Ana Almeida , Pedro Rito , Susana Brás , Filipe Cabral Pinto , Susana Sargento
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The demand for more secure, available, reliable, and fast networks emerges in a more interconnected society. In this context, 5G networks aim to transform how we communicate and interact. However, studies using 5G data are sparse since there are only a few number of publicly available 5G datasets (especially about commercial 5G network metrics with real users).
In this work, we analyze the data of a commercial 5G deployment with real users, and propose forecasting techniques to help understand the trends and to manage 5G networks. We propose the creation of a metric to measure the traffic load. We forecast the metric using several machine learning models, and we choose LightGBM as the best approach. We observe that this approach obtains results with a good accuracy, and better than other machine learning approaches, but its performance decreases if the patterns contain unexpected events. Taking advantage of the lower accuracy in the performance, this is used to detect changes in the patterns and manage the network in real-time, supporting network resource elasticity by generating alarms and automating the scaling during these unpredictable fluctuations.
Moreover, we introduce mobility data and integrate it with the previously traffic load metric, understanding its correlation and the prediction of 5G metrics through the use of the mobility data. We show again that LightGBM is the best model in predicting both types of 5G handovers, intra- and inter-gNB handovers, using the mobility information through Radars in the several roads, and lanes, near the 5G cells.
期刊介绍:
Computer and Communications networks are key infrastructures of the information society with high socio-economic value as they contribute to the correct operations of many critical services (from healthcare to finance and transportation). Internet is the core of today''s computer-communication infrastructures. This has transformed the Internet, from a robust network for data transfer between computers, to a global, content-rich, communication and information system where contents are increasingly generated by the users, and distributed according to human social relations. Next-generation network technologies, architectures and protocols are therefore required to overcome the limitations of the legacy Internet and add new capabilities and services. The future Internet should be ubiquitous, secure, resilient, and closer to human communication paradigms.
Computer Communications is a peer-reviewed international journal that publishes high-quality scientific articles (both theory and practice) and survey papers covering all aspects of future computer communication networks (on all layers, except the physical layer), with a special attention to the evolution of the Internet architecture, protocols, services, and applications.