Author :
Gelberger, Alexander ; Yemini, Niv ; Giladi, Ran
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Commun. Syst. Eng., Ben-Gurion Univ., Beer-Sheva, Israel
Abstract :
Software-Defined Networking (SDN) approaches were introduced as early as the mid-1990s, but just recently became a well-established industry standard. Many network architectures and systems adopted SDN, and vendors are choosing SDN as an alternative to the fixed, predefined, and inflexible protocol stack. SDN offers flexible, dynamic, and programmable functionality of network systems, as well as many other advantages such as centralized control, reduced complexity, better user experience, and a dramatic decrease in network systems and equipment costs. However, SDN characterization and capabilities, as well as workload of the network traffic that the SDN-based systems handle, determine the level of these advantages. Moreover, the enabled flexibility of SDN-based systems comes with a performance penalty. The design and capabilities of the underlying SDN infrastructure influence the performance of common network tasks, compared to a dedicated solution. In this paper we analyze two issues: a) the impact of SDN on raw performance (in terms of throughput and latency) under various workloads, and b) whether there is an inherent performance penalty for a complex, more functional, SDN infrastructure. Our results indicate that SDN does have a performance penalty, however, it is not necessarily related to the complexity level of the underlying SDN infrastructure.
Keywords :
computer networks; protocols; SDN approach; SDN capabilities; SDN characterization; SDN-based systems; centralized control; common network tasks; complexity level; equipment costs; fixed protocol stack; flexible dynamic programmable functionality; inflexible protocol stack; inherent performance penalty; network architectures; network systems; network traffic; predefined protocol stack; reduced complexity; software-defined networking; user experience; Complexity theory; Jitter; Linux; Protocols; Routing; Switches; Throughput;
Conference_Titel :
Modeling, Analysis & Simulation of Computer and Telecommunication Systems (MASCOTS), 2013 IEEE 21st International Symposium on