Demystifying network slicing: From theory to practice. Soenen, T., Banerjee, R., Tavernier, W., Colle, D., & Pickavet, M. In 2017 IFIP/IEEE Symposium on Integrated Network and Service Management (IM), pages 1115–1120, Lisbon, Portugal, May, 2017. IEEE.
Demystifying network slicing: From theory to practice [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Network slicing is the emerging paradigm in which operators use their resources to provide multiple logical networks and associated resources, with varying configurations and at the same time. More and more vertical industries need their machines and devices connected in networks with specific requirements. In order to provide networks fitted to these usecases, and not require that they adapt to the one-size-fits-all network as is currently the case with the mobile Internet, the telecom community vowed to include network slicing functionality within its next generation of mobile networking, 5G, as an end-to-end network solution. As the concept is new and still not fully grasped, we develop and refine the concept of a network slice both from a business and a technological point of view. We investigate how network slicing in the context of a vehicular network could be implemented and how it advances the state of the art. This involves a detailed study of the involved technologies across a range of infrastructures and network segments, as well as the resulting gaps in the existing technology landscape. Based on the lessons learned in this concrete usecase, network slicing is considered in a broader 5G landscape. We capture the main challenges and potential directions in order to make network slicing a true enabler of 5G-driven vertical industries.
@inproceedings{soenen_demystifying_2017,
	address = {Lisbon, Portugal},
	title = {Demystifying network slicing: {From} theory to practice},
	isbn = {978-3-901882-89-0},
	shorttitle = {Demystifying network slicing},
	url = {http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7987450/},
	doi = {10.23919/INM.2017.7987450},
	abstract = {Network slicing is the emerging paradigm in which operators use their resources to provide multiple logical networks and associated resources, with varying configurations and at the same time. More and more vertical industries need their machines and devices connected in networks with specific requirements. In order to provide networks fitted to these usecases, and not require that they adapt to the one-size-fits-all network as is currently the case with the mobile Internet, the telecom community vowed to include network slicing functionality within its next generation of mobile networking, 5G, as an end-to-end network solution. As the concept is new and still not fully grasped, we develop and refine the concept of a network slice both from a business and a technological point of view. We investigate how network slicing in the context of a vehicular network could be implemented and how it advances the state of the art. This involves a detailed study of the involved technologies across a range of infrastructures and network segments, as well as the resulting gaps in the existing technology landscape. Based on the lessons learned in this concrete usecase, network slicing is considered in a broader 5G landscape. We capture the main challenges and potential directions in order to make network slicing a true enabler of 5G-driven vertical industries.},
	language = {en},
	urldate = {2024-08-17},
	booktitle = {2017 {IFIP}/{IEEE} {Symposium} on {Integrated} {Network} and {Service} {Management} ({IM})},
	publisher = {IEEE},
	author = {Soenen, Thomas and Banerjee, Ratul and Tavernier, Wouter and Colle, Didier and Pickavet, Mario},
	month = may,
	year = {2017},
	pages = {1115--1120},
}

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