Keeping you updated about our activities! Here we highlight our latest work and focus on areas which are most critical. As the end of 2017 approaches many of our members will be celebrating Christmas and New Year, and later Chinese New Year too, we should also spare a moment to mark what has been a significant 12 months for the Forum and the work we are doing. We have seen a major shift in the last year, with the work, processes, tools and focus of the Forum adapting in line with the requirements and expectations of the industry. During this meeting we took a great step forward in the 5G area by announcing a landmark project with NTT to standardize the virtualization of operators' PON networks to support the delivery of Time Critical Applications (TCAs) in areas such as fronthaul for 5G. The project was initiated by NTT and w ill open up new business opportunities for operators and vendors by using technologies like Network Functions Virtualization (NFV) and Software Defined Networking (SDN) to allow them to cost-effectively upgrade their PON networks to enable the rapid introduction of new services – including 5G fronthaul. 5G is of course a very active area in the Forum and that work made great progress both in New Orleans and at the recent interim meeting in Berlin. Other areas that have seen momentum are the Cloud Central Office project, where the baseline document will soon be finalized and the associated interface and testing documents are starting, as well as the User Services Platform specification, which is also completing and moving onto the exciting prospect of plugfests in January. The Open Broadband - User Managed Objects Framework project also debuted, where we will be starting work following our alliance with the Distributed Management Task Force Inc. (DMTF). This project has a great potential for service providers looking to create an application marketplace that leverages resource information on their current home gateways. Another Open Broadband project, Broadband Access Abstraction was also approved to begin work, and will see practical work starting in January. You can read more about some of these announcements elsewhere in this newsletter, but a further significant development is that projects like these have already seen a number of new companies join us to support the work and play a part in its progress. I am tremendously encouraged by seeing these new companies coming on board and 2017 has been one of the most successful for several years in attracting additional organizations from around the world, and many have new skill-sets to bring. Rhonda Heier, has done a great job at connecting the Forum to the wider broadband community. Also new this year was the announcement and development of the Gfast and NG-PON2 Councils and our Broadband Access Summit Events (BASE). The summits in Berlin and Las Vegas were so successful that we have just announced plans to stage a second series, with the first one just prior to the quarterly meeting in Athens, Greece, next March. Further details will be announced soon. Internally, I would like to thank William Lupton, Mark Fishburn and the member team supporting them, for the work they have been doing around the tools we use within the Forum to get the work recorded and completed. As a result, some 18,000 contributions now sit safely in JIRA and soon the Forum's mailing lists will be moving to Google Suite, while calendars will be moving from ARO to the Wiki. This – and more – all takes time and can be a real hard slog, but I appreciate what is being achieved to ensure we have robust systems in place. I was also like to welcome April Nowicki to our team who comes to the Forum to help support the new tools and helping the membership in getting the full benefits of some software which will help collaborate even more effectively. Enjoy this newsletter and thank you for your contributions to a great 2017. I look forward to sharing more achievements with you all next year. Robin Mersh December 2017Q4 2017 Newsletter
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A new project with NTT has been launched within the Forum to standardize the virtualization of operators' PON Networks to support the delivery of TCAs, such as 5G fronthaul. The project looks to open up new business opportunities for operators and vendors by using network virtualization technologies such as NFV and SDN to cost-effectively upgrade their PON networks and enable the rapid introduction of new services. This includes the key issue of fronthaul for 5G services, adding to the Forum's ongoing work on the convergence of fixed and mobile networks. "As users' usage changes, both in regard to the different services required and the amount of data coursing through fiber networks, operators need to update their PON networks, including by adding TCAs," said Akihiro Otaka, Executive Manager at NTT Access Network Service Systems Laboratories. "This used to require the remake of PON equipment for each service, but should be done via a software upgrade in the near future to improve cost-effectiveness. With demand for this increasing, it is important we ensure there are standards in place to achieve a vendor-agnostic system and ensure mass deployment of this new system architecture, which is essential if we are to deliver agile and flexible next-generation broadband networks for emerging services." The project – PON Abstraction Interface for TCAs – looks at how NFV and SDN can be applied to Optical Line Terminals to disaggregate PON functions to functional modules with open interfaces. The first phase will define the disaggregation policy and functional requirements of interfaces to disaggregate PON functions which need time-critical processing, while the second phase will define the detailed specifications of the interfaces as Application Programming Interface (API) sets. The project has already attracted a number of new members to the Forum, as the industry becomes more focused on how the fixed network can help deliver 5G. The Broadband Forum has announced a new alliance with the DMTF, an industry standards organization with a global presence made up of members from 43 countries. Through its work on standards, the DMTF works to simplify the manageability of networks-accessible technologies through open and collaborative efforts of its expanding portfolio of member technology companies. During the New Orleans meeting, a new project stream was formed to specify the generation of test traffic at the application layer – a critical