The academic and professional community has recently started to develop the concept of 6G networks. The scientists have defined key performance indicators and pursued large-scale automation, ambient sensing intelligence, and pervasive artificial intelligence. They put great efforts into implementing new network access and edge computing solutions. However, further progress depends on developing a more flexible core infrastructure according to more complex QoS requirements. Our research aims to provide 5G/6G core flexibility by customizing and optimizing network slices and introducing a higher level of programmability. We bind similar services in a group, manage them as a single slice, and enable a higher level of programmability as a prerequisite for dynamic QoS. The current 5G solutions primarily use predefined queues, so we have developed highly flexible, dynamic queue management software and moved it entirely to the application layer (reducing dependence on the physical network infrastructure). Further, we have emulated a testbed environment as realistically as possible to verify the proposed model capabilities. Obtained results confirm the validity of the proposed dynamic QoS management model for configuring queues’ parameters according to the service management requirements. Moreover, the proposed solution can also be applied efficiently to 5G core networks to resolve complex service requirements.
Software-defined networking (SDN) provides many benefits, including traffic programmability, agility, and network automation. However, budget constraints burdened with technical (e.g., scalability, fault tolerance, security issues) and, sometimes, business challenges (user acceptance and confidence of network operators) make providers indecisive for full SDN deployment. Therefore, incremental deployment of SDN functionality through the placement of a limited set of SDN devices among traditional devices represents a rational and efficient environment that can offer customers modern and more data-intensive services. However, while hybrid SDN provides many benefits, it also has specific challenges addressed in the literature. This paper answers one of these challenges by presenting the research and development of a new load balancing scheme
Software-defined networking (SDN) provides many benefits, including traffic programmability, agility, and network automation. However, budget constraints burdened with technical (e.g., scalability, fault tolerance, security issues) and, sometimes, business challenges (user acceptance and confidence of network operators) make providers indecisive for full SDN deployment. Therefore, incremental deployment of SDN functionality through the placement of a limited set of SDN devices among traditional devices represents a rational and efficient environment that can offer customers modern and more data-intensive services. However, while hybrid SDN provides many benefits, it also has specific challenges addressed in the literature. This paper answers one of these challenges by presenting the research and development of a new load balancing scheme in the hybrid SDN environment built with a minimal SDN device set (controller and one switch). We propose a novel load balancing scheme to monitor current server load indicators and apply multi-parameter metrics for scheduling connections to balance the load on the servers as efficiently as possible. The base of the new load balancing scheme is continuous monitoring of server load indicators and implementations of multi-parameter metrics (CPU load, I/O Read, I/O Write, Link Upload, Link Download) for scheduling connections. The testing performed on servers aims to balance the server's load as efficiently as possible. The obtained results have shown that this mechanism achieves better results than existing load balancing schemes in traditional and SDN networks. Moreover, a proposed load balancing scheme can be used with various services and applied in any client-server environment.
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