You are on page 1of 3

Own 5G. Own the Edge.

by Brian Lavallée, Sr. Director of Solutions Marketing

5G has quickly gone from hype to reality with live commercial deployments taking place worldwide. How
can network operators best compete in this hyper-competitive market to help them own the edge? By taking
an adaptive approach to designing best-in-breed 5G networks that are open by design, automated, and
highly scalable.

5G is only two characters long yet encompasses the entire mobile network infrastructure. From 5G User
Equipment (UE), such as smartphones and IoT devices, to edge and core data centers where network and
Over-the-Top (OTT) consumer and enterprise applications are hosted, and everything in between. This
end-to-end service path traverses wireless and wireline domains, so when you think of it, a 5G network is
an expansive packet-optical wireline network with 5G New Radios (NR) and antennas hanging at the edge.

This means the only wireless part of an end-user’s content journey — humans or machines (think IoT) —
is from User Equipment (UE) to the Radio Unit (RU) atop a cell tower or side of a building. The remainder
of the journey is over wireline networks comprised of physical and virtual network elements. Microwave
backhaul can be, and is, used in certain cases. But to ensure higher capacity and a faster, easier upgrade
path into the future, there’s simply no viable alternative to packet-optical wireline networks. This is
increasingly the case with order of magnitude increases in speed and number of 5G endpoints.

Figure 1: End-to-end 5G service path

“Own 5G. Own the Edge” Blog, v0.7, February 17, 2022 (BL)
The criticality of xHaul transport networks
Fronthaul, midhaul, and backhaul transport networks, collectively referred to as xHaul, are critical to any
successful rollout of 5G services. This is because xHaul transport networks interconnect RUs, Distributed
Units (DU), and Centralized Units (CU), which comprise the Radio Access Network (RAN), to the 5G Core.
As end-to-end (E2E) Service Level Agreement (SLA) performance guarantees provided by network slicing
are eventually offered over 5G networks, the importance of xHaul networks is further increased, because
the majority of the E2E service path is over wireline networks.

This will be less so for use cases such as ultra-reliable Low Latency Communications (urLLC), where Multi-
access Edge Compute (MEC) is leveraged by situating storage and compute resources closer to Rus, thus
reducing the wireline network distance. However, most content accessed via the RAN will still come from
distant core data centers for the foreseeable future, while edge data centers are rolled out worldwide.

5G unleashes new opportunities and challenges


To successfully deliver on the full promise of 5G, wholesale and mobile network operators must leverage
new technologies, new architectures, new operational models, and new skillsets, all the while supporting
4G networks that will be around for years to come. In fact, it’s forecasted that there will be over 5 billion 4G
connections still active in 2025, as per GSMA Intelligence’s 2021 Mobility Economy Report. Therefore,
converging 4G and 5G networks and the traffic they carry is critical to the ongoing financial viability of mobile
and wholesale network operators. This is because building multiple network overlays is simply too complex,
costly, and risky. This also means each operator will have their own unique 4G-to-5G migration journey.

Mobile network infrastructure has traditionally been closed and proprietary, forcing mobile network
operators to choose a single vendor. This locked them into the product roadmap, investment focus,
capabilities, and financial viability of a single corporation. A broader multi-vendor ecosystem that embraces
openness allows operators to choose what they perceive as best-in-breed that best addresses their specific
business needs.

In addition to adopting an open approach, operators must evolve away from manual-intensive operational
processes. This legacy approach simply cannot efficiently address the scale and increased complexity that
comes with 5G. Operators must quickly adopt analytics-driven automation that will allow them to better
manage the complete lifecycle of 5G services. This is also where openness and analytics-driven automation
intersect. Taking an open and holistic approach to building out 5G networks means operators can choose
best-in-breed automation software, which is critical to managing an open, multi-vendor, end-to-end 5G
network with greater ease and lower risk.

How can mobile network operators gain the openness, automation, and scale required to achieve 5G? By
taking an Adaptive NetworkTM approach.

The Adaptive Network approach to 5G


Operators rolling out 5G networks should follow the Adaptive Network approach leveraging Programmable
Infrastructure, Analytics and Intelligence, and Software Control and Automation. All these elements are
underpinned by the key technology principles of openness and scale. These foundational elements are also
supported by professional services helping network operators evolve to their unique and ultimate network
end-state, regardless of where they are along their 5G unique journey.

Ciena’s 5G Network Solutions are based on our Adaptive Network approach to offer you openness, scale,
and automation — crucial to supporting existing 4G while introducing new 5G services, all over a converged
4G/5G xHaul network infrastructure. To learn about how the Adaptive Network approach enables network
operators to own the edge, download our 5G Success Using the Adaptive Network Approach white paper.

Own 5G. Own the edge. For network operators, it’s that simple.

“Own 5G. Own the Edge” Blog, v0.7, February 17, 2022 (BL)
Figure 2: Ciena’s Adaptive Network™

“Own 5G. Own the Edge” Blog, v0.7, February 17, 2022 (BL)

You might also like