The Creation Phase in Network Slicing: From a Service Order to an Operative Network Slice
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Ordoñez-Lucena, José; Adamuz Hinojosa, Óscar Ramón; Ameigeiras Gutiérrez, Pablo José; Muñoz Luengo, Pablo; Ramos Muñoz, Juan José; Folgueira Chavarría, Jesús; López, DiegoEditorial
IEEE
Materia
Network Slicing SDN NFV Service Catalog Slice Instance Creation
Date
2018-08Referencia bibliográfica
J. Ordonez-Lucena et al., "The Creation Phase in Network Slicing: From a Service Order to an Operative Network Slice," 2018 European Conference on Networks and Communications (EuCNC), 2018, pp. 1-36, doi: 10.1109/EuCNC.2018.8443255.
Patrocinador
This work is partially supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness and the European Regional Development Fund (Project TEC2016-76795-C6-4-R); Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and Sport (FPU Grant 16/03354); University of Granada, Andalusian regional Government and European Social Fund under Youth Employment Program.Résumé
—Network slicing is considered a key mechanism to
serve the multitude of tenants (e.g. vertical industries) targeted
by forthcoming 5G systems in a flexible and cost-efficient manner.
In this paper, we present a SDN/NFV architecture with multitenancy support. This architecture enables a network slice
provider to deploy network slice instances for multiple tenants
on-the-fly, and simultaneously provision them with isolation
guarantees. Following the Network Slice as-a-Service delivery
model, a tenant may access a Service Catalog, selecting the
slice that best fits its needs and ordering its deployment. This
work provides a detailed view on the stages that a network
slice provider must follow to deploy the ordered network slice
instance, accommodating it into a multi-domain infrastructure,
and putting it operative for tenant’s consumption. These stages
address critical issues identified in the literature, including (i) the
mapping from high-level service requirements to network functions and infrastructure requirements, (ii) the admission control,
and (iii) the specific information a network slice descriptor should
have. With the proposed architecture and the recommended set
of stages, network slice providers can deploy (and later operate)
slice instances with great agility, flexibility, and full automation.