Not sure what you mean NFV is NFV, 

>From NFV perspective cRDP is no different than vMX -it’s just a virtualized 
>router function nothing special…

 

Also with regards to NFV markets, it’s just CPE or telco-cloud (routing on 
host, FWs, LBs and other domain specific network devices like SBCs), and then 
RRs, no one sane would be replacing high throughput aggregation points like PEs 
or core nodes with NFV ,unless one wants to get into some serious horizontal 
scaling ;).

 

adam 

 

From: NANOG <nanog-bounces+adamv0025=netconsultings....@nanog.org> On Behalf Of 
Mark Tinka
Sent: Saturday, August 1, 2020 9:51 PM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Has virtualization become obsolete in 5G?

 

 

On 1/Aug/20 18:23, Robert Raszuk wrote:

Virtualization is not becoming obsolete ... quite reverse in fact in all types 
of deployments I can see around. 

 

The point is that VM provides hardware virtualization while kubernetes with 
containers virtualize OS apps and services are running on in isolation. 

 

Clearly to virtualize operating systems as long as your level of virtualization 
mainly in terms of security and resource consumption isolation & reservation is 
satisfactory is a much better and lighter option. 


I see cloud-native as NFV++. It requires some adjustment to how classic NFV has 
been deployed, and that comes down to whether operators (especially those who 
err on the side of network operations rather than services) see value in 
upgrading their stack to cloud-native.

If you're a Netflix or an Uber, sure, a cloud-native architecture is probably 
the only way you can scale. But if you are simple network operators who focus 
more on pushing packets than over-the-top services, particularly if you already 
have some NFV, making the move to cloud-native/NFV++ is a whole consideration.

Mark.

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