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How OPNFV and ETSI NFV are Advancing NFV Adoption

By Blog

ETSI was the birthplace of the NFV concept in 2012, and OPNFV was launched just two years later with many of the same members to help bring NFV from specs to reality using open source methodologies. Marc Cohn, who is an active participant in many open communities including OPNFV, OpenDaylight and the Open Networking Foundation, recently published an article for SDxCentral about how OPNFV and ETSI continue to work in tandem to accelerate NFV adoption.

He says, “OPNFV and ETSI NFV ISG share many common members, providing continuity and collaboration across the NFV specification and implementation activities. Both the ETSI NFV ISG and OPNFV senior leadership teams are aligned on their common mission—to stimulate a vibrant open ecosystem to ultimately drive adoption for NFV. And what we’ve seen is that instead of specifications solely driving implementation, the OPNFV reference platform will help drive the requirements, which in term will drive evolution of the reference platform.”

He goes on to discuss where the two initiatives complement each other and what we can expect to see in the long-term. Read the full article here: ‘WE’ is ‘Us’: How OPNFV and ETSI NFV are collaborating to accelerate NFV adoption.

OPNFV’s First Milestone: A Toe-dip in the River

By Blog

Eight months ago OPNFV began uniting the networking industry around a mission to bring NFV from specification to implementation. Because the challenges facing us as an industry around NFV are so complex we realized none of us could go it alone and that collaboration is key. We require participation from a broad range of perspectives in order to create a common platform that can be woven into the fabric of any network and operate at scale. OPNFV has created a place where users and vendors can solve this problem by working on integration, testing, deployment, and infrastructure issues together. The current of interest is growing stronger with an increasing number of people wanting a voice in our community and a seat at the member table.

Today we are pleased to share the first milestone in this united effort–the availability of OPNFV Arno, the industry’s first open source platform for NFV. What this first release does is give all of us an early look at what the future can hold for NFV. Today you can download OPNFV Arno, start tire-kicking basic NFV use cases, and even trying out Virtual Network Functions (VNFs) on top of the platform and and we hope that you do. Our community will benefit from your early experiences, feedback and input so we can iterate further and release faster. As a user, please share your feedback to opnfv-users@lists.opnfv.org. If you’re a developer, join the mailing lists or weekly technical calls to help shape the direction of OPNFV.

While the code milestone is significant, an even more important accomplishment is the foundation and process we’ve built for future work. Forming a passionate community, establishing our continuous integration tool chain and processes, launching our bare metal data center and community lab program, and developing working relationships with upstream industry partners–these are the strongholds that make our code better and development process more agile in the long-run. I’ve personally been inspired by the determination of our contributors and committers as they’ve worked long hours addressing bugs and troubleshooting a range of infrastructure and code issues.

Arno is a river in Italy; our release names are river-themed, a decision made by the community, inspired in part because of the “upstream” work we are doing as a project. In open source, working “upstream” means you contribute your code back to the main source rather than forking or branching it. The OPNFV community uses code from a range of different open source projects (e.g. Ceph, KVM, OpenDaylight, OpenStack, Open vSwitch), integrates those components into an end-to-end platform, and contributes changes back to the upstream groups. Work in open source is based on trust, so building trust among these communities is always primary goal. We benefit from their knowledge and open R&D in their areas of expertise, which allows us to be laser-focused on NFV.

As William Shakespeare said, “We know what we are, but know not what we may be.” Today is a milestone for OPNFV and the industry, but it is the first of many to come. We are on a journey to transform global telecommunications infrastructure and we hope you’ll join us.

Comments from Alcatel-Lucent
“The CloudBand team has long been a staunch supporter of the open source approach to networking,” said Ron Haberman, vice president and general manager CloudBand, Alcatel-Lucent. “We believe that NFV drives new possibilities for the telecommunications industry and that the true way in which rapid progress can be made is through openness and collaboration.”

Comments from ARM
“The community spirit of OPNFV is driving a unique level of industry collaboration, enabling significant momentum to address the broad set of challenges that must be solved for NFV to be realized,” said Charlene Marini, Vice President, Networking Segment Marketing at ARM. “The Arno release is an important step in building infrastructure for a common software platform that can scale across diverse topologies and silicon architectures to enable an intelligent flexible cloud for efficient NFV infrastructure.”

Comments from AT&T
“OPNFV is working diligently to accelerate the industry build and continuous integration and build of the NFV platform. And AT&T is looking forward to the progress. Arno is the first step in this direction. The networking industry has become more comfortable collaborating in an open forum to create common approaches. In the future, common use cases, traffic profiles and benchmarks, along with automated testing on an integrated build environment like ARNO will help advance the NFV platform.”

