ETSI NFV Release 5 Kicks Off With Increased Support for Cloud-Enabled Deployments

By Taryn Engmark

Associate Editor

Embedded Computing Design

November 11, 2021

News

ETSI NFV Release 5 Kicks Off With Increased Support for Cloud-Enabled Deployments

The ETSI Industry Specification Group (ISG) for Network Functions Virtualization (NFV) has started working on its next specification release known as Release 5, officially kicking off the new Release technical work after their September meeting.

The Release 5 work program is expected to drive ETSI NFV’s work into two main directions: consolidating the NFV framework and expanding its applicability and functionality set.

On one hand, some aspects of the NFV concepts and functionalities that have been addressed in previous Releases, but need additional work, will be further developed in Release 5. For instance, based on development, deployment experience and feedback collected during testing events such as the “NFV/MEC Plugtests,” additional work on VNF configuration was deemed necessary. Another example is the more detailed specification work related to fault management modeling, which aims at further defining faults and alarms information to improve interoperability during network operations, in particular for root cause analysis and fault resolution in multi-vendor environments.

In addition to the new original work conceived with Release 5, certain activities that were initiated in Release 4 will continue with an extended scope. These concern, in particular, the networking for container-based deployments and the introduction into the NFV framework of generic management functions for VNFs, both being of critical relevance to ensure increased support for cloud-enabled deployments. Furthermore, informative work initiated under the Release 4 scope that was not completed on time will also be carried over to Release 5. At the same time, protocols and data models related to Release 4 are also under development taking advantage of the continuous publication, roughly twice a year, of new and/or updated specifications.

On the other hand, Release 5 aims at expanding the work of the ISG into different dimensions to address industry needs when it comes to network transformation. One of the dimensions relates to referencing and extending the NFV framework to increasingly address telecom use cases in the radio access network (RAN) domain by taking as an input the most recent outcomes from other standards development organizations involved specifically in this domain.

More specifically, the list of recently ETSI NFV-approved new work items of Release 5 includes a set of studies on “VNF configuration, energy efficiency aspects for NFV, enhanced container networking, flexible VNF deployment, NFV support for virtualization of RAN, and reliability evaluation for cloud-native VNFs.”

It is envisioned that the Release 5 studies will be developed in a shorter time with an expected completion by summer 2022.

For more information, visit ETSI.