New Open Source CORD Project Offers First Open Reference Implementation For Service Providers' Central Office/Access Network

Central Office Re-Architected as a Datacenter (CORD) Initiative Radically Transforms the Economics of Network Access

SUNNYVALE, CA--(Marketwired - July 29, 2016) - The CORD™ Project, an open source project that delivers cloud economics and agility to the telco Central Office (CO), today announced availability of the first open CORD reference implementation, which provides a single integrated solutions platform for creating innovative new customer services.

With CORD, service providers, both fixed and wireless, will have the service delivery platform necessary to create and deploy new services at cloud-like speed, and independent of the access network architecture. To achieve this, CORD leverages merchant silicon, white boxes servers, bare metal switches and open source software platforms to offer today's traditional connectivity services, as well as tomorrow's cloud-based services, to residential, enterprise and mobile customers in a common unified infrastructure.

Hosted by The Linux Foundation, CORD's community growth, technical roadmap, availability of the open reference implementation, the project's focus moving forward, as well as how the global community can contribute and participate are being discussed today at the first CORD Summit, located at the Google Sunnyvale Tech Corner Campus in California. New partners, Google, Radisys and Samsung, were announced this week and will be in attendance.

The first open reference implementation of CORD builds on best-in-class software defined networking (SDN), network functions virtualization (NFV), Cloud and open source platforms such as ONOS®, Trellis, OpenStack, Docker and XOS.

"Our first open source distribution is much more than a pile of code on Github. We have created a distribution in standard repositories that a developer or user can download and auto-build CORD on a single node very quickly -- hopefully in an hour or so," said Larry Peterson, chief architect of ON.Lab and board member of the CORD Project. "We also provide excellent documentation in terms of white papers, design notes, videos and demos to make it really easy for developers and users to get started."

More About the New CORD Reference Implementation

Both the open source ONOS and CORD Projects are hosted by The Linux Foundation, the nonprofit advancing professional open source management for mass collaboration.

The new open reference implementation supports CORD's three domains of use: residential, enterprise and mobile. It includes a hardware blueprint with guidance on OCP servers; switches and access blades assembly instructions; auto-configuring software; and testing infrastructure. It also features software distribution of the platform stack comprising: