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Network Automation (2.0) Takes on Service Assurance Challenges

Summary Bullets:

Glen Hunt, Principal Analyst

Operators continue to invest and scale their IP and transport networks to meet growing capacity and new use cases demands, and the need to expand automated network management beyond network element and service provisioning, as well as begin to address service assurance, has become a top priority. Experience has shown that today’s highly complex and dynamic networks rely on automation as the key to successfully delivering high-quality services. In the two most recent networking conferences (i.e., MWC 22 and MPLS SD & AI Net World), network automation demonstrations and proof of concept (PoC) presentations by vendors and network operators alike were front and center and show promise when addressing service quality assurance.

The foundation for network automation has evolved of the past decade, and according to the recent EANTC-Interop Test 2022, significant software-defined networking (SDN) evolution and robustness across vendors was evident, noting that protocols for managing the routing policies are well-instrumented. Network automation, to date, has been primarily focused on network resource configuration and service provisioning, thanks to the technical shift from command-line interfaces and scripts to application programming interfaces and workflows; however, to ensure service quality, solutions must be capable of visualizing network-wide resources and have the capability to dynamically adjust to changing traffic patterns, network anomalies, and provide visibility into network performance and trends.

Today’s IP networks are transitioning quickly to leverage SRv6, network slicing, cloud services, and SDN to deliver advanced services. This level of complexity requires automation to establish and maintain network service level agreements (SLAs). For simplicity, the first phase of network automation can be characterized as Network Automation 1.0; the market is now entering the Network Automation 2.0 phase, which extends addresses service assurance.

Network Automation 2.0 presents the greatest challenges for vendors and operators; solutions should include the following characteristics to adequately address end-to-end service assurance:

Vendor solutions have emerged, such as the Path Computing Element newly launched in Huawei’s iMaster Network Cloud Engine IP (NCE-IP), which delivers the following benefits to network operators:

Source: Huawei

Typical use case examples for Network Automation 2.0 using Huawei’s NCE-IP:

The use cases noted above demonstrate the network automation can be leveraged to deliver services faster, ensure SLAs are maintained, and drastically reduce time-to-service.

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