Comments from Brocade
“Service Provider and Enterprise customers are looking to the vendor community to deliver unified, highly reliable, saleable and open solutions for the next era of networking and OPNFV’s first release is a direct response to their demands,” said Ken Cheng, CTO of Brocade and a member of the OPNFV Board of Directors. “We believe this is a critical first step in driving broad adoption of NFV and open source infrastructure solutions when combined with OpenDaylight and OpenStack.”

Comments from China Mobile
“We are extremely excited to witness the successful release of Arno in OPNFV,” said Yang Zhiqiang, Deputy General Manager, China Mobile Research Institute. “As the very first deliverable release, Arno marks a significant milestone of OPNFV on its goal of offering an integrated and open source NFV platform. This release will energize the whole NFV community and further speed up the development of NFV industry.”

Comments from Cisco
“When looking to implement NFV, there is a need to deploy a service with an easy way to operate as a service chain. We need a common platform integrating several open source projects to move this forward with our partners, said Dave Ward, Chief Architect, Cisco. “The OPNFV Arno release is a first step in the right direction to drive open source projects that support a platform for developers and the community.”

Comments from Dell
“Dell is committed to developing solutions based on open standards and open source to provide customers with flexible solutions today and tomorrow,” said Jai Menon, Chief Research Officer and Vice President, Dell Research. “The advancement of NFV using open standards and open source is leading to more agile, efficient network infrastructures, which will help create new business models. The OPNFV Arno release is a critical step towards an open source software foundation to power a vibrant ecosystem.”

Comments from Dorado Software
“The potential of NFV is closely tied to the ability to manage the diverse areas of rapid innovation that contributes to its success. A key success factor is having a common technology baseline to facilitate both collaboration and differentiation,” said Chris Simon, Vice President, Service Provider and NFV Business Unit. “Dorado looks forward to leveraging OPNFV’s Arno release to offer service providers immediate solutions for their end-to-end NFV service orchestration needs.”

Comments from ENEA
“The Arno release is a welcome first stab at a turnkey installation process allowing creation of NFV software platforms”, said Daniel Forsgren, SVP Product Management, Enea. “As Silver members, Enea has already leveraged the OPNFV project creating the first ARM-based OPNFV reference platform. With an intent to be a key contributor in the open source community we will upstream as much as possible of that work to the OPNFV baseline.”

Comments from Ericsson
“The on-going progress of NFV architecture is opening up new opportunities in the network.  Ericsson is pleased to contribute to the OPNFV project and other open source collaborations to continue this progress,” said Magnus Furustam, Head of Product Area Cloud Systems at Ericsson. “We see the release of Arno as an important step in realizing the benefits of the NFV architecture.”

Comments from HP
“One of the major goals for creating OPNFV was to accelerate implementation and interoperability,” said Prodip Sen, CTO, NFV at HP. “The goal was to use the open source collaborative model for essentially short-circuiting the typical long telecom standardization process. Now in just eight months since formation, we have been able to create an integration environment that allows automated build, deployment and testing of some of the key resource orchestration and network control components for the NFV infrastructure. This is a supreme testament to the power of the collaborative community model and the strength of the vibrant NFV ecosystem I and validates the new path to standardization.”

Comments from Huawei
“OPNFV helps accelerate the maturity of NFV, which enables the operators and vendors to achieve great successes.” said Mr. Weimin Ying, Huawei NFV Leader and President of Wireless R&D. “Huawei considers the OPNFV community very important and the Arno release is a significant milestone achievement. Huawei will continue to contribute to OPNFV and help our customers and partners to succeed”.

Comments from Intel
“NFV is already demonstrating the ability to reshape network infrastructure business models for agility and efficiency. Intel is investing in technology innovation, ecosystem building, and deep industry engagements to deploy solutions that will transform the network,” said Sandra Rivera, Vice President, Data Center Group and General Manager, Network Platforms Group, Intel Corporation. “The OPNFV Arno release represents a critical advancement towards an integrated, standardized open source platform that will accelerate the pace of NFV adoption.”

Comments from Juniper Networks
“Juniper Networks is pleased to be part of the OPNFV standards body supporting the Arno release,” said Paul Obsitnik, vice president of Service Provider Marketing for Juniper Networks. “We believe this is a foundational step towards realizing business value from NFV and driving greater innovation in service provider and enterprise networks.”

Comments from NTT DOCOMO
“OPNFV has grown into a global center of the industry for the development of a common NFV platform. It plays a crucial role in accelerating the market delivery of interoperable NFV solutions,” said Hiroshi Nakamura, Senior Vice President and Managing Director of R&D Strategy Department, NTT DOCOMO, INC. “We are really excited about Arno, the first software release from OPNFV, and truly appreciate the dedicated efforts of the developers and the whole OPNFV community. We are looking forward to OPNFV to further progress and succeed with the support from the community.”

