Broadband Forum unveils project on new broadband standard
A broadband experience will be provided to subscribers thanks to a new standard which enables operators to reconfigure a connection to meet the specific demands of the broadband application in use.
Broadband Forum’s work on WT-474 Subscriber Session Steering is well underway. The project will deliver flexible on-demand connectivity that detects traffic changes and automatically scales to preserve the user experience, bringing benefits to both the service provider and their customers. Essentially, this provides operators with a load balancing and service selection capability right at the ingress to the broadband network.
This will allow operators to better utilise network assets, save energy, and ensure their networks can run more efficiently. The ability to treat subscribers individually allows operators to use different network paths for subscribers with varying service offerings.
“Typically, traditional fixed broadband networks have relatively static configurations in the access network, with subscribers mapped to specific gateways,” says Jonathan Newton, Vodafone and co-director of the access and transport architecture work area at Broadband Forum. “Subscriber Session Steering breaks through restrictions on a service provider’s ability to offer innovative edge services, ensuring that the network is loaded evenly, coping with issues such as device failures, and allowing service providers to focus on service innovation.”
Using the CloudCO framework, Subscriber Session Steering can move a subscriber’s service to a different broadband network gateway (BNG) user plane (the function carrying the network user traffic) in real-time if it is not meeting the quality a customer demands for video streaming or gaming. For example, an operator can change the user plane location to improve the latency that is needed for an end-user’s gaming session.
Beyond gaming, operators can use the SDN-enabled capabilities to offer tailored packages for remote workers, telehealth use cases and smart home services, for example. For the end-user, they receive an experience as they are afforded on-demand access to low latency services, improved availability, and reduced maintenance. It will allow operators to offer a greater range of service levels with the knowledge of network costs in relation to each service offering.
“As we continue to migrate to a fully virtualised network, operators desire new tools to effectively manage and upgrade networks and differentiate the services they offer to customers,” says Ken Ko, managing director at Broadband Forum. “WT-474 is enabling increasing differentiation by dynamically steering subscribers to an optimised user plane function. An operator can now change the user plane location of an existing subscriber session in order to address a particular application’s service level agreement (SLA) requirements.”
Until operators can steer sessions, virtual BNG (vBNG) deployments will remain statically tied to specific servers and this limits the ability to scale effectively to meet demand. With session steering functionality, load balancing can be enabled across vBNG user plane instances and operators can manage software in a cloud native model, rolling out software in a controlled way.
Comment on this article below or via Twitter @IoTGN