Surviving the Storm: The Impacts of Open RAN Disaggregation on Latency and Resilience
Sotiris Chatzimiltis, Mohammad Shojafar, Mahdi Boloursaz Mashhadi and, Rahim Tafazolli

TL;DR
This paper analyzes how Open RAN disaggregation affects latency and resilience, showing that while it introduces additional delays and congestion risks, its flexibility enables effective mitigation strategies and resilience improvements.
Contribution
It models latency impacts of Open RAN disaggregation, introduces a new resilience utility function, and proposes an adaptive mechanism that significantly enhances system robustness against signaling storms.
Findings
Open RAN increases attachment latency under high load.
Disaggregation makes networks more susceptible to signaling storms.
Adaptive mechanisms can improve resilience by up to 286%.
Abstract
The development of Open Radio Access Networks (Open RAN), with their disaggregated architectures and virtualization of network functions, has brought considerable flexibility and cost savings to mobile networks. However, these architectural advancements introduce additional latency during the initial attachment procedure of User Equipment (UE), increasing the risk of signaling storms. This paper investigates the latency impact due to disaggregation of the Base-band Unit (BBU) into the Central Unit (CU) and Distributed Unit (DU). Specifically, we model the delays induced due to disaggregation on UE attachment, analyzing the performance under varying load conditions, and sensitivity to processing times. We demonstrate that while both monolithic and Open RAN architectures experience performance degradation under high-load conditions, Open RAN's added overheads can increase its…
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