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106 lines
8.7 KiB
Plaintext
106 lines
8.7 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2715
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Title: HPR2715: About ONAP
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2715/hpr2715.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 08:02:46
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---
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This is HPR Episode 2,715 entitled, about on-up, and in part on the series, networking.
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It is hosted by J.W. U.P. and is about 10 minutes long, and Karima next visit flag.
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The summary is the Linux Foundation on-up project all about it.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15, that's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at an honesthost.com.
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Good day.
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My name is J.W. U.P.
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and I had the opportunity to attend the ONS Europe Open Source Networking Summit in Amsterdam via Ken Fallon,
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talking to the Linux Foundation, and so I got to have press credentials, and I got to go into this event,
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and it's normally a 1200-Euro event that can't arrange for me to go for free.
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As a result, I got some ideas, and I talked to a lot of people, most of whom did not want to be recorded,
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but I allowed me to write in my notebook what they had to say, and I got a lot of business cards,
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and some of them may want to come and do a podcast.
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For instance, Jerome did the OpenMainframe podcast, I met him at the UK and Sheffield at the Altcamp,
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and told him to do it, so maybe some of those guys will come.
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So the first thing I did was I went to the keynotes, and they were really, really interesting,
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and all of the press guys were there, and I found out that most of the press guys were a lot like me and Ken.
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So there wasn't any one person who was a correspondent for the Linux Journal there,
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but the rest of those guys were freelancers that took pictures and wrote freelance articles,
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and sometimes wrote a book for O'Reilly, I sat in the press room a lot and talked to them,
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and overall it was a very nice event, and so the first thing that I wanted to talk to you all about
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that I saw is a thing called ONAP, and I want you to know that this thing was mostly for people
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that do telco and stuff on the edge, and it was very business-y, and so the first thing that I wanted
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to talk about is what is ONAP, and what does it mean for you, and so the first thing is,
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is what is ONAP, and it stands for the Open Network Automation Platform, ONAP,
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is an initiative by a combination of the EEOCMP.
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Okay, so this EEO or ECOMP stands for Enhanced Control, Orchestration and Management Policy,
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and OpenO, which is Open Orchestration Projects, into the ONAP, to bring the capabilities for
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designing, creating, orchestrating, and handling the full lifecycle management of virtual network
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functions and software-defined networks and services that all of these things entail.
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So, in essence, ONAP is the platform above the infrastructure layer that automates a network,
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so ONAP allows the end users to connect products and services through the infrastructure and allows
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deployments of VNFs and scaling the network in a fully automated manner. The higher level
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architecture of ONAP contains different software subsystems that are part of the design time
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environment, as well as execution time environment, to execute the design platforms.
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The project is under the governance of the Linux Foundation, and founded by AT&T China Mobile,
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and both AT&T and China Mobile did several presentations at this fifth.
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This is brought together by many other key players in the industry like Vodafone,
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who did a presentation, Orange, who also did a presentation. Bill Canada, who was not there,
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Ericsson, who was there, Reliance, JIO wasn't there, Nokia was there, had a booth there,
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and these key players are now defining the next generation of network orchestration.
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And so, now we'll cover what is the fuss about ONAP?
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So, again, what's all the fuss about ONAP? As ONAP enables VNFs and other network functions and
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services to be interoperable in automated policy driven real-time environment, this provides everyone
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as ONAP is fully open sourced, the code is free for everyone to consume, and it allows the ability
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to fully create design and play automated network services, and the ramification of this
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are huge. As Chris, Rice, Senior, VP, Domain, 2-0 architecture puts it, we're certainly going
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to get help from the rest of the ecosystem and vendors, but this is something that's really
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going to have an effect on the way we build networks going forward. And this is a fundamental
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shift in the way we build networks, and we're building them in a software-defined way only,
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which really sucks if you're a hardware vendor.
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And it's ONAP is planned to bring DevOps best practices to agile development
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methods in the telecom world. So, I listened to it there at the conference, and I thought it was
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a lot like Red Hat Open Shift, that's what they were talking about. And this will make use of
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today's cloud technologies and network virtualization capabilities, and we'll lower the bar
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for entry for more and more players. And it's really important that more and more players come,
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because they said that with this, especially in San Francisco, the guy said that people are going
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to expect 20 milliseconds time from the edge, so they're going to have the processing power there
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at the edge, and it's going to push back on this ONAP to make it there. And this really, because
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it's open-source, it reduces the operational cost significantly. You have much more control
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on the network and services that are available, and it's a win-win situation for both the service
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providers and the end customers as a network will be able to work in a much more efficient manner
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that's consistently connected to the world we live in. Customers will benefit from new services
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and improved experience, and I mean, they had guys on computers that were from China mobile that
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were building services right there, so when they thought of something, they were building something
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new for their port. And it's a little history. The ONAP project was officially launched in February
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of 2017, and since over 1,000 people have already joined the ONAP project, expanding the scope of
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to over 30 projects, including working March and Open-O, which was a thing ECOMP within the unified
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project, and on the 5th of April 2017, the Open Network Automation Platform Code and documentation
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were officially released to the global community with the intent of increasing further collaboration
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around ONAP. And so that's mostly how it started, and of course, the Linux Foundation has a
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a real page on there, and so it has a thing there, and so it says that their definition of the
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Linux thing is the ONAP provides a comprehensive platform for real-time policy-driven
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orchestration and automation of the physical and virtual network functions that will enable software
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network, IT and cloud providers and developers to rapidly automate new services and support
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complete lifecycle management. By unifying a member resources, ONAP is accelerating the development
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of a private ecosystem around a globally shared architecture and implementation for network
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automation with open standards of focus faster than anyone product could do on its own.
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And there's a white paper, and I'll have the link for that in the show notes,
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and they're really serious about it, and of course, there's a wiki page, and so how did it
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really come about? So the ONAP was announced, again, as a merger of the Open Eco-MP and Open
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Orchestrator OpenO projects. The goal of the project is to develop a widely used platform for
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orchestrating and automating physical and virtual network elements with a full lifecycle management.
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And they talk about Bell, Bell, dang, and it's the overview, and the overview. So that's what
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it is, and so I'm telling you that all of the companies, all of the telecoms there at this
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conference where Kent sent me. They were really interested in this. This is what they talked about,
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and so this will be a series, and the next part of the series will be what is edge
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you in F. So that'll be the next thing I'm going to talk about. All right, enjoy your day,
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and if you have any questions, please get back to me at JWP5 at hotmail.com. Have a great day.
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