Abstract

Network function virtualization (NFV) is critical to the scalability and flexibility of various network services in the form of service function chains (SFCs), which refer to a set of Virtual Network Functions (VNFs) chained in a specific order. However, the NFV performance is hard to fulfill the ever-increasing requirements of network services mainly due to the static orchestrations of SFCs. To tackle this issue, a novel Scalable SFC Orchestration (SSCO) scheme is proposed in this paper for NFV-enabled networks via federated reinforcement learning. SSCO has three remarkable characteristics distinguishing from the previous work: (1) A federated-learning-based framework is designed to train a global learning model, with time-variant local model explorations, for scalable SFC orchestration, while avoiding data sharing among stakeholders; (2) SSCO allows for parameter update among local clients and the cloud server just at the first and last epochs of each episode to ensure that distributed clients can make model optimization at a low communication cost; (3) SSCO introduces an efficient deep reinforcement learning (DRL) approach, with the local learning knowledge of available resources and instantiation cost, to map VNFs into networks flexibly. Furthermore, a loss-weight-based mechanism is proposed to generate and exploit reference samples in replay buffers for future training, avoiding the strong relevance of samples. Simulation results obtained from different working scenarios demonstrate that SSCO can significantly reduce placement errors and improve resource utilization ratio to place time-variant VNFs compared with the state-of-the-art mechanisms. Furthermore, the results show that the proposed approach can achieve desirable scalability.

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