phase of work – to increase the level of realism of test conditions in the laboratory to better reflect actual conditions out in the field. Key industry stakeholders will benefit including service providers, vendors and laboratories, by fundamentally allowing them to manage the complex traffic of subscribers on the network. The work will be carried out within the Architecture and Migration Work Area and will involve four initial projects – architecture and requirements, definition of the associated models, an implementers' guide and a software reference implementation. "We expect this work to be immediately useful to projects like Open Broadband, as well as other work both in and outside the Broadband Forum," said Project Stream Leader and Board Member Ken Ko. "The work will allow us to formally define complex traffic behavior at the application level in a way that is unambiguous and repeatable, making it extremely valuable in a wide range of lab test scenarios." The Architecture and Migration Work Area has continued to work on the development of TR-359 Issue 2. Building on the momentum of the NFV-enhanced architecture foundations defined by Issue 1, Issue 2 introduces SDN and greater management and will reflect work done in the Cloud CO project. This will increase the applicability of virtualization to the wider multi-service broadband network. Work is progressing well and is expected to go to straw ballot in Q2/2018. The group is continuing to work on the use cases for Broadband Assured Services. The Broadband User Services (BUS) Work Area is finalizing recent changes to its highly anticipated User Services Platform (USP). The evolution of its flagship protocol, TR-069, is set to continue, with the release of version 1.0 expected at the end of Q1 2018. Just ahead of this release will be the first USP Plugfest, which will be held in Atlanta, Georgia, from February 20-22. Details of the Plugfest will be available soon The BUS Work Area is working in conjunction with the Physical Layer Transmission Work Area to push forward the development of real metrics for Wi-Fi performance testing. These can be used to qualify devices for service provider home deployments. This work came as a result of a perceived gap in standards from providers and is on track to provide some real value to the chaotic world of in-home networking The second FSAN/BBF XGS-PON/NG-PON2 interoperability test session on October 9-13, 2017 was a complete success. The primary purpose of this event was to drive technology maturity through multi-vendor testing, reducing the operational and capital cost of residential and enterprise fiber access deployment for service providers. This event test report showed a significant increase in the number of test cases passed, proving the market is moving quickly to a matured state. The PON management project stream continues to expand. Anticipating deployment of new NETCONF/YANG management solutions in 2018 and beyond, the new WT-414 NetConf and YANG Interoperability Test Plans document will assist service providers in systematically validating management system implementations, accelerating their path to a more unified SDN/NFV fiber access network infrastructure. The Innovation Group hosted a Birds of a Feather session in New Orleans, with the 5G project stream focusing on Fixed Wireless Access, An Operator View. AT&T took part in the session, sharing its experience of Fixed Wireless Access deployments. This confirmed some of the key requirements already discussed in SD-407 for a 5G RG and the 3GPP core, including the importance of IPv6 and DHCPv6 support. There was also progress on adding Long Reach VDSL2 (VDSL2-LR) performance, functional and vectoring tests. Following its long history of providing mobile backhaul architecture and nodal requirements, the Routing & Transport Work Area continues with 5G, progressing several activities. The group continues to work to transform transport and IP networks to efficiently support 5G and the innovative services brought about by 2020 mobil.e networks. These new services, through the development of applications that they enable, generate new revenues both for the provider and their customers. The network requirements for the anticipated services is driving activity on use cases, architecture and technology enhancement. Included in these are: Those interested in the details of the projects and progress are encouraged to contact the Area Director and/or Project Stream Leads for suggestions on how to get involved and contribute The overriding framework Cloud Central Office project (CloudCO) document, WT-384, has completed Straw Ballot and has been progressed to Final Ballot as a result of this meeting. The group spent some significant time reviewing the results of the service provider survey, which was authored at the previous meeting, in order to gain insight into the specific migration use case scenarios. The Wireline-Wireless Convergence (WWC) Work Area addresses the needs of converged operators, which have both wireline and mobile networks deployed and are in a position to leverage all their assets with combined subscriber offerings. The Forum's way of working has shifted to fast interactive discussions through the Atlassian Tools: the BBF Wiki, JIRA, Confluence and Bitbucket. All new contributions are now posted to JIRA - see the link below Questions? Contact April Nowicki, Member Support Manager anowicki@broadband-forum.org| WT-370 Fixed Access Network Sharing - Architecture and Nodal Requirements (TR-370) Since the Q3 meeting, the Broadband Forum has received media interest from a variety of top tier publications. Please connect with the Broadband Forum on Twitter (@Broadband_Forum), LinkedIn, Facebook and YouTube and use #Gfast and #NGPON2. 2017 Broadband Forum Meetings. Keep the below dates free for next year's quarterly meetings. China SDN/ NFV Conference 2018: April 17-18, Beijing, China Questions about Membership? Rhonda Heier Membership Development Manager Questions about BBF Tools? April Nowicki Member Support Manager Questions or ideas? Contact the Broadband Forum +1 510.492.4020 or email info@broadband-forum.orgLandmark project to virtualize operators' PON networks for 5G Fronthaul
The report - which draws on more than 40 interviews and an online survey with more than 100 respondents, including telecom vendors, system integrators and Communication Service Providers (CSPs) – highlights that 73% of respondents believe their companies are behind schedule in their NFV/SDN deployments.
