Rakuten Symphony Inc. and CIQ, Inc.
announced the availability and support of the Rocky Linux operating
system for handling demanding radio signal processing software workloads.
"Open source communities encourage innovation through
collaboration. Without them, many of the technologies we take for granted today
would never have developed, or would be locked away behind patent law.
Deployment of Rocky Linux represents a return to true open-source principles,
powered by open communities," said Tareq Amin, CEO of Rakuten Mobile and
Rakuten Symphony.
In modern telecom networks, the DU
deployment results in a large number of sites that today require individual
operating system licenses and support. Using licensing models designed for
enterprises with smaller footprints does not economically work. In addition, the
high-performance requirements demanded by the radio processing workloads for 5G
and Open RAN mean generic operating system solutions are not enough. This is
true for any latency-sensitive workloads running at the edge in any
industry.
The focus on high performance also
improves cost-efficiency when deployed at such scale. The deployment of highly
latency-sensitive and performance-oriented workloads, such as DU, requires a
fine-grained allocation of compute, network and memory resources, which is
accomplished through Rocky Linux's real-time OS kernel, with orchestration done
via the Rakuten Symphony Symworld Cloud
Platform.
"We've successfully validated Rocky
Linux with our radio software in the Rakuten Mobile network in Japan. The open
source performance is clearly at parity with commercial alternatives available
in the market today," says Ryota Mibu, Cloud Platform Division Manager, Rakuten
Mobile. "We have implemented the required enhanced platform awareness for radio
software operation by applying advanced techniques and tools such as CPU
pinning, SR-IOV, DPDK/PMD, link aggregation and source-based routing."
Gregory Kurtzer, who founded Rocky
Linux and is also the founder and CEO of CIQ, said, "Rocky is the trusted
successor to CentOS, which was immensely popular across the ecosystem including
telecoms. Rocky is 100% compatible with RHEL and is continuing with the open
source promise that CentOS has left behind. It is a perfect alternative in all
parts of the telecom business. We have been collaborating with the telecom
community to ensure it meets both the real-time performance and economic needs
of large, disaggregated and open telecom 5G+ network deployments going forward.
The Rakuten team has been a great partner with CIQ, and we're all excited for
the success Rakuten Symphony has achieved with Rocky Linux."
Rocky Linux is foundational in the
planned deployment of 30,000 units of Symware in Rakuten
Mobile and contributes to the projected 50% cost savings. Rakuten Symphony will
establish a dedicated team within its cloud business unit focused on Rocky
Linux distribution and is also working closely with a broad spectrum of
third-party vendors and technology partners within the telecom industry to make
Rocky Linux the standard operating system for running large networks.
"As a security and compliance lead for Rocky Linux/RESF, it's
been my goal to ensure that we maintain a secure, transparent and reliable
enterprise Linux solution for the community," said Scott Shinn, CTO of
Atomicorp and a Rocky Linux community member and team lead. Shinn is
also project manager of the open source intrusion detection system OSSEC
HIDS. "This includes surpassing the requirements to conform to many
industry standards (PCI-DSS, NIST-800-53/171, NERC/CIP, HIPAA, etc.) and supply
chain assurance for the entire SBOM and making sure that these are always
openly available to the entire open source Rocky community. This is very
exciting for telecoms who have largely distributed resources from core to edge
powering their 4G and 5G radio networks. For this reason, we are very excited
to have Rakuten joining and sponsoring the Rocky Enterprise Software Foundation
(RESF) to ensure that Rocky Linux is always a leading solution for all
telecoms."
Amin also commented, "Rakuten
Symphony's center of design centers on simplification and removal of
unnecessary cost and complexity. This applies equally to architectures,
technologies and cost structures. With the modern cloud based architectural
changes now being introduced into telecom for the first time, this is the
opportunity to think differently and solve problems in new ways given our large
scale and performance needs."