced to address security at different levels such as network and service levels. The underlying protocols of the Authentication and Key Agreement protocol are verified using Casper/FDR, which is a well-known, formal methods- based tool. The research also investigates potential methods to implement the proposed security protocols. To enable the implementation of some of the targeted security models, the research also proposes major enhancements to the current addressing, naming and location systems

    Integration Results

    Get PDF
    The H2020 What to do With the Wi-Fi Wild West (Wi-5) project combines research and innovation to propose a Software Defined Networking (SDN) architecture based on an integrated and coordinated set of smart Wi-Fi networking solutions. In this document, we present the integration methodologies and provide the integration test results of the developed functionalities of Wi-5. The integration of the functionalities is being developed within Work Package 5. First, the smart and cooperative solutions provided by the SDN based Wi-5 architecture will be briefly described. Next, we will define and explain the modular approach to be applied in Wi-5 APs and the Wi-5 controller. According to this approach, we will describe the functionalities of both the Wi-5 APs that are modelled as a combination of the monitoring and network configuration modules, and the Wi-5 controller which is composed of the monitoring, decision, and network configuration modules. Following this, we will define and explain the Wi-5 integration strategy that was utilized to integrate the smart and cooperative functionalities in terms of assembly of the modules utilized to model the Wi-5 AP and the Wi-5 controller. The integration approach and steps of the proposed functionalities are then given and the limitations that have been faced during the integration progress of the functionalities are clearly explained in each subsection. Moreover, the design criteria and possible evaluation approaches of such nonintegrated functionalities are explicitly provided. During the integration process, coordinated work between WP3 and WP4 was carried out and, after the feedback was shared for WP5-WP3 and WP5WP4, some novel innovations and contributions are introduced. The online integration approach for the channel assignment algorithm of the radio resource management solution is proposed, and integrated as a product of this mutual feedback. Also, the proactive handover application for seamless handover functionality is another product of this collaboration. After the integration process, the test definitions and evaluation results of the integrated functionalities are presented. Also, the available test metrics and network deployments for each of the functionality tests are provided. The test results prove that the proposed functionalities perform well in meeting the design objectives. We observe that the Wi-5 solutions give the expected performance gains in most of the conducted test cases

    Dependable IMS services - A Performance Analysis of Server Replication and Mid-Session Inter-Domain Handover

    Get PDF
    corecore