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5G-Slicer-demo

This demo presents the 5G-Slicer emulator in action. 5G-Slicer is an emulation framework that facilitates the definition of mobile network slices through modeling abstractions for radio units, mobile nodes, trajectories, etc., while also offering realistic network QoS by dynamically altering -at runtime- signal strength. Moreover, 5G-Slicer provides an already realized scenario for a city-scale deployment that smart-city researchers can simply configure through a ``ready-to-use" template, leaving 5G-Slicer responsible for translating it into an emulated environment. 5G-Slicer's prototype offers a connector for the Fogify Framework , which is an interactive, multi-host, and scalable fog emulator. Fogify gives the required scalability and the ability of runtime changes to the 5G-Slicer. Since the 5G-Slicer's SDK is written in Python, we utilize Jupyter notebook as a web-based interactive GUI for 5G-Slicer and post-experimentation utilization metrics analysis.

Requirements

Before starting, we need to setup and configure requirements for Fogify framework. Specifically, we have to install docker, docker-compose and docker swarm on the infrastructure. For more information, we suggest the official documentation.

Furthermore, the system executes some low-level commands in order to apply specific characteristics to the network. For this reason, on each cluster of the swarm cluster, we should install the traffic control tool (tc-tool). On Debian-based destributions, tc-tool comes bundled with iproute, so in order to isntall it you have to run:

apt-get install iproute

Stack Instantiation

Having a docker swarm cluster running, we have to execute the 5G-Slicer, Fogify, and Jupyter. The services are dockerized and are described through the docker-compose file. So we should run the following command at the swarm master node.

sudo docker-compose -p 5GSlicer up

In order to open the web interface of Jupyter, you have to find the output of the ui service where the system outputs the url and the token

Jupyter Notebook

For instance, in previous output we can open the Jupyter interface with the following url:

http://127.0.0.1:8888/?token=1cd2e914cd03e76d551a666cb0a8dcdb6361bc29ddf54eed

If we have more nodes in the cluster, we have to execute the following command on every node.

sudo docker-compose -p fogemulator up agent cadvisor

Preparation of use-case

5GSlicer implemented a simple IoT service that is driven by real-world data to showcase a scenario of a bus operator that collects and analyzes location-based data from its fleet. The codebase of the application is under the application folder and can be easily build by running the following command:

./application/build-image.sh

When the containers are built, user has to create a folder named /home/ubuntu/data and should place the data of Dublin's buses and bus stops. Finally, the user can utilize the demo_files/docker-compose.yaml file as input of the 5GSlicer.

Scenario Execution

The following snippet depicts the example of 5G-Slicer demo and its programming abstractions. Lines 1-2 import the 5G-Slicer SDK and the parameterizable smart bus testbed template. In Lines 3-5, the user introduces the Fogify Controller address (experiment orchestrator) and the docker-compose file, describing the available infrastructure and network resources along with the emulation configuration. Lines 6-8 configure the testbed according to user preferences, including the number of radio units, MECs, and buses, along with the operational bounding box. The generate_experiment method produces a new SDK object that captures a programming view of the 5G-Slicer model and materializes the testbed with the mobility scenarios. Line 11 deploys the testbed, and Line 12 generates the interactive map. With the scenario_execution method in Line 13, the user can run the mobility scenario that is generated from the datasets. Finally, Line 14 finishes the emulation and releases all resources.

from usecases.dublin_buses_experiment import BusExperiment
from SlicerSDK import SlicerSDK
bus_experiment = BusExperiment(
    SlicerSDK("http://controller:5000", "docker-compose-demo.yaml"), # initial SlicerSDK model
    num_of_RUs=100, # number of radio units
    num_of_clouds=1, # number of cloud servers
    num_of_edge=4, # number of MEC servers
    num_of_buses=7, # number of IoT devices
    max_num_of_trace_steps=50, # trajectories information
    min_num_of_trace_steps=1, 
    bus_ids=[331416615, 335096213, 360603795, 380192314, 430355076, 335862098, 335096213], # IoT ids
    bounding_box=( 
        (53.351627215495036, -6.294565200805664), # bounding box in which the devices will operate
        (53.36187249371434, -6.234655380249024)),
    seed=1) # Random seed to keep the same EDGE nodes during the experiment
slicerSDK = bus_experiment.generate_experiment()  # creation of the experimental data