Comments from NEC
“An Open Platform for NFV is a key element for the success of an NFV ecosystem. NEC, as an IT and NW technology leader, has commercially delivered SDN/NFV solutions, including vEPC and vCPE, and is delighted to collaborate with its partners in the OPNFV project on creating a carrier-grade reference implementation for immediate and future operator needs” said Atsuo Kawamura, Senior Vice President, NEC Corporation. “OPNFV is the integrating platform for our Upstream First strategy, and the OPNFV Arno release is a major accomplishment. NEC is committed to continue working with our partners in OPNFV to achieve a platform that addresses important operator requirements.”

Comments from Red Hat
“Red Hat is deeply engaged in using open source and upstream collaboration to help communication service providers transform their networks.  This major industry shift has taken another step forward with the OPNFV Arno release showcasing open source software as a reference implementation for an NFV platform.”

Comments from SK Telecom
“NFV has been very successful in engaging the overall telecom industry to define high level architectures and specifications”, stated Myung-Soon Park, Head of Emerging Technology R&D Center, SK Telecom.  “The OPNFV Arno release is a significant first step towards materializing the specifications”, and “OPNFV will continue to play increasingly important role in accelerating timely and efficient innovative telecom solutions including 5G by defining tightly integrated and standardized environment.”

Comments from Telecom Italia
“After being among the founders of ETSI NFV ISG we were also within the starting members team of the OPNFV community. OPNFV can play a key role and might become the reference community shaping the actual NFV implementation,” said Luigi Licciardi, Head of Standard Coordination and Technology Disclosure, Global Advisory Services, Operations, Telecom Italia SpA. “In fact, as we are facing this major industry transformation in our infrastructure and in the way we will develop and operate services, the OPNFV Arno release represents a first major achievement and the completion of an important learning cycle regarding a new way of work and collaborate within the industry; this will help the trial and adoption of NFV within our companies.”

Comments from ZTE
“OPNFV collaboration allows the industry to address critical concerns up-front and build a common reference platform to innovate and provide new services much faster. The OPNFV Arno release demonstrated the collective effort and achievements of vendors and end-users to accelerate the evolution towards NFV,” said Dr. Zhao Xianming, CTO, ZTE Corporation. “ZTE continues to invest in ecosystem for NFV transformation and invites partners to join us in the ZTE Open SDN/NFV Lab to experience the solutions based on open standards and open source software.”

 

OPNFV Delivers Open Source Software to Enable Deployment of Network Functions Virtualization Solutions

By Announcements

Open source software communities, service providers and network and technology vendors come together to deliver an industry-standard open source NFV platform

SAN FRANCISCO, June 4, 2015 — The OPNFV Project, a carrier-grade, integrated, open source platform to accelerate the introduction of new Network Functions Virtualization (NFV) products and services, today announced the availability of OPNFV Arno, the community’s first software release. Arno is aimed at anyone who is exploring NFV deployments, developing Virtual Network Functions (VNF) applications, or interested in NFV performance and use case-based testing. This developer-focused release provides an initial build of the NFV Infrastructure (NFVI) and Virtual Infrastructure Manager (VIM) components of ETSI NFV architecture.

In the eight months since launching, OPNFV has brought together more than 100 developers from network operators, solution providers and vendors who are collaborating to build the foundation for a flexible open source NFV platform by integrating and testing components from relevant upstream projects. The OPNFV community has quickly formed and built processes to work on 2 projects that span the range of requirements needed to build NFV solutions. The work is supported by 57 member companies who bring diverse perspectives and capabilities for addressing the industry’s need for a standard, open approach to deploying NFV platforms.

“Only eight months after its formation, OPNFV has met one of its major goals by creating an integrated build, deployment and testing environment that accelerates NFV implementation and interoperability,” said Prodip Sen, chairman of the OPNFV board of directors. “With Arno, we now have a solid foundation for testing some of the key resource orchestration and network control components for NFV. This is great a testament to the power of an open source collaborative model and the strength of the NFV ecosystem.”

“The increasing interest and demand for quicker adoption and implementation of NFV is the driving force behind the collaborative efforts of the OPNFV community,” said Chris Price, technical steering committee chair, OPNFV. “Arno is a major step in achieving these goals, implementing a congruent NFV platform for accelerated development and application deployment across the industry.”

Key capabilities of OPNFV Arno:

  • Availability of baseline platform: Arno enables continuous integration, automated deployment and testing of components from upstream projects such as Ceph, KVM, OpenDaylight, OpenStack and Open vSwitch. It allows developers and users to automatically install and explore the platform.
  • Ability to deploy and test various VNFs: End users and developers can deploy their own or third party VNFs on Arno to test its functionality and performance in various traffic scenarios and use cases.
  • Availability of test infrastructure in community-hosted labs: Agile testing plays a crucial role in the OPNFV platform. With Arno, the project is unveiling a community test labs infrastructure where users can test the platform in different environments and on different hardware. This test labs infrastructure enables the platform to be exercised in different NFV scenarios to ensure that the various open source components come together to meet vendor and end user needs.
  • Allows automatic continuous integration of specific components: As upstream projects are developed independently they require testing of various OPNFV use cases to ensure seamless integration and interworking within the platform. OPNFV’s automated toolchain allows continuous automatic builds and verification.

