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Licentiate defenses

As PROPHET completes at the end of 2016, we are very happy to announce that two students whose research was fully (Kirill Bogdanov)  or partially (Georgios Katsikas) funded by PROPHET have successfully defended their licentiate theses (licentiate is a degree at KTH half-way to a PhD). We are very grateful to Prof. Gerald Q. Maguire Jr. for a fantastic job co-advising Kirill and Georgios. Their theses are available online:

Journal Publication on Synthesizing Network Functions

In our recent journal article, we analyzed NF(V) service chains to identify their traffic classes and associate each traffic class with a newly-synthesized network function. By doing so, we eliminated I/O and processing redundancy and achieved 40 Gbps throughput with low latency on only one machine with 8 CPU cores. The full abstract is as follows:

In this paper we introduce SNF, a framework that synthesizes (S) network function (NF) service chains by eliminating redundant I/O and repeated elements, while consolidating stateful cross layer packet operations across the chain. SNF uses graph composition and set theory to determine traffic classes handled by a service chain composed of multiple elements. It then synthesizes each traffic class using a minimal set of new elements that apply single-read-single-write and early-discard operations. Our SNF prototype takes a baseline state of the art network functions virtualization (NFV) framework to the level of performance required for practical NFV service deployments. Software-based SNF realizes long (up to 10 NFs) and stateful service chains that achieve line-rate 40 Gbps throughput (up to 8.5x greater than the baseline NFV framework). Hardware-assisted SNF, using a commodity OpenFlow switch, shows that our approach scales at 40 Gbps for Internet Service Provider-level NFV deployments.

Ph.D. graduations

We are very happy to announce that Maciej Kuzniar and Peter Peresini have successfully defended their PhDs at EPFL during Summer of 2016. They are the first PhD graduates of the PROPHET project.  We are very grateful to Willy Zwaenepoel for being their advisor at EPFL, and to EPFL for providing a superb research environment. Their theses are available at the links below:

Maciej: Measuring and Managing Switch Diversity in Software Defined Networks

Peter: Simplifying Development and Management of Software-Defined Networks

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