Software‐defined networking in vehicular networks: A survey

Software‐defined networking (SDN) is a new paradigm that consists in decoupling the control plane from the data plane, which offers the flexibility of configuring and managing networks. Recently, an extension of SDN to vehicular ad hoc networks (VANETs), named software‐defined vehicular networks (SD...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inTransactions on emerging telecommunications technologies Vol. 33; no. 10
Main Authors Mekki, Tesnim, Jabri, Issam, Rachedi, Abderrezak, Chaari, Lamia
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Wiley-Blackwell 01.10.2022
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Summary:Software‐defined networking (SDN) is a new paradigm that consists in decoupling the control plane from the data plane, which offers the flexibility of configuring and managing networks. Recently, an extension of SDN to vehicular ad hoc networks (VANETs), named software‐defined vehicular networks (SDVN), has been emerged to expand the capabilities of VANET in terms of the provided services and to overcome the VANET issues. Also, SDN has gained a lot of interest to be involved in the extensions of VANET, which are vehicular cloud and vehicular fog. In this paper, we overview the use of SDN in VANET. We survey its deployment in the classic vehicular networks, 5G‐VANET, vehicular cloud, and vehicular fog. Thereafter, we discuss some case studies of SDN in the vehicular context. Then, we present a taxonomy of the existing architectures followed by the major challenges in the implementation of SDN in the vehicular context. Next, we review the tools used to simulate SDN‐based VANET scenarios. Finally, we give some future research directions. This paper presents an overview of the concept of software‐defined networking in the context of vehicular networks. A classification of the software‐defined vehicular network architectures, benefits, challenges, use cases, simulation tools, and open issues are presented in this work.
ISSN:2161-3915
2161-3915
DOI:10.1002/ett.4265