Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > A critical survey of Network Functions Virtuali...
View graph of relations

A critical survey of Network Functions Virtualization (NFV)

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Published

Standard

A critical survey of Network Functions Virtualization (NFV). / King, Daniel; Ford, Chris.
iPOP: IP Over Optical. Japan, 2013.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Harvard

King, D & Ford, C 2013, A critical survey of Network Functions Virtualization (NFV). in iPOP: IP Over Optical. Japan, 9th International Conference on IP+ Optical Network (iPOP 2013), Tokyo, Japan, 30/05/13. <http://www.pilab.jp/ipop2013/info/onlineproceedings.html>

APA

Vancouver

Author

Bibtex

@inproceedings{baf4f5f0991b4d2e9fc151178b49998f,
title = "A critical survey of Network Functions Virtualization (NFV)",
abstract = "Communication Service Provider (CSP) networks use a variety of proprietary appliances for network function when delivering services. Therefore, deploying a new network function often requires new hardware components. Integrating new equipment into the network requires space, power and the technical knowledge to deploy and operate the new network function. This problem is compounded by function and technology lifecycles which are becoming shorter as innovation accelerates in an increasingly network-centric connected world.The concept of virtualization is well-known and has been used for many years, including operating system virtualization (Virtual Machines) [1]; computational and application resource virtualization (Cloud Computing) [2]; link and node virtualization (Virtual Network Topologies) [3]; and data center virtualization (Virtual Data Center) [4].Network Functions Virtualization (NFV) is a new industry initiative [5] and aims to leverage existing virtualization concepts to consolidate function-specific network equipment onto standard high volume servers [6], switches and storage, which could be located in network nodes, data centers or at enterprise customer sites.",
keywords = "Network , Functions, Virtualization",
author = "Daniel King and Chris Ford",
year = "2013",
month = may,
day = "31",
language = "English",
booktitle = "iPOP",
note = "9th International Conference on IP+ Optical Network (iPOP 2013) ; Conference date: 30-05-2013 Through 31-05-2013",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - A critical survey of Network Functions Virtualization (NFV)

AU - King, Daniel

AU - Ford, Chris

PY - 2013/5/31

Y1 - 2013/5/31

N2 - Communication Service Provider (CSP) networks use a variety of proprietary appliances for network function when delivering services. Therefore, deploying a new network function often requires new hardware components. Integrating new equipment into the network requires space, power and the technical knowledge to deploy and operate the new network function. This problem is compounded by function and technology lifecycles which are becoming shorter as innovation accelerates in an increasingly network-centric connected world.The concept of virtualization is well-known and has been used for many years, including operating system virtualization (Virtual Machines) [1]; computational and application resource virtualization (Cloud Computing) [2]; link and node virtualization (Virtual Network Topologies) [3]; and data center virtualization (Virtual Data Center) [4].Network Functions Virtualization (NFV) is a new industry initiative [5] and aims to leverage existing virtualization concepts to consolidate function-specific network equipment onto standard high volume servers [6], switches and storage, which could be located in network nodes, data centers or at enterprise customer sites.

AB - Communication Service Provider (CSP) networks use a variety of proprietary appliances for network function when delivering services. Therefore, deploying a new network function often requires new hardware components. Integrating new equipment into the network requires space, power and the technical knowledge to deploy and operate the new network function. This problem is compounded by function and technology lifecycles which are becoming shorter as innovation accelerates in an increasingly network-centric connected world.The concept of virtualization is well-known and has been used for many years, including operating system virtualization (Virtual Machines) [1]; computational and application resource virtualization (Cloud Computing) [2]; link and node virtualization (Virtual Network Topologies) [3]; and data center virtualization (Virtual Data Center) [4].Network Functions Virtualization (NFV) is a new industry initiative [5] and aims to leverage existing virtualization concepts to consolidate function-specific network equipment onto standard high volume servers [6], switches and storage, which could be located in network nodes, data centers or at enterprise customer sites.

KW - Network

KW - Functions

KW - Virtualization

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

BT - iPOP

CY - Japan

T2 - 9th International Conference on IP+ Optical Network (iPOP 2013)

Y2 - 30 May 2013 through 31 May 2013

ER -