This post is based on a presentation by Tejas Patel, program manager in the information innovation office at DARPA, given during ONE Summit North America 2022.
When DARPA set out to explore the future of 5G, we asked ourselves, “how can DARPA have an outsized effect on the networking community?”
For us, the answer was quite simple: Focus on making security easy and readily available.
So the next natural question was “how” we accomplish this goal.
We did this by breaking the problem down into three parallel efforts across the random core:
The final question we asked ourselves in how to run these programs was what we should build upon?
DARPA is in the business of running research projects lasting between three and four years, not in long-term sustainment. This meant that greenfield development was out of the question.
Instead, we turned to the Linux Foundation to build upon the 5G Super Blueprint, leverage their existing relationships with the open source community, and utilize the Linux Foundation’s proven track record for enabling long term sustainment and evolution of open source projects.
Key touch points between DARPA & the 5G Super Blueprint / GOV OPS-5G:
By itself, open source software is not useful; the value comes from how the source code is developed.
To that end, we have SRS focusing on developing functionalized software versions of 5G handsets and base stations, emphasizing ease of readability, flexibility, and modularity. This allows anyone to audit the code base and have confidence in the software stack. This is particularly important given the growth of tunable network parameters. As we have moved from 2G, 3G, all the way to 5G, having an open source implementation allows anyone to tune these parameters and see exactly what effect this tuning has. No longer are we in the world of blackbox testing.
This is particularly important to the DoD as we often find ourselves not just in unknown environments but potentially hostile environments, and being prepared for hostility is often the difference between life and death for our deployed service members.
Watch Tejas Patel’s entire presentation on the LFN YouTube channel, and stay tuned for more examples of how LFN is deployed.