 

“Delivering Arno within eight months is a true testament to the benefits of an open source collaborative model,” said Heather Kirksey, director, OPNFV. “With Arno, end users can delve into the platform and begin testing use cases right away. Our goal for future releases is to continue enhancing the platform with new features that address specific real-world scenarios and carrier-grade requirements.”

 

Comments from OpenDaylight
“NFV has gone from idea to reality so quickly. I am hearing from every major operator their plans to deploy SDN and NFV and see the OPNFV project as playing a critical role in this vision becoming a reality. It’s great to see the OPNFV community has chosen OpenDaylight as a key component of their project and the Arno release,” said Neela Jacques, executive director, OpenDaylight.

Comments from OpenStack
“Delivering Arno in a short amount of time shows the potential of open source collaboration,” said Jonathan Bryce, executive director, OpenStack Foundation. “The OpenStack community looks forward to working closely with OPNFV and accelerating the evolution of NFV.”

Comments from ETSI NFV ISG
“We are very happy to see the adoption of components of ETSI NFV architecture in Arno. This is a major milestone for OPNFV and the NFV ecosystem in building the integrated open source NFV platform. We congratulate the community and are looking forward to future releases,” said Dr. Steven Wright (AT&T), chairman of ETSI NFV ISG.

Information about Arno is available here: https://www.opnfv.org/arno.

Those who are interested in collaborating on OPNFV and shaping the future of networking can learn more here: https://www.opnfv.org/developers/how-participate .

About Open Platform for NFV (OPNFV)
Open Platform for NFV (OPNFV) is a carrier-grade, integrated, open source platform to accelerate the introduction of new NFV products and services. It brings together service providers, vendors and users to collaborate in an open forum on advancing the state-of-the-art in NFV. For more information, please visit: http://www.opnfv.org.

OPNFV is a Collaborative Project at The Linux Foundation. Linux Foundation Collaborative Projects are independently funded software projects that harness the power of collaborative development to fuel innovation across industries and ecosystems.www.linuxfoundation.org

Additional Resources
Getting Started with OPNFV
Joining the OPNFV Community
OPNFV Blog
OPNFV Events

Media Inquires
Jill Lovato
OPNFV Project
pr@opnfv.org

EMC and VMware Join the OPNFV Project

By Announcements

New members join to advance open source Network Functions Virtualization

SAN FRANCISCO, May 22, 2015 — The OPNFV Project, a community-led industry supported open source flexible platform for Network Functions Virtualization (NFV), today announced that EMC has joined as a Platinum member, and VMware has joined as a Silver member. EMC joins other Platinum members AT&T, Brocade, China Mobile, Cisco, Dell, Ericsson, HP, Huawei, IBM, Intel, Juniper Networks, NEC, Nokia Networks, DOCOMO, Red Hat, Telecom Italia, Vodafone and ZTE.

OPNFV is an open source project focused on accelerating the evolution of NFV. The project has united over 100 developers from service providers and commercial suppliers to collaborate on the development of a carrier-grade, integrated, open source flexible platform for NFV. Members are committed to help advance the creation of a flexible, open source framework for NFV.

EMC is driving innovation for telcos as the industry moves to adopt software-defined technologies in a rapidly transforming market. Together with VMware, the companies offer a deep ecosystem of solutions, technologies and partnerships that enable telcos to leverage NFV, big data and the cloud to transform their core networks.

“The telecom industry is undergoing a fundamental transformation. EMC is pleased to be part of OPNFV and to support its mission to use open source in order to accelerate the evolution of NFV for the unique needs of the telecom industry during this time of massive change. Today EMC provides unique capabilities that enable carriers to optimize operations and monetize real-time data. Through our participation in OPNFV, we’re committed to innovating for the future as we work closely with EMC’s federation of businesses to build an NFV platform with differentiation at all levels of the stack,” said David Hudson, Senior Director of the Communication Service Provider Group, Office of CTO at EMC Corporation.

“VMware is committed to supporting communication service providers as they transform to next generation cloud infrastructures,” said David Wright, vice president of operations, Telco NFV group at VMware. “I’m delighted that VMware and our Federation partner EMC are joining the OPNFV project to help accelerate the adoption of virtualized network infrastructures using OpenStack, the open interfaces of choice for our customers.”

