Smart Cities, IoT, SDN, 5G Networks, Cloud Computing… Managing Complexity with SDN Orchestration Service & Content Providers’ Perspective of Smart Cities - How to enrich citizen experience using a pervasive urban SDN connectivity environment Ramon Casellas, Ricard Vilalta, Raül Muñoz and Ricardo Martínez The Software Defined Network – Programmable City Workshop - Bristol
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Smart Cities, IoT, SDN, 5G Networks, Cloud Computing… Managing Complexity with SDN Orchestration
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Smart Cities, IoT, SDN, 5G Networks, Cloud
Computing…
Managing Complexity with SDN Orchestration
Service & Content Providers’ Perspective of Smart Cities - How to enrich citizen
experience using a pervasive urban SDN connectivity environment
Ramon Casellas, Ricard Vilalta, Raül Muñoz and Ricardo Martínez
The Software Defined Network – Programmable City Workshop - Bristol
The Software Defined Network – Programmable City Workshop – BiO/ONF 2015/07/07
Introduction: Smart cities & IoT
Smart city Monitors critical infrastructures, optimizes resources, plans maintenance, offers services to citizens
and users.
50 billion devices expected to connect to the Internet by 2020 [Cisco, 2013]
Complexity management of monitoring, real-time data evaluation, …
Enhance/Automate decision-making?
Key elements:
Sensors/actuators (monitoring functionality, large amount of data flows)
Network (dynamic, large bandwidth)
Cloud (centralized approach) / Fog (distributed approach – end-user proximity)
Key requirements:
More agile IoT to accommodate the increased amount of transmitted data along with the expansion of connected devices
Flexible/elastic, dynamically adapting and large bandwidth network to connect sensors-to-cloud, cloud-to-cloud and multiple
end-users
High-capacity, fast processing, low latency to ensure quality of service and quality of experience
http://smartcity.bcn.cat
The Software Defined Network – Programmable City Workshop – BiO/ONF 2015/07/07
Take-away message 1:
Underlying Infrastructure to be complex & heterogeneous
To support new advanced city services and satisfactory user experience, the
underlying communications infrastructure needs to evolve, grow and adapt,
resulting in heterogeneous technologies (both at the data and control plane).
5G and beyond networks: 4G / 5G / mmWave /…
Net & Functions Virtualization, Fog & Cloud computing (local/remote processing)…
This network complexity needs to be managed
3
VNF InstancesvEPC
VNF
Instances
Edge DC
(NFVI-PoP)Core DC
(NFVI-POP)
Access Aggregation Core
RAN & Wireless Backhaul
(3G/LTE, Wi-FI)
LTEPhy
LTE stack
Metro DC
(NFVI-PoP)
VNF Instances
Radio Access
Network
(3G/LTE)
Wireless (Wifi,
Bluetooth, etc)
The Software Defined Network – Programmable City Workshop – BiO/ONF 2015/07/07
Take-away message 2:
Programmable optical technologies still much relevant
The optical technology still well positioned in view of latency / jitter and bandwidth
requirements Core of the infrastructure to support heterogeneous services.
Growth at the Data Center (Optical Interconnects) and Software Defined Optical
Transmission Flexible data plane supporting elastic, dynamic and reconfigurable
optical networks with scalable, power/cost efficient, and reliable technologies.
4
Electric
chargers
Air
quality
Noise
levels
Bikes
parking
Video
surveillance
Smart
vehicles
Car
parking
The Software Defined Network – Programmable City Workshop – BiO/ONF 2015/07/07
Take-away message 3:
Integration of SDN in a “CityOS” environment
A “SmartCityOS” platform can no longer rely on quasi-static network provisioning and will benefit from
network visibility & control and SDN principles. The re-configurability of the underlying networks
needs to be part of the “ToolBox” and “SystemCalls”
Unpredictability of traffic (bandwidth a scarce resource with latency requirements), dynamic management of services
Network Evolution for Smart City Services:
Infrastructure From a model of vertical (separated) networks for services to a convergent network model of
supporting diverse services and the implementation of new ones
Control SDN principles -- IoT Gateways (GW) and other network elements becoming SDN-enabled in order
to reduce operational and maintenance expenditures of the network.
5
Social impact and Citizenship
Services
Platform
Network
Council Corporate Network
(Fiber, WiFi, …)
Operators’ Network
(xDSL, GPRS, UMTS,…)
Sensors and Actuators
Aggregation and TransportNetwork
S/A
Wireless Access Networks
Opportunities for SDN
Platform
The Software Defined Network – Programmable City Workshop – BiO/ONF 2015/07/07
Take-away message 4:
The need to orchestrate heterogeneity
It is not reasonable to assume a single “God” SDN controller controlling such
complexity, and we will need to manage vendor islands and segmentation
Scalable solutions will need to rely on abstraction, virtualization and orchestration
of cloud / network services
Example: Orchestration of heterogeneous transport networks – STRAUSS Control