Software Networks describe new concepts for the Internet�s next generation. This architecture is based on virtual networking using Cloud and datacenter facilities. The main problems to be dealt with are the placement of virtual resources for opening a new network on the fly, and the urbanization of virtual resources implemented on physical network equipment. The digital architecture also deals with mechanisms capable of automatically controlling the placement of all virtual resources within the physical network. This book describes how to create and delete virtual networks on the fly. Indeed, the system is able to create any new network with any kind of virtual resource (e.g. switches, routers, LSRs, optical paths, firewalls, SIP-based servers, devices, servers, access points, etc.). Software Networks shows how this architecture is compatible with new advances in SDN (Software Defined Networking), new high-speed transport protocols such as TRILL (Transparent Interconnection of Lots of Links) and LISP (Locator/Identifier Separation Protocol), NGN, IMS, new generation Wi-Fi, and 4G/5G networks. Finally, the author introduces Clouds of security and the virtualization of secure elements (smartcards) that could certainly transform how to secure the Internet. For this second edition, the author addresses in five new chapters the importance of open source software for networks, mobile edge computing, fog networking, tactile internet a network environment allowing remote access, and security the use of Cloud of security, secure elements and the emergence of the blockchain.
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Introduction xi Chapter 1. Virtualization 1 1.1. Software networks 4 1.2. Hypervisors and containers 6 1.3. Kubernetes 8 1.4. Software networks 9 1.5. Virtual devices 11 1.6. Conclusion 12 Chapter 2. SDN (Software-Defined Networking) 13 2.1. The objective 14 2.2. The ONF architecture 16 2.3. NFV (Network Functions Virtualization) 21 2.4. OPNFV 23 2.5. Southbound interface 23 2.6. The controller 25 2.7. Northbound interface 26 2.8. Application layer 27 2.9. Urbanization 28 2.10. Conclusion 30 Chapter 3. Fabric, SD-WAN, vCPE, vRAN, vEPC 33 3.1. Fabrics control 33 3.2. NSX and VMware company 35 3.2.1. CISCO ACI (Application Centric Infrastructure) 39 3.2.2. OpenContrail and Juniper 40 3.2.3. Brocade 42 3.2.4. Nokia’s SDN architecture 43 3.3. SD-WAN 43 3.4. vCPE 47 3.5. vRAN 48 3.6. vEPC 49 Chapter 4. Open Source Software for Networks 51 4.1. Open source software 51 4.2. Open Compute Project (OCP) 53 4.3. OPNFV 54 4.4. ONAP (Open Network Automation Protocol) 61 4.5. Open vSwitch 64 4.6. OpenDaylight platform 65 4.7. FD.io 66 4.8. PNDA 67 4.9. SNAS 68 Chapter 5. MEC 69 5.1. eNodeB and gNodeB virtualization 70 5.2. C-RAN 74 Chapter 6. Fog Networking 79 6.1. Fog architectures 79 6.2. Fog controllers 82 6.3. Fog and the Internet of Things 86 6.4. Conclusion on the Fog solution 87 Chapter 7. Skin Networking 89 7.1. Skin networking architecture 89 7.2. Virtual access points 90 7.3. Software LANs 92 7.4. Participatory Internet 94 7.5. Conclusion 96 Chapter 8. Software Network Automation 97 8.1. Automation of the implementation of software networks 97 8.2. Management of a complex environment 99 8.3. Multi-agent systems 101 8.4. Reactive agent systems 105 8.5. Active, programmable and autonomous networks 107 8.6. Autonomic networks 109 8.7. Conclusion 113 Chapter 9. New-generation Protocols 115 9.1. OpenFlow 117 9.2. VXLAN 123 9.3. NVGRE 124 9.4. MEF Ethernet 125 9.5. Carrier-Grade Ethernet 126 9.6. TRILL (Transparent Interconnection of a Lot of Links) 129 9.7. LISP (Locator/Identifier Separation Protocol) 131 9.8. Conclusion 132 Chapter 10. Mobile Cloud Networking, the Mobile Cloud and Mobility Control 133 10.1. Mobile Cloud Networking 133 10.2. Mobile Cloud 137 10.3. Mobility control 139 10.4. Mobility protocols 143 10.4.1. Mobile IP or MIP 144 10.4.2. Solutions for micromobility 145 10.5. Multihoming 146 10.6. Network-level multihoming 148 10.6.1. HIP (Host Identity Protocol) 149 10.6.2. SHIM6 (Level 3 Multihoming Shim Protocol for IPv6) 150 10.6.3. mCoA (Multiple Care-of-Addresses) in Mobile IPv6 151 10.7. Transport-level multihoming 153 10.7.1. SCTP (Stream Control Transmission Protocol) 153 10.7.2. CMT (Concurrent Multipath Transfer) 157 10.7.3. MPTCP (Multipath TCP) 159 10.8. Conclusion 160 Chapter 11. Wi-Fi and 5G 161 11.1. 3GPP and IEEE 162 11.2. New-generation Wi-Fi 163 11.2.1. Wi-Fi 5 (IEEE 802.11ac) 164 11.2.2. IEEE 802.11ad 166 11.2.3. IEEE 802.11af 167 11.2.4. Halow (IEEE 802.11ah) 168 11.2.5. Wi-Fi 6 (IEEE 802.11ax) and super WiGig (IEEE 802.11ay) 169 11.3. Small cells 170 11.3.1. Femtocells 171 11.3.2. Hotspots 174 11.3.3. Wi-Fi Passpoint 175 11.3.4. Virtualization of Wi-Fi and HNB 179 11.3.5. Backhaul networks 182 11.4. Software radio and radio virtual machine 184 11.5. 5G 185 11.5.1. 5G radio 189 11.5.2. The core network 192 11.5.3. C-RAN 193 Chapter 12. The Internet of Things 197 12.1. Sensor networks 198 12.2. RFID 200 12.3. NFC (Near-Field Communication) 204 12.4. NFC contactless payment 206 12.5. HIP (Host Identity Protocol) 207 12.6. Healthcare Internet 207 12.7. Case study: the smart city 210 12.8. Conclusion 213 Chapter 13. Vehicular Networks 215 13.1. 5G 217 13.2. 5G standardization 220 13.2.1. 5G vehicular networks 220 13.2.2. Technological presentation of C-V2X 222 13.3. VLC 224 13.4. Conclusion 226 Chapter 14. Tactile Internet 227 14.1. Tactile internet applications 227 14.2. Functionalities required for the tactile internet 229 14.3. Technical specifications for 5G 232 14.4. Tactile internet in Industry 4.0 234 14.5. Conclusion on tactile internet 235 Chapter 15. Security 237 15.1. Secure element 239 15.2. Secure elements-based solution 242 15.2.1. Virtual secure elements 242 15.2.2. The TEE (Trusted Execution Environment) 244 15.2.3. TSM 245 15.2.4. Solution without a TSM 249 15.2.5. HCE 250 15.2.6. Securing solutions 250 15.3. The blockchain 256 15.4. Conclusion 257 Chapter 16. Concretization and Morphware Networks 259 16.1. Accelerators 260 16.2. A reconfigurable microprocessor 261 16.3. Morphware networks 266 16.4. Conclusion 268 Conclusion 269 References 271 Index 273
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781786304582
Publisert
2020-02-14
Utgave
2. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc
Vekt
635 gr
Høyde
236 mm
Bredde
163 mm
Dybde
23 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
308
Forfatter