“Open collaboration allows for a range of perspectives and opinions to be heard and debated via code,” said Heather Kirksey, director, OPNFV. “We’re seeing industry leaders unite around OPNFV as the place to have those debates and the result will be a stronger platform for all. We look forward to contributions from EMC and VMware to help accelerate the creation of an open source reference platform for NFV.”

Paul To, director, Cloud & NFV, EMC, will join OPNFV’s board of directors as well as the Technical Steering Committee. As part of its Platinum membership, EMC is dedicating additional employee resources to OPNFV to help build the reference platform for NFV.

About Open Platform for NFV (OPNFV)

Open Platform for NFV is a carrier-grade, integrated, open source flexible platform intended to accelerate the introduction of new products and services using NFV. It brings together service providers, vendors and users to collaborate in an open forum on advancing the state-of-the-art in NFV. For more information, please visit: http://www.opnfv.org.

OPNFV is a Collaborative Project at The Linux Foundation. Linux Foundation Collaborative Projects are independently funded software projects that harness the power of collaborative development to fuel innovation across industries and ecosystems. www.linuxfoundation.org

# # #

VMware is a registered trademark of VMware, Inc. in the United States and other jurisdictions. The use of the word “partner” or “partnership” does not imply a legal partnership relationship between VMware and any other company.

Additional Resources
Getting Started with OPNFV
Joining the OPNFV Community
OPNFV Blog
OPNFV Events
Learn more about VMware vCloud for NFV with VMware Integrated OpenStack

Media Inquiries
Jill Lovato
OPNFV Project
pr@opnfv.org

Highlights: OPNFV Mini Summit at NFV World Congress

By Blog

NFV World CongressIt was great to be part of the inaugural NFV World Congress last week in San Jose. On Tuesday, we hosted an OPNFV mini-summit that was standing room only. After I provided an OPNFV overview, Dave Neary of Red Hat gave a presentation on the importance of open source, giving us a history lesson along the way. Chris Price, our TSC chair, gave a talk detailing the community’s vision for the initial release of OPNFV and beyond. He then chaired a service provider panel featuring Luigi Liccari from Telecom Italia, Chris Donley from CableLabs, and Byran Sullivan from AT&T. It was a bit of a change of pace to have a vendor put the operators in the hot seat, but they graciously provided insight into how they’re planning to roll out NFV and the challenges they see.

Frank Brockers, our BGS project lead, kicked off the afternoon getting more into the details of OPNFV and looking at OPNFV through the lens of open source system integration. Finally, we ended with a presentation explaining data plane acceleration and its importance in platform performance co-authored by Keith Wiles from Intel and Bob Monkman from ARMNFV World Congress.

The presenters all did an excellent job, and the audience was very engaged with questions throughout the day. It was great being able to share information about the project with the larger industry! It was also great seeing two PoCs from AT&T featuring OPNFV, and many other members were on hand with cool NFV demos. There were also plenty of informal dinners and hallway discussions about the project — it’s fantastic to see how much excitement and enthusiasm the topic is creating amongst operators and vendors alike.

Our next event is geared toward the technical community — we’re holding an OPNFV Day at the OpenStack Summit in Vancouver. We’re going to give an overview of OPNFV, look at some of projects and see a demo featuring developing code in action. In the afternoon we’ll be doing breakout hands-on working sessions where we hope to generate some good technical collaboration among our community and the OpenStack technical community.

Whether it’s at one of our events, reaching out on forums or mailing lists, or getting involved in a technical project, we invite you to join OPNFV!

 

ADVA Optical Networking, Canonical and Stratus Technologies Join OPNFV Project

By Announcements

Contributions from the new Silver members advances the implementation of open source Network Functions Virtualization

SAN FRANCISCO, April 9, 2015 — The OPNFV Project, a community-led industry-supported open source reference platform for Network Functions Virtualization (NFV), today announced that ADVA Optical Networking, Canonical and StratusⓇ Technologies are joining the project to build the industry’s first large scale, carrier- grade, end-to-end testing and integration project. Launched in September 2014, the OPNFV project is supported by 55 member companies who are committed to advance open source NFV. The community expects to make its first software release that will set the foundation necessary to build the NFV reference platform.

“In less than seven months OPNFV community has done a commendable job of setting up the foundation for collaboration. As we prepare for our first release, we are excited to see more active participation from the industry,” said Heather Kirksey, director, OPNFV. “The knowledge that our new members bring of building programmable solutions, cloud orchestration solutions and telco-grade cloud solutions are critical to building a flexible NFV framework that meets the industry’s needs.”

More on the newest OPNFV members, listed in alphabetical order:

ADVA Optical Networking is building tomorrow’s networks. Its intelligent telecommunications hardware, software and services have been deployed by several hundred service providers and thousands of enterprises. In March, the company garnered industry and media attention for the launch of its long-term NFV strategy. What’s more, ADVA Optical Networking also recently demonstrated how NFV can be used to virtualize customer premise equipment and to create virtualized radio access backhaul networks.

