Openness is a key factor when talking about network-functions virtualisation (NFV), says Bethany Mayer at Hewlett-Packard.
Indeed, she believes openness is a significant differentiator for Hewlett-Packard against other vendors in the increasingly competitive market.
Mayer is senior vice president and general manager of HP’s new Network Functions Virtualisation group, a unit she was put in charge of in February after several years heading up the tech giant’s $2.5 billion (£1.5bn) networking business. She will still oversees HP’s networking efforts until a new executive is named to the post, but much of her focus is being put into network-functions virtualisation (NFV) and competing against the likes of Cisco Systems.
In a recent interview with eWEEK, Mayer said HP’s efforts to make its NFV technology open and flexible, and to grow the number of tech vendors it partners with to ensure that communications service providers will be able to leverage the solutions to get services to market faster and to better manage their costs.
“I’m not kidding,” Mayer said. “It’s open.”
NFV and software-defined networking (SDN) are being embraced by vendors as ways to make networks more flexible, programmable, automated and cost-effective at a time when trends like cloud computing, IT mobility, big data and bring-your-own-device (BYOD) are increasing the demand for more dynamic networks. Traditional networks too often are programmed manually, are complex and are too difficult to adapt to changing business needs.
SDN essentially separates the control plane from the underlying physical infrastructure and puts the network intelligence into software. NFV – which was born out of the telecommunications industry – virtualises such networking tasks as firewalls, load balancing and intrusion detection systems, making them easier to deploy.
Networking vendors of all sizes are building out their SDN and NFV portfolios, putting their own spins on how they should work. Cisco is pushing its Application Centric Infrastructure (ACI) vision, which utilises the company’s hardware (including switches and silicon) and software capabilities to enable organisations to unify and manage their virtual and physical infrastructures and many of their data centre resources from a single point, the Application Policy Infrastructure Controller (APIC). The goal is to create an infrastructure that quickly and securely automatically responds to the needs of applications.
Mayer and other critics see that approach as Cisco pushing a stack of proprietary technologies, though Cisco officials have argued that the ACI strategy calls for an open approach. HP’s OpenNFV program also includes the vendor’s own infrastructure and technologies, but a goal is to make it easy for customers to use HP components within whatever environment they choose. For example, a key part is HP’s SDN controller, which not only can be used in HP environments, but also in situations where other vendors’ products are deployed.
HP’s products also work with a range of virtualisation platforms, from the open-source KVM and VMware to Microsoft and Red Hat, she said. The company also is working with some telecommunications partners – including Verizon and Sprint – on proof-of-concept projects for HP’s NFV technology. In addition, the company already has more than a dozen virtualised functions, including Home Subscriber Service (HSS) and Home Location Register (HLR). The NFV Director enables carriers to bring these virtualized functions together and manage them.
The range of capabilities is an indication of the jump HP has over competitors in the NFV and SDN fields, Mayer said.
“We are so far ahead of them,” she said. “We are two years ahead of them as far as our solutions go.”
The idea of NFV was raised in 2012 by service providers and network operators who are trying to keep up with the rapid and changing demands on their networks and the rising competition from such over-the-top (OTT) threats as Google and Skype. Carriers’ networks that have been built up over years are unwieldy, giving them a disadvantage over Web companies like Google, which are unhampered by legacy infrastructures.
Citing numbers from market research firm Ovum, HP in February said that OTT social messaging applications cost communication service providers $32.5 billion (£19.3bn) in lost SMS revenue in 2013, and that number is expected to hit $54 billion (£32bn) by 2016. The service providers also are losing billions to OTT voice-over-IP vendors – as much as $63 billion (£37bn) by 2018 – according to HP.
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Originally published on eWeek.
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