291 research outputs found

    An Adaptable Optimal Network Topology Model for Efficient Data Centre Design in Storage Area Networks

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    In this research, we look at how different network topologies affect the energy consumption of modular data centre (DC) setups. We use a combined-input directed approach to assess the benefits of rack-scale and pod-scale fragmentation across a variety of electrical, optoelectronic, and composite network architectures in comparison to a conventional DC. When the optical transport architecture is implemented and the appropriate resource components are distributed, the findings reveal fragmentation at the layer level is adequate, even compared to a pod-scale DC. Composable DCs can operate at peak efficiency because of the optical network topology. Logical separation of conventional DC servers across an optical network architecture is also investigated in this article. When compared to physical decentralisation at the rack size, logical decomposition of data centers inside each rack offers a small decrease in the overall DC energy usage thanks to better resource needs allocation. This allows for a flexible, composable architecture that can accommodate performance based in-memory applications. Moreover, we look at the state of fundamentalmodel and its use in both static and dynamic data centres. According to our findings, typical DCs become more energy efficient when workload modularity increases, although excessive resource use still exists. By enabling optimal resource use and energy savings, disaggregation and micro-services were able to reduce the typical DC's up to 30%. Furthermore, we offer a heuristic to duplicate the Mixed integer model's output trends for energy-efficient allocation of caseloads in modularized DCs

    Development of a secure monitoring framework for optical disaggregated data centres

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    Data center (DC) infrastructures are a key piece of nowadays telecom and cloud services delivery, enabling the access and storage of enormous quantities of information as well as the execution of complex applications and services. Such aspect is being accentuated with the advent of 5G and beyond architectures, since a significant portion of the network and service functions are being deployed as specialized virtual elements inside dedicated DC infrastructures. As such, the development of new architectures to better exploit the resources of DC becomes of paramount importanceThe mismatch between the variability of resources required by running applications and the fixed amount of resources in server units severely limits resource utilization in today's Data Centers (DCs). The Disaggregated DC (DDC) paradigm was recently introduced to address these limitations. The main idea behind DDCs is to divide the various computational resources into independent hardware modules/blades, which are mounted in racks, bringing greater modularity and allowing operators to optimize their deployments for improved efficiency and performance, thus, offering high resource allocation flexibility. Moreover, to efficiently exploit the hardware blades and establish the connections across them according to upper layer requirements, a flexible control and management framework is required. In this regard, following current industrial trends, the Software Defined Networking (SDN) paradigm is one of the leading technologies for the control of DC infrastructures, allowing for the establishment of high-speed, low-latency optical connections between hardware components in DDCs in response to the demands of higher-level services and applications. With these concepts in mind, the primary objective of this thesis is to design and carry out the implementation of the control of a DDC infrastructure layer that is founded on the SDN principles and makes use of optical technologies for the intra-DC network fabric, highlighting the importance of quality control and monitoring. Thanks to several SDN agents, it becomes possible to gather statistics and metrics from the multiple infrastructure elements (computational blades and network equipment), allowing DC operators to monitor and make informed decisions on how to utilize the infrastructure resources to the greatest extent feasible. Indeed, quality assurance operations are of capital importance in modern DC infrastructures, thus, it becomes essential to guarantee a secure communication channel for gathering infrastructure metrics/statistics and enforcing (re-)configurations, closing the full loop, then addressing the security layer to secure the communication channel by encryption and providing authentication for the server and the client

    On the complexity of configuration and orchestration for enabling disaggregated server provisioning in optical composable data centers

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    Due to the limitations of traditional data center (DC) architectures, the concept of infrastructure disaggregation has been proposed. DC resources are separated into multiple blades to be exploited independently. As a result, composable DC (CDC) infrastructures are achieved, enhancing the modularity of resource provisioning. However, disaggregation introduces additional challenges that need to be carefully analyzed. One relates to the potential complexity increase on the orchestration and infrastructure configuration that need to be performed when provisioning resources to support services. This aspect is highly influenced by the distribution of resources at the physical infrastructure. As such, when analyzing the performance of a CDC, it becomes essential to also study the related operational complexity of the resource orchestration and configuration phases. Furthermore, the requirements of several tenant services may impose heterogeneous deployments over the shared physical infrastructure in the form of either disaggregated single-server or multi-server distributions. The associated orchestration/configuration cost is again highly influenced by the data plane architecture of the CDC. With these aspects in mind, in this paper, we provide a methodology for analysis of the complexity of resource orchestration for a service deployment and the associated configuration cost in optical CDCs, considering various service deployment setups. A selected set of CDC architectures found in the literature is employed to quantitatively illustrate how the data plane design and service deployment strategies affect the complexity of infrastructure configuration and resource orchestration.This work has been supported by the Spanish Government through project TRAINER-B (PID2020-118011GB-C22) with FEDER contribution.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Software-Defined Networks for Future Networks and Services: Main Technical Challenges and Business Implications

