Towards A Marketplace for Multi-domain Cloud Network Slicing: Use Cases

Author(s):  
Asma Islam Swapna ◽  
Raphael Vicente Rosa ◽  
Christian Esteve Rothenberg ◽  
Ilias Sakellariou ◽  
Lefteris Mamatas ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Vol 59 (3) ◽  
pp. 91-97
Author(s):  
Stuart Clayman ◽  
Augusto Neto ◽  
Fabio Verdi ◽  
Sand Correa ◽  
Silvio Sampaio ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Luis M. Contreras ◽  
Samier Barguil ◽  
Ricard Vilalta ◽  
Victor López

AbstractNetwork slicing will permit offering to vertical customers tailored end-to-end logical networks in an on-demand fashion, on top of a common telecom infrastructure, achieving a Slices-as-a-Service (SlaaS) business model. This is possible due to the progressive introduction of network softwarization techniques, such as programmability and virtualization, into existing operational networks, enabling dynamic and flexible provision of slices. Those vertical customers could require the control not only of the network functions composing the end-to-end service, but also of the connectivity among them, e.g., for influencing the paths for steering traffic among function instances. However, this can be problematic since decisions from one vertical customer can collide with decisions from others. One aspect not yet sufficiently investigated is how to permit vertical customers to jointly control the service functions and the underlay connectivity, in such a way that could operate the allocated slice as if it was actually a dedicated network entirely for them. This paper explores some architectural proposition in this respect illustrated with some potential use cases and it provides an example of the provision of SlaaS for a vertical customer.


2020 ◽  
Vol 26 (8) ◽  
pp. 6015-6041
Author(s):  
Shimaa A. Abdel Hakeem ◽  
Anar A. Hady ◽  
HyungWon Kim

2019 ◽  
Vol 65 (2) ◽  
pp. 444-453 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qi Wang ◽  
Jose Alcaraz-Calero ◽  
Ruben Ricart-Sanchez ◽  
Maria Barros Weiss ◽  
Anastasius Gavras ◽  
...  

Network slicing is widely studied as an essential technological enabler for supporting diverse use case specific services through network virtualization. Industry verticals, consisting of diverse use cases requiring different network resources, are considered key customers for network slices. However, different approaches for network slice provisioning to industry verticals and required business models are still largely unexplored and require further work. Focusing on technical and business aspects of network slicing, this article develops three new business models, enabled by different distributions of business roles and management exposure between business actors. The feasibility of the business models is studied in terms of; the costs and benefits to business actors, mapping to use cases in various industry verticals, and the infrastructure costs of common and dedicated virtualization infrastructures. Finally, a strategic approach and relevant recommendations are proposed for major business actors, national regulatory authorities, and standards developing organizations.


2021 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas B. Maciel ◽  
Emidio P. Neto ◽  
Kevin B. Costa ◽  
Mathews P. Lima ◽  
Vitor G. Lopes ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leandro Almeida ◽  
Paulo Ditarso Maciel ◽  
Fabio Luciano Verdi

Abstract Cloud Network Slicing is a new research area that brings together cloud computing and network slicing in an end-to-end environment. In this context, understanding the existing scientific contributions and gaps is crucial to driving new research in this field. This article presents a complete quantitative analysis of scientific publications on the Cloud Network Slicing, based on a systematic mapping study. The results indicate the situation of the last ten years in the research area, presenting data such as industry involvement, most cited articles, most active researchers, publications over the years, main places of publication, as well as well-developed areas and gaps. Future guidelines for scientific research are also discussed.


Author(s):  
Mark Roddy ◽  
Thuy Truong ◽  
Paul Walsh ◽  
Mustafa Al Bado ◽  
Yanxin Wu ◽  
...  

Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 229
Author(s):  
Lorena Chinchilla-Romero ◽  
Jonathan Prados-Garzon ◽  
Pablo Ameigeiras ◽  
Pablo Muñoz ◽  
Juan M. Lopez-Soler

Fifth Generation (5G) is expected to meet stringent performance network requisites of the Industry 4.0. Moreover, its built-in network slicing capabilities allow for the support of the traffic heterogeneity in Industry 4.0 over the same physical network infrastructure. However, 5G network slicing capabilities might not be enough in terms of degree of isolation for many private 5G networks use cases, such as multi-tenancy in Industry 4.0. In this vein, infrastructure network slicing, which refers to the use of dedicated and well isolated resources for each network slice at every network domain, fits the necessities of those use cases. In this article, we evaluate the effectiveness of infrastructure slicing to provide isolation among PLs in an industrial private 5G network. To that end, we develop a queuing theory-based model to estimate the E2E mean packet delay of the infrastructure slices. Then, we use this model to compare the E2E mean delay for two configurations, i.e., dedicated infrastructure slices with segregated resources for each PL against the use of a single shared infrastructure slice to serve the performance-sensitive traffic from PLs. Also we evaluate the use of TSN against bare Ethernet to provide layer 2 connectivity among the 5G system components. We use a complete and realistic setup based on experimental and simulation data of the scenario considered. Our results support the effectiveness of infrastructure slicing to provide isolation in performance among the different slices. Then, using dedicated slices with segregated resources for each PL might reduce the number of the production downtimes and associated costs as the malfunctioning of a PL will not affect the network performance perceived by the performance-sensitive traffic from other PLs. Last, our results show that, besides the improvement in performance, TSN technology truly provides full isolation in the transport network compared to standard Ethernet thanks to traffic prioritization, traffic regulation, and bandwidth reservation capabilities.


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