“NFV has the potential to dramatically change our industry; to open new revenue streams and realize new models of simplicity,” commented Stephan Rettenberger, vice president, marketing, ADVA Optical Networking. “But achieving this potential isn’t straightforward. It requires true collaboration. It requires true openness. It requires true interworking. OPNFV and the community that it’s building share our vision here and together we’re going to drive NFV forward.”

Canonical is the company behind Ubuntu, the leading operating system for cloud, scale-out and ARM-based hyperscale computing featuring the fastest, most secure hypervisors, as well as the latest in container technology with LXC and Docker. With Ubuntu, NFV solutions can be instantly deployed, integrated and scaled on any public cloud, private cloud or bare-metal server.

“Canonical is delivering Ubuntu OpenStack and open source orchestration solutions to leading telcos and carriers, so supporting OPNFV is a perfect fit for us,” said John Zannos, vice president of cloud alliances, Canonical. “NFV will supply flexibility and rapid innovation to the telcos, by leveraging our Ubuntu OpenStack Ecosystems, we look forward to accelerating broad adoption of open source NFV technologies in collaboration with OPNFV.”

Stratus Technologies is the leading provider of infrastructure based solutions that keep applications running continuously in today’s always-on world. With Stratus, service providers can achieve carrier-grade reliability in an OpenStack cloud environment. The software defined resiliency solution for NFV and SDN provides fully stateful fault tolerance with geo-redundancy to enable transparent service continuity.

“SDN and NFV are game-changing technologies, but today’s off-the-shelf solutions do not meet the reliability requirements of the telecommunications industry. Our belief is that the only way this can be achieved is through an industry led community focus,” said Steve Hauser, chief technology officer, Stratus Technologies. “We are delighted to be participating in OPNFV, by contributing deep industry expertise and technologies that will underpin the SDN and NFV infrastructure with the goal of dramatically increasing utilization, while providing uncompromised reliability.”

Anyone can participate in the OPNFV community regardless of affiliation or location. Technology contributions, concepts or ideas can be shared here. Join the discussions, listen to the debates and contribute to the advancement of open source NFV.

About Open Platform for NFV (OPNFV)

Open Platform for NFV is a carrier-grade, integrated, open source reference platform intended to accelerate the introduction of new products and services using NFV. It brings together service providers, vendors and users to collaborate in an open forum on advancing the state-of-the-art in NFV. For more information, please visit: http://www.opnfv.org.

OPNFV is a Collaborative Project at The Linux Foundation. Linux Foundation Collaborative Projects are independently funded software projects that harness the power of collaborative development to fuel innovation across industries and ecosystems.www.linuxfoundation.org

Additional Resources
Getting Started with OPNFV
Joining the OPNFV Community
OPNFV Blog
OPNFV Events

Media Inquires
Prathima Ramesh
OPNFV Project
pr@opnfv.org

OPNFV Bridging Open Source Communities and Telcos

By Blog

Mobile World CongressIt has been a whirlwind two months since I joined OPNFV in January. I recently spent three weeks on the road getting to know our community and seeing OPNFV in a broader market context, and it’s been a great experience. Our technical committee chair Chris Price wrote about our recent Meet-up and Hackfest and the only thing I’ll add to his great summary is that I was highly impressed by the passion and collaborative attitude I witnessed during those events. It’s not always an easy thing for a diverse group of people all working for different companies to come together and form a coherent community, but we are definitely on our way.

After the Prague Hackfest, I flew to Barcelona for Mobile World Congress, which left absolutely no doubt that NFV is a big deal. Light Reading’s pre-show poll showed that NFV and SDN were considered by conference-goers as the most important topics there, and it was great to see all the demos of NFV capabilities on display at our members’ booths. It was highly educational to see how our member companiesare thinking about technology and how they’re putting the concepts into products. To everyone who gave me a tour of your booth – thanks! It was inspiring to see some cool use cases such as vIMS, vCPE and cloud RAN along with a unique example of dynamically allocating mobile capacity to either the suburbs or downtown depending on time and day and user density. It’s obvious that NFV will not only improve operational efficiency and agility, but enable end users to think differently about their network services as well.

