Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/22639
Title: CloudSimHypervisor: Modelling and Simulating Network Slicing in Software-Defined Cloud Networks
Authors: Nyanteh, AO
Li, M
Abbod, MF
Al-Raweshidy, H
Keywords: virtual software-defined network;OpenFlow;network virtualization hypervisor;tenant controllers;CloudSimHypervisor
Issue Date: 12-May-2021
Publisher: IEEE
Citation: Nyanteh, A. O., Li, M., Abbod, M.F. and Al-Raweshidy, H. (2021) 'CloudSimHypervisor: Modeling and Simulating Network Slicing in Software-Defined Cloud Networks,' IEEE Access, 9, pp. 72484-72498. doi: 10.1109/ACCESS.2021.3079501.
Abstract: © Copyright 2021, A. O. Nyanteh et al. Software-Defined Networking (SDN) is an innovative technology which provides a programmable network control which is decoupled from the physical infrastructure. Network Virtualization (NV) is the phenomenon where a given physical network infrastructure and its resources are abstracted to create multiple logical virtual network slices of the underlying substrate. NV enables independent virtual networks to co-exist on one or more shared physical network infrastructure. Edge computing makes use of the edge resources in close proximity to end-users to reduce service delay and the network traffic volume in the end-to-end networks. Similarly, network slicing which is a key enabling technology for 5G networks is designed to support different services from different platforms at different scales enables sharing of physical network infrastructure on many different virtual network layers. These innovative technologies and strategies have gained significant attention from both academia and industry as they have the potential to maximize network resource utilization and optimize end–to–end network service delivery in 5G solutions deployment. To enable continuous simulation and development of applicable 5G networking concepts using these technologies, there is a need for an accessible and easy-to-learn testbed which is able to efficiently measure the performance of physical and virtual network capacities, provisioning approaches and management of multiple architectural models using large-scale network slicing configurations in a repeatable and controllable manner. These tools and toolkits provide scalable, lightweight and controlled cloud simulation environments necessary to analyse network traffic flows, allocation capacities and policies and the behaviour of multiple heterogeneous networks at an extremely low cost as compared to the huge financial commitments involved in conducting similar experiments in a real-life event. Existing solutions do not support Network Slicing and end- to -end heterogenous network automation which are key enablers of 5G network implementation. Hence in this paper, the CloudSimHypervisor framework is developed in this based on CloudSimSDN-NFV. The complete architecture and features of the CloudSimHypervisor framework and some used cases are presented in this paper. We validate the CloudSimHypervisor framework with two use case experiments in the cloud computing environment: Joint compute and network resource utilization and network traffic prioritization. Results from these experiments display the efficiency of the CloudSimHypervisor in estimating and measuring processing speed, transmission speed, compute and network usage efficiency and energy consumption.
URI: https://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/22639
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2021.3079501
Appears in Collections:Dept of Electronic and Electrical Engineering Research Papers

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