commit | 1e9061e185e308b310a54d1b505541b8a8823ec6 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Kent Hagerman <khagerma@ciena.com> | Tue May 21 16:01:21 2019 -0400 |
committer | Kent Hagerman <khagerma@ciena.com> | Wed May 22 12:42:18 2019 -0400 |
tree | 2efdc3d9f8cba52642d6856a625077d47164920a | |
parent | 802aca48623560437ec03b52c7b7c73f37ff965a [diff] |
General afrouter cleanup. - Separated backend.go into multiple files. - Replaced array indexing hack with enum pattern. - Various renaming for better consistency. - Removed a few unused structs. - Replaced a thread with an atomic operation. Change-Id: I2239692cac21ddb7f513b6d8c247ffa8789714ac
Voltha aims to provide a layer of abstraction on top of legacy and next generation access network equipment for the purpose of control and management. Its initial focus is on PON (GPON, EPON, NG PON 2), but it aims to go beyond to eventually cover other access technologies (xDSL, Docsis, G.FAST, dedicated Ethernet, fixed wireless).
Key concepts of Voltha:
Control and management in the access network space is a mess. Each access technology brings its own bag of protocols, and on top of that vendors have their own interpretation/extension of the same standards. Compounding the problem is that these vendor- and technology specific differences ooze way up into the centralized OSS systems of the service provider, creating a lot of inefficiencies.
Ideally, all vendor equipment for the same access technology should provide an identical interface for control and management. Moreover, there shall be much higher synergies across technologies. While we wait for vendors to unite, Voltha provides an increment to that direction, by confining the differences to the locality of access and hiding them from the upper layers of the OSS stack.
While we are still at the early phase of development, you can check out the BUILD.md file to see how you can build it, run it, test it, etc.
Contributions, small and large, are welcome. Minor contributions and bug fixes are always welcome in form of pull requests. For larger work, the best is to check in with the existing developers to see where help is most needed and to make sure your solution is compatible with the general philosophy of Voltha.