OPNFV Group PhotoMobile World Congress was OPNFV’s first big marketing event. We hosted a great networking reception Tuesday night, with both members and prospective members out in abundance. I overheard all sorts of thoughtful conversations about NFV and open source, and it was fun interacting with everyone in a more social environment. We topped off the event with an interactive panel discussion on “Accelerating NFV Through Open Source Software Collaboration,” moderated by OPNFV marketing chair, Sandra Rivera. Despite the venue being over a kilometer from the entrance and the timeslot being on the last day before lunch, we had a standing room only crowd. It speaks to the industry’s interest in what we are trying to accomplish! See the video recording of the entire panel discussion.
The OPNFV Board also met face to face for the second time since formation. We had a number of spirited conversations around our first software release, strategy, and roadmap.  This is a passionate and engaged Board, and they take their stewardship of this organization very seriously. In fact, as I reflect on OPNFV at my two-month mark with the organization, what stands out most to me is that the community as a whole – the Board, the technical community leadership, the marketing committee, the contributors and committers – is dedicated to making OPNFV succeed. It’s a privilege to be part of this group and I encourage everyone who is not involved to join us. It’s truly an exciting time to be in the world of networking!

About the author of this post

Heather KirkseyHeather Kirksey
Heather Kirksey is the director of NFV leading initiatives around the OPNFV project.

OPNFV Community Comes Together to Define its First Software Release

By Blog

Open source communities thrive on healthy arguments and collaboration to develop code that can solve real world problems. In the past few weeks the OPNFV community had two such face-to-face meeting opportunities. Developers from our community, from around the world and different companies came together at the Linux Foundation Collaboration Summit in Santa Rosa and at Prague where we were able to socialize with members of the nearby ETSI NFV ISG #9 conference. It was great to engage in person with those who we most often communicate with virtually.

In Santa Rosa we took a deeper dive into the technical details of delivering on the OPNFV vision. OPNFV is unique as it is an end-to-end integration virtualization project, which means that understanding the dynamics and collaborating with other upstream open source projects is critical to its success. Our technical discussions focused on ‘what and how’ of integrating features from projects like OpenDaylight, OpenStack, KVM and Open vSwitch into the OPNFV platform. The summit also offered a perfect milieu for us to mingle with the Linux, KVM and container experts, among others.

A week later in Prague, the community had intense discussions and debates about the details of the first software release. We discussed the progress, changes and updates to the work of our continuous integration, deployment, infrastructure and testing teams. For the first release, the technical steering committee decided on a time-based release aimed at establishing core project infrastructure, and providing a baseline platform for development and experimentation. An important outcome of the planning was the establishment of concise project dependencies and time constraints associated with key milestones and events in the coming months. Our goal is to have the hardware infrastructure up and running shortly to provide a convergence point for the projects and launch the first code release in April.

Beyond all the intense planning sessions and tiring schedules, what stood out was the enthusiasm and knowledge exhibited by the community in addressing the challenges and building the code. If there is one thing I have learnt working with our community leaders is that there is a pervasive desire to succeed. With clarity on our targets, challenges and goals we can now hone in on key activities and work toward the first OPNFV milestone. We welcome you to participate in the discussions and share your knowledge as we get ready to deliver our first release.

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About the author of this post

Christopher PriceChris Price
Chris leads open source industry collaboration for Ericsson in the areas of NFV, Cloud & SDN from the CTO’s office in Sweden and is an active member of the technical steering comitee’s of the OpenDaylight and OPNFV Projects.  Chris’ experiences include leading Ericssons’ IP&Broadband network architecture and standardization teams with a rich history in development of systems and technology in the areas of network management, policy control and user service management, user session control plane solutions, and DPI technologies.

OPNFV Project Grows with Dialogic, H3C and Qosmos Joining the Community

By Announcements

Additional members show increased commitment to accelerate the implementation of open source network functions virtualization

SAN FRANCISCO, March 2, 2015 — The OPNFV Project, a community-led industry- supported open source reference platform for Network Functions Virtualization (NFV), today announced that Dialogic, H3C and Qosmos® are joining the project to advance the industry’s first integrated, open source NFV platform. The project has 52 members who have invested funds and resources to accelerate the implementation of open source NFV.

The OPNFV project was launched in September 2014 with an intention of developing an open source reference platform for NFV. The community, gearing up for its first code release, has been growing steadily with widespread support from service providers, vendors and open source communities.

“The networking industry is eager to unlock the immense potential of NFV quickly with open source software development,” said Heather Kirksey, director, OPNFV. “Our newest members add strength to the community with their knowledge on networking software solutions, IP-based solutions and network intelligence technologies, which are valuable to build the first ever open source reference platform for NFV.”

More on the newest OPNFV members, listed in alphabetical order:

Dialogic is a global leader in providing networking software and infrastructure solutions that inspires the world’s leading service providers and application developers to elevate the performance of media-rich communications across the most advanced networks.

“Dialogic is active in developing NFV technologies with a strong focus on software-based infrastructure projects,” said Jim Machi, senior vice president of product management and marketing, Dialogic. “We are eager to collaborate with the industry and share our expertise to speed the implementation of open source NFV platform.”

