5G WWC Standards to Integrate Wireline and WirelessDeutsche Telekom Achieves End-to-end Data Call on Converged Access with 5G Residential Gateway Control from the 5G Core
Wireline and wireless services are delivered today from two
distinct technology implementations with separate network cores. 5G WWC
standards offer a path to a fully converged broadband access network that
integrates wireless and wireline operations on a common 5G Core. Using these
standards in an industry first proof-of-concept, Deutsche Telekom has validated
in a lab trial the feasibility of converging the fixed network control plane
into a 5G Core to steer traffic from a 5G residential gateway. The traffic was
then routed along the entire wireline access chain to the core network. Operators traditionally use two separate and distinct network cores: one for wireless users and one for wireline access. The 5G Core can be implemented as a common core, where the control plane and user plane can span across wireless and wireline networks. Therefore, the new converged network based on 5G WWC standards enables operators to support both wireline and wireless networks without unnecessary duplication of functions such as authentication, subscriber databases, charging, and network-management tools. It also creates new options for converged services. The trial system takes advantage of 5G User Plane Function (UPF) and Access Gateway Function (AGF) from Casa Systems. Casa’s cloud-native 5G Core network functions provide multi-access support independent of network access type. And the 5G residential gateway prototype, which is internally developed at Deutsche Telekom, connects over the wireline access network.
The AGF mediates between the wireline access network and the 5G Core, with
mapping between wireline broadband and 5G authentication, authorization, and
session establishment procedures. Source: Deutsche Telekom media announcement |