Robin Mersh, CEO of the Broadband Forum, was presented as one of the key industry decision-makers in the report, discussing the status of digital transformation and approaches to overcome the industry challenges being faced. Reflecting on the results, Mersh stated: "Whether through recruitment drives, a greater focus on standardization, or the provision of educational programs, the research shows we know where changes need to be made."
For the full report, please see: https://goo.gl/w8993y
The DMTF's Redfish® API is an open industry standard specification which aims to publish a standard API to meet customer demand for simple and secure management in modern Software Defined Data Center (SDDC) environments.
Under the agreement, the Broadband Forum will have access to Redfish® manageability expertise within the DMTF and it will have the authorization to refer to the established DMTF Redfish® technologies for specifying compute and networking domain manageability of platforms.
The Broadband Forum and the DMTF aim to collaborate closely wherever possible in advancing relevant interoperability standards for broadband operators to deploy cloud services and applications.
For more information on what the alliance means for the industry, watch this video interview with Michael Bugenhagen, Chief Architect, NFV, at CenturyLink: https://youtu.be/8VadMp7WggsTesting gets reality check in new Broadband Forum global testing initiative
Work Area Updates from New Orleans
Virtualize that: Architecture and Migration Work Area looks at NFV and SDN
A new project on Generation of Application Test Traffic kicked off. The goal of this project is to ultimately produce an open source traffic generation tool that will allow networking equipment manufacturers to generate aggregated traffic patterns in order to validate equipment performance under a variety of conditions, improve scheduling algorithms, etc. The project is scoped to have four key deliverables, the ultimate one being the tool itself.
A study of use cases for the repurposing of existing premises infrastructure such as coax was also initiated.Broadband User Services finalizes USP changes and plans Plugfest
Common YANG project moves forward
NETCONF/YANG management solutions set for 2018 and beyond
The Project Stream for "Passive Optical Network (PON) Abstraction Interfaces for Time Critical Applications" continues to make excellent progress. This work is needed because operators are interested in providing more additional value or differentiated services to meet the trend towards more diversified network requirements, particularly where the network is used as business infrastructure. These include dynamic bandwidth allocation, energy-efficient Optical Network Terminal (ONT) sleep mode, dynamic wavelength allocation and network protection.
Stay tuned for upcoming announcements on the BBF-247 certification programs for XGS-PON and NG-PON2. In 2018, the first beta certification test for next-generation ITU-T technologies is expected to be launched. These new technologies will be game changers for the service provider community.Innovation Group explores Fixed Wireless Access in the context of 5G
There will be several key topics covered in the BoF sessions in 2018, including the Internet of Things (IoT), 5G, CloudCO and orchestration, and network slicing in Fixed Mobile Convergence (FMC).
Work with BUS continued on test setups for Wi-Fi performance (WT-398).
It was also agreed to start work on SD-419, which addresses use cases for extending fiber access over existing in-premises infrastructure. This will be done jointly with the Architecture and Migration Group.
The Work Area was also busily engaged resolving straw ballot comments on the following four documents going to final ballot in Q1, following a mid-meeting conference call. They are: WT-114i3a2 (35b performance), WT-115i3a1 (35b functional), WT-338i1 (reverse power feed) and WT-400 (Gfast bonding). Two other documents which will be sent to straw ballot after the conference call are WT-114i3a4 (re-transmission Performance) and WT-347 (CPE SELT Operation Guidelines).Routing and Transport Work Area focuses on 5G transport
SDN and NFV Work Area send first Cloud-based Central Office Technical Report to final ballot
5G Front and center for Wireline-Wireless Convergence Work Area
New Broadband Forum tools delivering increased agility and faster working
These documents will be published in the coming days. For a full list of all work in progress,click here. Please feel free to share this information with your colleagues, so they are engaged and aware of the developments of this work.Welcome to new and returning members!
We are pleased to welcome six new and returning members to the Q4 meeting, including Comcast, Telefonica, Telkom Indonesia, Kurth Electronics, Chengdu Superxon Communication Technology Co., Ltd, MoCA and The Broadband Communications Chamber of Ghana.Broadband Forum in the news
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