Based in Hangzhou, China, H3C is a global supplier of IP-based products and solutions. H3C offers a full series of IP products and solutions, including networking, security, management software, wireless, and more.

“H3C believes firmly that open source software will help bring innovative network solutions faster to market,” said Xuejun You, vice president, H3C. “Our contributions to OPNFV will help us accelerate H3C’s goal of building a new IT architecture to help develop new solutions to our customers.”

Qosmos leads the market for embedded Deep Packet Inspection (DPI) and network intelligence technology used in physical, SDN and NFV architectures. The company supplies software to vendors who embed real-time application awareness in their products for traffic optimization, service chaining, quality of service, analytics, cyber security and more.

“Given Qosmos’ focus on developing products that provide real-time network intelligence in SDN and NFV environments, it is natural for us to invest in the development of open source NFV platforms,” said Erik Larsson, vice president of marketing, Qosmos. “We are eager to share our expertise in network intelligence technology with the OPNFV community.”

Anyone can participate in the OPNFV community regardless of affiliation or location. Technology contributions, concepts or ideas can be shared here. Join the discussions, listen to the debates and contribute to the advancement of open source NFV.

About Open Platform for NFV (OPNFV)

Open Platform for NFV is a carrier-grade, integrated, open source reference platform intended to accelerate the introduction of new products and services using NFV. It brings together service providers, vendors and users to collaborate in an open forum on advancing the state-of-the-art in NFV. For more information, please visit: http://www.opnfv.org.

OPNFV is a Collaborative Project at The Linux Foundation. Linux Foundation Collaborative Projects are independently funded software projects that harness the power of collaborative development to fuel innovation across industries and ecosystems. www.linuxfoundation.org

Additional Resources

Media Inquires

Prathima Ramesh
OPNFV Project
pr@opnfv.org

OPNFV Project Launches New Conference to Advance Open Source Network Functions Virtualization

By Announcements

Inaugural summit brings together service providers, networking industry and open source communities to discuss open source NFV

SAN FRANCISCO, February 24, 2015 – The OPNFV Project, a community-led industry supported open source reference platform for Network Functions Virtualization (NFV), today announced the creation of the OPNFV Summit and call for speaking proposals. The goal of the Summit is to enable collaboration between the service providers, networking industry and open source communities to advance the development and adoption of an open source NFV platform. Hosted by The Linux Foundation, the inaugural OPNFV Summit will take place in Burlingame, Calif., November 11-12, 2015.

Speaker proposals are now being accepted for the Summit. The deadline to submit a proposal is Wednesday, September 2, 2015.

NFV is revolutionizing the networking industry by allowing service providers to deliver new services to their customers more quickly while significantly reducing both operating and capital expenditures. The OPNFV Summit is uniting the communities, projects, products and companies that are driving today’s NFV ecosystems, along with best practices from the world of open source software and collaborative development.

“The OPNFV project is unique as it aims to build a carrier-grade NFV platform by integrating and testing existing open source software components and contributing back into upstream communities based on NFV requirements,” said Heather Kirksey, director, OPNFV. “The Summit will offer plenty of opportunities for collaboration between open source communities and industry experts, to work with the code and the developers who are solving the real-world problems.”

OPNFV Summit includes keynotes, technical sessions and hands-on design workshops hosted by industry leaders on topics that will include, but are not limited to:

●Building the OPNFV community

●OPNFV and standards bodies

●OPNFV operations and applications

●OPNFV performance and security

●OPNFV use cases

●Working with the OPNFV code and upstream projects

●Organizational impacts of OPNFV

The Summit also includes a Hackfest on November 9-10, 2015. The Hackfest is an opportunity for developers and community members to come together to contribute to ongoing projects and the OPNFV codebase.

Early registration closes June 1, 2015 after which the conference price will increase from $199 to $299. To register for the OPNFV Summit, please visit:

http://events.linuxfoundation.org/events/opnfv-summit/attend/register.

To view the OPNFV Summit 2015 sponsorship prospectus, please visit: http://events.linuxfoundation.org/events/opnfv-summit/sponsor.

About Open Platform for NFV (OPNFV)

Open Platform for NFV is a carrier-grade, integrated, open source reference platform intended to accelerate the introduction of new products and services using NFV. It brings together service providers, vendors and users to collaborate in an open forum on advancing the state-of-the-art in NFV. For more information, please visit: http://www.opnfv.org.

OPNFV is a Collaborative Project at The Linux Foundation. Linux Foundation Collaborative Projects are independently funded software projects that harness the power of collaborative development to fuel innovation across industries and ecosystems. www.linuxfoundation.org

Additional Resources

Getting Started with OPNFV

Joining the OPNFV Community

OPNFV Blog

OPNFV Events

Media Inquires
Prathima Ramesh
OPNFV Project
pr@opnfv.org