Volta claims that moving routing intelligence to the cloud and running white boxes can slash costs compared with legacy equipment.

Mitch Wagner, Executive Editor, Light Reading

May 15, 2019

5 Min Read
Volta Bigs Up Its Cloud Router, Claims 90% Savings vs Legacy

Startup Volta Networks is looking to break into the router market with a story based on cloud-native capabilities and massively reduced costs. The company claims its Volta Elastic Virtual Routing Engine (VEVRE) can reduce edge routing costs by 90% compared with legacy routers.

Founded by ex-Juniper and Cisco executives, Volta provides software that separates the control plane from the data plane -- the proposition that underpinned software-defined networking (SDN). The data plane runs on commodity hardware, while almost all of the control plane moves to the cloud, except for a few functions that are latency sensitive, says Dean Bogdanovic, Volta Networks founder and CEO and a former distinguished engineer at Juniper Networks.

Volta, which has raised $3.3 million in funding to date, is looking to differentiate itself from legacy vendors, such as Cisco and Juniper, that, claims Bogdanovic, just aren't keeping up with increased demand for bandwidth and latency driven by emerging applications such as the Internet of Things, artificial intelligence and smart cars. Legacy vendors are virtualizing their routers, but the software is still mostly tied to vendor hardware, which limits scalability, he adds. Vendors are tied to these limitations out of fear of jeopardizing their existing business model, which involves selling expensive hardware, Bogdanovic notes.

With Volta's approach, network operators can buy inexpensive switch hardware from a Taiwanese vendor or Dell, and run up to 255 virtual routers on that switch, as long as bandwidth holds out, Bogdanovic says.

Figure 1: Volta's Dean Bogdanovic Volta's Dean Bogdanovic

"We're about one tenth the cost of Juniper or Cisco. Our approach is much less expensive," claims Volta marketing VP Hugh Kelly. "That's what gets the carrier's attention."

In addition to cost savings, VEVRE offers the benefit of reduced latency: That's important for the Internet of Things and other emerging edge use cases that require fast access to compute and storage and can't wait for information to make the round trip from the device to a big, centralized cloud data center, and back again.

For example, tower operators can deploy a single VEVRE switch at a tower and run it as a 5G gateway for multiple telcos and other service providers, Kelly says.

Volta keeps costs down by offloading control plane software to the cloud, and also using a high-level software development kit (SDK), rather than traditional configuration files, to make it easier for developers to build services. "That makes service creation and time to revenue faster," Bogdanovic says.

VEVRE is currently shipping, and the company has been working with customers for 12 months, including NTT, and has been named a software finalist by Vodafone, TIM Brasil and Telefonica as part of the Telecom Infrastructure Project's Disaggregated Cell Site Gateway (DSCG) specification. Volta was also recently named an "integral" partner for Fujitsu's new Smart xHaul solution, to help service providers add capacity to meet 5G demands.

Volta is pioneering bringing routing to the cloud, but it's not the only one doing it. Startup DriveNets supports up to 400G per port and can scale up to a hefty 768 Tbit/s, making it possibly the highest capacity router available.

And Casa Systems provides the Axyom Virtual Broadband Network Gateway (vBNG) Router to bring virtualization and NFV to fixed telco broadband networks.

(DriveNets and Casa joined Volta among the 13 finalists that made the shortlist for this year's Most Innovative Telco Cloud Product Strategy (Vendor) Leading Lights award.

Volta's approach looks good, but the test will be real-world implementations, says Roz Roseboro, Heavy Reading principal analyst, cloud infrastructure and management. "If you can get the same performance at lower cost, what's not to like?" she says. But Volta will have to prove viability with implementations in the field. "Getting people to try a new approach is always a challenge," she says.

The industry has been talking about SDN and white boxes for nearly a decade. But Volta has an opportunity, Roseboro says. "Now, people aren't afraid of white boxes anymore," Volta is "going to hang their hat on the sophistication and completeness of their routing protocols -- no compromise on functionality," she says. "It's a little different than people doing a network operating system, though that's part of it. [Volta is] trying to fully replace the functionality you get with a full-blown Juniper or Cisco router."

By putting control software in the cloud, Volta gains scalability advantages not available to competitors that run the control software on the router, Roseboro says. In the latter case, operators need to buy a bigger router, or additional routers, to scale up, and that's more expensive; by putting the control software in the cloud, Volta makes it possible to scale up the network less expensively, reducing need to scale up hardware. "Volta puts the bare minimum in locations and all the heavy lifting is done in the cloud," she says. "People have been talking about doing this for a while, but this is among the first implementations."

She adds, "The challenge will be how do you get everyone to trust that it work the same as Cisco, Juniper and Arista have done for 20 years?"

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About the Author(s)

Mitch Wagner

Executive Editor, Light Reading

San Diego-based Mitch Wagner is many things. As well as being "our guy" on the West Coast (of the US, not Scotland, or anywhere else with indifferent meteorological conditions), he's a husband (to his wife), dissatisfied Democrat, American (so he could be President some day), nonobservant Jew, and science fiction fan. Not necessarily in that order.

He's also one half of a special duo, along with Minnie, who is the co-habitor of the West Coast Bureau and Light Reading's primary chewer of sticks, though she is not the only one on the team who regularly munches on bark.

Wagner, whose previous positions include Editor-in-Chief at Internet Evolution and Executive Editor at InformationWeek, will be responsible for tracking and reporting on developments in Silicon Valley and other US West Coast hotspots of communications technology innovation.

Beats: Software-defined networking (SDN), network functions virtualization (NFV), IP networking, and colored foods (such as 'green rice').

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