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    In 2013, the IEEE Future Directions Committee (FDC) formed an SDN work group to explore the amount of interest in forming an IEEE Software-Defined Network (SDN) Community. To this end, a Workshop on "SDN for Future Networks and Services" (SDN4FNS'13) was organized in Trento, Italy (Nov. 11th-13th 2013). Following the results of the workshop, in this paper, we have further analyzed scenarios, prior-art, state of standardization, and further discussed the main technical challenges and socio-economic aspects of SDN and virtualization in future networks and services. A number of research and development directions have been identified in this white paper, along with a comprehensive analysis of the technical feasibility and business availability of those fundamental technologies. A radical industry transition towards the "economy of information through softwarization" is expected in the near future

    Adaptive Real Time IoT Stream Processing in Microservices Architecture

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    Attack-Surface Metrics, OSSTMM and Common Criteria Based Approach to “Composable Security” in Complex Systems

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    In recent studies on Complex Systems and Systems-of-Systems theory, a huge effort has been put to cope with behavioral problems, i.e. the possibility of controlling a desired overall or end-to-end behavior by acting on the individual elements that constitute the system itself. This problem is particularly important in the “SMART” environments, where the huge number of devices, their significant computational capabilities as well as their tight interconnection produce a complex architecture for which it is difficult to predict (and control) a desired behavior; furthermore, if the scenario is allowed to dynamically evolve through the modification of both topology and subsystems composition, then the control problem becomes a real challenge. In this perspective, the purpose of this paper is to cope with a specific class of control problems in complex systems, the “composability of security functionalities”, recently introduced by the European Funded research through the pSHIELD and nSHIELD projects (ARTEMIS-JU programme). In a nutshell, the objective of this research is to define a control framework that, given a target security level for a specific application scenario, is able to i) discover the system elements, ii) quantify the security level of each element as well as its contribution to the security of the overall system, and iii) compute the control action to be applied on such elements to reach the security target. The main innovations proposed by the authors are: i) the definition of a comprehensive methodology to quantify the security of a generic system independently from the technology and the environment and ii) the integration of the derived metrics into a closed-loop scheme that allows real-time control of the system. The solution described in this work moves from the proof-of-concepts performed in the early phase of the pSHIELD research and enrich es it through an innovative metric with a sound foundation, able to potentially cope with any kind of pplication scenarios (railways, automotive, manufacturing, ...)

    Service composition based on SIP peer-to-peer networks

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    Today the telecommunication market is faced with the situation that customers are requesting for new telecommunication services, especially value added services. The concept of Next Generation Networks (NGN) seems to be a solution for this, so this concept finds its way into the telecommunication area. These customer expectations have emerged in the context of NGN and the associated migration of the telecommunication networks from traditional circuit-switched towards packet-switched networks. One fundamental aspect of the NGN concept is to outsource the intelligence of services from the switching plane onto separated Service Delivery Platforms using SIP (Session Initiation Protocol) to provide the required signalling functionality. Caused by this migration process towards NGN SIP has appeared as the major signalling protocol for IP (Internet Protocol) based NGN. This will lead in contrast to ISDN (Integrated Services Digital Network) and IN (Intelligent Network) to significantly lower dependences among the network and services and enables to implement new services much easier and faster. In addition, further concepts from the IT (Information Technology) namely SOA (Service-Oriented Architecture) have largely influenced the telecommunication sector forced by amalgamation of IT and telecommunications. The benefit of applying SOA in telecommunication services is the acceleration of service creation and delivery. Main features of the SOA are that services are reusable, discoverable combinable and independently accessible from any location. Integration of those features offers a broader flexibility and efficiency for varying demands on services. This thesis proposes a novel framework for service provisioning and composition in SIP-based peer-to-peer networks applying the principles of SOA. One key contribution of the framework is the approach to enable the provisioning and composition of services which is performed by applying SIP. Based on this, the framework provides a flexible and fast way to request the creation for composite services. Furthermore the framework enables to request and combine multimodal value-added services, which means that they are no longer limited regarding media types such as audio, video and text. The proposed framework has been validated by a prototype implementation
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