1 / 11

NVRG Charter Revision

NVRG Charter Revision. Joe Touch, USC/ISI. Draft charter 5/22/09.

lance-kent
Download Presentation

NVRG Charter Revision

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NVRG Charter Revision Joe Touch, USC/ISI

  2. Draft charter 5/22/09 • Recent developments in networking are aiming at better utilizing infrastructure in terms of reusing a single physical or logical resource for multiple other network instances, or to aggregate multiple these resources to obtain more "functionality". These resource can be network components, such as, for example, routers, switches or hosts, and also services, such as, for example, name mapping systems. Typically, this is referred to as Virtual Networks, where a resource is either re-used for multiple networks or multiple resources are aggregated for virtual resource.

  3. Para 2 • Important properties of Virtual Networks are i) the level of participation of each resource and ii) the clear separation of any virtual network to all others. Each resource can be sliced so that it can be part of multiple Virtual Networks, but on the other hand does virtualization guarentee the clear separation of each network, so that actions in one network do not affect the operation of any other network.

  4. Para 3 • However, in the network community, Virtual Networks is a very broad term, ranging from running multiple wave lengths over a fiber, MPLS, virtual routers, to overlay systems. This leads to deployment of single technologies in parts of the Internet or other IP-based networks, but lacks a common understanding of what virtualized networks is causing to IP-based networks, or how Virtual Networks is applied in favorable way. This leads to the introduction of virtualization in an uncoordinated way between the various players, such as network operators, vendors, service providers and testbed providers (e.g. GENI, FEDERICA, etc) without considerations about the overall impact on the system level.

  5. Para 4 • The Virtual Networks Research Group (VNRG) provides a forum for interchange of ideas among a group of network researchers with an interest in network virtualization in the context of the Interent and also beyond the current Internet.

  6. Para 5 • The RG works on a set of principles of virtual networks that a single physical resource can be re-used by multiple entities with a clear separation between the actions taken by the single entities. Virtualization delivers an abstraction to the user (i.e., not necessarily a human but a service or whatever) referring to the decoupling from the physical resource, i.e., the abstraction is not bound to a single resource but can be relocated but is a logical structure. Virtualization also offers recursion, i.e., an already virtualized network can again include virtual networks.

  7. Charter Tasks • The group will address the following research challenges: • Consider a whole system for virtualized networks and not only single components or a limited set of components • Identifying architectural challenges resulting from virtual networks • Recursive network management of virtual networks • Emerging technological and implementation issues.

  8. Contact Info. • Web site: http://user.informatik.uni-goettingen.de/~stiemer/nvrg/ • Mailing list: Open mailing list to anybody, just needs signing up with the list list's address: nvrg@listserv.gwdg.de signing up: https://listserv.gwdg.de/mailman/listinfo/nvrg

  9. Items from mailing list • Add circuit/link# (Kobayashi) • Too fuzzy; focus on interop. control of testbeds+ (Kempf) • Enable foreign resources, interconnecting VNs+*, questions 2nd half Para 4 (Botero & Hesselbach) • Prob. Statement*# and requirements# needed, more research points needed* (Papadimitriou) • (+Görg) • Document current approaches (*Manner) • Industry vs. testbed differences, vendor input, slice isolation, repeatability, visibility (Falk) • Separate net virt. from OS virt., no repeatability or visibility, resource mgt. that focuses on net side, skip term ‘slice’, add other testbeds [CoreLab, AKARI], skip testbed unification (#Touch)

  10. Steps - Touch • Steps 1: • define a common virtual network framework (what this BOF is for) • determine how providers can offer VNFs as a service • determine how to provision a VNF across providers • integrate VNFs with slice reservation systems

  11. Steps - Bless • identify the virtual network resources that need to be controlled and managed, derive some requirements for them • work on a network virtualization framework (identifying the different roles/actors and their interaction). • identify control interfaces as well as requirements for interoperability, especially in the background of creating and running virtual networks across provider domains.

More Related