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Data Rate Performance Measurements of NFV Cloud Native Scaling for a Media Application

Data Rate Performance Measurements of NFV Cloud Native Scaling for a Media Application
Data Rate Performance Measurements of NFV Cloud Native Scaling for a Media Application
This dataset accompanies a paper that discusses the advantages of a 3GPP-compliant service-based architecture platform that demonstrates the concept of cloud-native service orchestration and routing for a media vertical sector application. Cloud-native service orchestration and routing is a complete end-to-end approach that enables virtualisation and management of multiple layers in the OSI model, which provides considerable flexibility and control to achieve delivery of QoS to users in the face of varying demand, at reasonable cost. The discussion is motivated by a customer-facing trial conducted in Bristol, UK where the platform was deployed as virtual network functions and the vertical service using the cloud-native orchestrator. The architecture of the system is presented, together with an exemplary media application illustrating the benefits of dynamic control of the whole service function. Three scenarios are described: a baseline case, where a single service instance handles requests from multiple clients at different locations, which can become overloaded with a consequent degradation in user experience; a static horizontally scaled-out service scenario, where service instances serving content are placed closest to users on edge hosts with associated performance gains in terms of reduced response time and networking costs, but with increased hosting costs; and a dynamically-managed horizontal scaling case, where storage service instances are enabled automatically based on location-specific demands when needed. It is illustrated that dynamic service instances based on sensing QoS metrics provides an opportunity to achieve a balance between user experience benefits of edge service provisioning and acceptable costs through avoiding waste of cloud resources at the edge.
IEEE DataPort
Melas, Panos
1b2fc675-1a90-465e-908d-19fa0d985523
Taylor, Steve
9ee68548-2096-4d91-a122-bbde65f91efb
Melas, Panos
1b2fc675-1a90-465e-908d-19fa0d985523
Taylor, Steve
9ee68548-2096-4d91-a122-bbde65f91efb

(2020) Data Rate Performance Measurements of NFV Cloud Native Scaling for a Media Application. IEEE DataPort doi:10.21227/2e1c-rd87 [Dataset]

Record type: Dataset

Abstract

This dataset accompanies a paper that discusses the advantages of a 3GPP-compliant service-based architecture platform that demonstrates the concept of cloud-native service orchestration and routing for a media vertical sector application. Cloud-native service orchestration and routing is a complete end-to-end approach that enables virtualisation and management of multiple layers in the OSI model, which provides considerable flexibility and control to achieve delivery of QoS to users in the face of varying demand, at reasonable cost. The discussion is motivated by a customer-facing trial conducted in Bristol, UK where the platform was deployed as virtual network functions and the vertical service using the cloud-native orchestrator. The architecture of the system is presented, together with an exemplary media application illustrating the benefits of dynamic control of the whole service function. Three scenarios are described: a baseline case, where a single service instance handles requests from multiple clients at different locations, which can become overloaded with a consequent degradation in user experience; a static horizontally scaled-out service scenario, where service instances serving content are placed closest to users on edge hosts with associated performance gains in terms of reduced response time and networking costs, but with increased hosting costs; and a dynamically-managed horizontal scaling case, where storage service instances are enabled automatically based on location-specific demands when needed. It is illustrated that dynamic service instances based on sensing QoS metrics provides an opportunity to achieve a balance between user experience benefits of edge service provisioning and acceptable costs through avoiding waste of cloud resources at the edge.

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More information

Published date: 31 May 2020

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 446306
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/446306
PURE UUID: c43457da-37a6-4d55-a35d-e891c13e3089
ORCID for Steve Taylor: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9937-1762

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 04 Feb 2021 17:30
Last modified: 06 May 2023 01:36

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Contributors

Contributor: Panos Melas
Contributor: Steve Taylor ORCID iD

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