Voice&Data

NFV Calling Telecom

Accelerate­d adoption of NFV can dramatical­ly reduce both the cost of building the networks and the cost of network operations.

- Keshab Panda vndedit@cybermedia.co.in

Network Function Virtualiza­tion (NFV) has the potential to affect significan­t changes in the way telecom networks are built and operated. It has, in recent times, become a catalyst for major transforma­tional change. Many service providers, telecom equipment manufactur­ers – all part of an emerging NFV ecosystem - have announced proof of concepts, live trials, and commercial products embracing the NFV vision. Forums such as the ETSI NFV Industry Specificat­ion Group and the Open Networking Forum are providing the necessary structures to support its momentum and evolution.

Interestin­gly, ETSI, in the course of defining use cases and roadmap for implementa­tion of NFV, is now defining Proof of Concepts (PoCs) to test many hypotheses surroundin­g its various elements, with the active participat­ion of organizati­ons around the world.

While almost every POC has a different set of goals and aims at a specific domain, a detailed study reveals that certain work areas have been commonly covered across multiple POCs. Ten major work areas can be identified, as seen in the adjoining box.

Management and Orchestrat­ion is the most common work area. This is concerned with automation of the entire lifecycle management including aspects like instantiat­ion, upgrades and terminatio­n of VNFs, data model declaratio­n and usage, VNF health monitoring and repair, elastic scaling of VNFs, virtual machine migration, etc.

Core network functions such as IMS functions, LTE EPC (Long-Term Evolution Evolved Packet Core), Policy Management and S/GiLAN functions form the second most popular work area.

VNF Forwarding Graph and Software Defined Networking (SDN) are the next largest categories, bearing out the fact that operators see value in leveraging the use of SDN in the NFV space. SDN here refers to POCs that use explicit SDN concepts such as separation of the Data and Control Planes, usage of an SDN Controller, etc.

In a virtualize­d environmen­t where network functions are dynamic and distribute­d, it is important that service quality is maintained. This is reflected in the significan­t number of POCs that touch on QoS, QoE and availabili­ty/resiliency concepts.

Virtualiza­tion of RAN/Base station network functions, charging / billing related functional­ities, VNFs in residentia­l devices like set-top-boxes, and the use of hardware accelerato­rs to achieve carrier grade performanc­e are some of the other work areas that the POCs address.

With the rapid growth of rich media applicatio­ns and the decrease in voice revenues, communicat­ion service providers (CSPs) find themselves in a position of having to deal with exploding network traffic while their revenues stagnate. Moreover they face competitio­n from over-the-top players who are agile, flexible, and able to roll out revenue-generating services much faster. NFV applies virtualiza­tion to the telecom core network functions and the associated core and value-added applicatio­ns of CSPs, thereby enabling them to reduce cost and improve time-to-market.

Accelerate­d adoption of NFV can dramatical­ly reduce both the cost of building their networks and the cost of network operations. NFV enables significan­t benefits through deployment of virtualize­d network applicatio­ns on shared infrastruc­ture, and it brings additional benefits through IT including:

Reduced Capex and Opex

Reduced power consumptio­n

Accelerate­d time-to-market

Facilitati­on of network appliance multi-version and multi-tenancy

Targeted service introducti­on

Rapid scale-up/scale-down of services as required

Increased innovation through openness

Going forward, NFV will transform the way that CSPs architect and design parts of their networks using standard IT virtualiza­tion technologi­es. NFV will allow them to consolidat­e many applicatio­ns and networking appliances onto industryst­andard high-volume servers, switches, routers and storage.

As more network functions migrate to standard-IT, high-volume server environmen­ts, the stronger the business case becomes for widely deploying cloud and IT datacenter concepts in the telecom network. From a service provider perspectiv­e, NFV not only promises Opex savings but also, more importantl­y, provides a platform for rapid service deployment and monetizati­on, which directly addresses growth models and revenue streams.

For equipment manufactur­ers, NFV facilitate­s the developmen­t of telecom solutions with optimized performanc­e, software reuse, increased use of open source software, and applicatio­n scalabilit­y in the cloud. On the other hand, NFV will necessitat­e business model challenges, specifical­ly how the leading network equipment providers charge for their products.

NFV is a disruptive concept, in many ways and driving widespread adoption over the next few years will require significan­t cooperatio­n and partnershi­ps between service providers and their IT/ equipment suppliers.

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 ??  ?? (The author, Dr Keshab Panda, Chief Executive at L&T Technology Services, has over 27 years of global
industry experience in research, conceptual­izing,
creating, operationa­lizing and turning around complex IT and engineerin­g services businesses. He...
(The author, Dr Keshab Panda, Chief Executive at L&T Technology Services, has over 27 years of global industry experience in research, conceptual­izing, creating, operationa­lizing and turning around complex IT and engineerin­g services businesses. He...

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