Open Source Network Functions Virtualization Project Brings NFV Closer to Cloud Native with Sixth Platform Release, OPNFV 'Fraser'

Open Source Network Functions Virtualization Project Brings NFV Closer to Cloud Native with Sixth Platform Release, OPNFV 'Fraser'

With even more mature cloud native integration, better testing, additional features, and expanded CI/CD infrastructure, OPNFV Fraser builds ecosystem bridge to cloud providers

SAN FRANCISCO, May 1, 2018 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The OPNFV Project, an open source project within The Linux Foundation that facilitates the development and evolution of Network Functions Virtualization (NFV) components across various open source ecosystems through reference platform development, integration, deployment, and testing, today announced the availability of the sixth OPNFV platform release, OPNFV Fraser. Making the mission of OPNFV more operationally relevant, Fraser advances the state of NFV around cloud native applications and new upstream project integration while continuing end user support as they deploy and test virtualized networks.

By increasing support for cloud native applications and providing access to readily deployed NFV infrastructure on demand, OPNFV provides the platform and tooling required by developers with whom end users are actively collaborating to validate, integrate, onboard, and test NFVI, VIM, VNFs, and network services. With a new level of maturity that brings the industry even closer to true cloud native integration that can be leveraged by cloud providers, Fraser has deepened its testing capabilities around functional, performance, stress, and benchmark testing. The release also brings new carrier-grade features around monitoring, service assurance, networking, and dataplane acceleration. With these updates, Fraser strengthens the project's position as the nexus point for collaboration across networking ecosystems.

"Since inception, OPNFV has been the place for industry collaboration with upstream communities, which has grown even more with the Fraser release," said Heather Kirksey, VP, Community and Ecosystem Development, The Linux Foundation. "With more mature cloud native integration and expanded testing and collaboration, OPNFV delivers the tools needed for end users to validate and test new network services."

Key updates in OPNFV Fraser include:

    --  Advancing the support for cloud native NFV. Fraser expanded cloud native
        NFV capabilities in nine different projects, more than doubled the
        number of supported Kubernetes-based scenarios, deployed two
        containerized VNFs, and integrated additional cloud native technologies
        from the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) relating to service
        mesh (Istio/Envoy), logging (fluentd), tracing (opentracing with
        Jaeger), monitoring (Prometheus), and package management (gRPC). These
        updates move the cloud native capabilities from basic container
        orchestration to include operational needs for cloud native
        applications. Additionally, the FastDataStacks project takes advantage
        of FD.io work to incorporate the VPP dataplane into Kubernetes
        networking capabilities to enable cloud native network-centric services.
    --  More mature testing. OPNFV continues to focus on the real-world
        deployment needs of service providers by expanding test case coverage
        and scope. Testing projects in Fraser see a robust increase in test
        cases. Functest, the OPNFV functional testing project, now permits use
        of its framework with other open source projects such as ONAP. This
        avoids duplication, reduces VM size, and accelerates the creation of
        additional test cases. Functest also added test cases to cover
        Kubernetes and Clover and made it easier and faster to run functional
        tests. Also in support of real-world needs, performance test projects
        extended the Day 0 performance testing to long-running performance
        testing as Day N operational issues become more real for service
        providers.
    --  Continuous Integration (CI) updates enable increased community hardware
        utilization, which in turns speeds up the testing process. Fraser
        includes the latest versions of upstream projects and advanced dynamic
        CI with the introduction of metadata descriptor specifications for
        Scenarios, PODs, and installers that will make hardware allocation for
        scenarios dynamic and automated. The XCI cross-community project made
        additional cloud-native strides by initiating CI/CD integration work
        with the CNCF Cloud CI project.
    --  New carrier-grade features are added, specifically in the areas of
        monitoring, service assurance, networking, and dataplane acceleration.
        Specific new features include:
        --  The Doctor project, in conjunction with OpenStack, whose
            collaboration was instrumental in achieving this milestone,
            introduced an infrastructure maintenance use case for zero VNF
            downtime. Similarly, Barometer continued to expand the monitored
            items list and plugin support. The Calipso project added support for
            Kubernetes and physical/physical-virtual switch connections across
            heterogeneous environments.
        --  The SFC, SDNVPN, FastDataStack, and Parser projects added new
            features around networking and dataplane acceleration.
        --  The IPv6 project now supports clustering, simplifying network
            configuration, and is exploring IPv6 container networking.

Supporting Operator Deployments

Orange and China Mobile have used OPNFV continuous integration (CI) pipeline and testing projects to create an NFV onboarding framework within their organizations. Orange uses OPNFV for NFVI and VIM validation, VNF onboarding and validation, and network service onboarding. China Mobile uses OPNFV for their Telecom Integrated Cloud (TIC) to continuously integrate, onboard and test NFVI, VIM and VNFs; and full network service onboarding and testing based on OPNFV is on their roadmap.

"Orange sees OPNFV as the right vehicle to create and end-to-end solution to certify VNFs, NFVI reference architecture, and integration with ONAP," said Jehanne Savi, Executive Leader of the AII-IP and On-demand Networks Programmes, Orange.

What's Next

The fifth OPNFV Plugfest will be co-located with ETSI at their location in Sophia Antipolis, France on June 4-8, 2018. Testing will include ETSI test cases and will focus on interoperability of the OPNFV platform in deployment, network integration, VNF applications, and more. Both OPNFV members and non-members are welcome to attend.

The recently announced OPNFV Verification Program (OVP) had four graduates in its first iteration (Huawei, Nokia, Wind River, ZTE) and is recruiting more vendors and network operators to participate in the next version of the test suite and program.

The virtual central office (VCO) demo is expanding into residential services with a virtualized Mobile Network use case, including vRAN for the LTE RAN as well as vEPC for a minimum viable mobile access network configuration. The demo will be featured at the Open Networking Summit Europe event, September 25-27 in Amsterdam.

The seventh OPNFV release, Gambia, due out end-of-year or early 2019, will include a slew of new projects. Areas of focus are expected to feature C-RAN (cloud radio area network), AUTO (ONAP automated OPNFV), edge cloud, and Capstone (certificate management service), among others.

More information about OPNFV Fraser is available at https://www.opnfv.org/software/downloads.

About The Linux Foundation
The Linux Foundation is the organization of choice for the world's top developers and companies to build ecosystems that accelerate open technology development and commercial adoption. Together with the worldwide open source community, it is solving the hardest technology problems by creating the largest shared technology investment in history. Founded in 2000, The Linux Foundation today provides tools, training and events to scale any open source project, which together deliver an economic impact not achievable by any one company. More information can be found at www.linuxfoundation.org.

The Linux Foundation has registered trademarks and uses trademarks. For a list of trademarks of The Linux Foundation, please see our trademark usage page: https://www.linuxfoundation.org/trademark-usage. Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds.

Additional Resources
Get Involved in OPNFV
Download OPNFV Fraser
OPNFV Resources
OPNFV Blog

Media Inquires
Jill Lovato
The Linux Foundation
jlovato@linuxfoundation.org

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SOURCE OPNFV Project