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On Energy Efficient Resource Allocation in Shared RANs: Survey and Qualitative Analysis

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TLDR
An innovative survey, since it concentrates on multiple operators, and the enabling of Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNOs), which will come into play with the complete virtualization of mobile networks.
Abstract
An expansion of services and unprecedented traffic growth is anticipated in future networks, aligned with the adoption of the long-awaited Fifth Generation (5G) of mobile communications To support this demand, without exposing mobile operators to the pressure of CAPEX and OPEX, 5G uses new frequency bands, and adopts promising trends, including: densification, softwarization, and autonomous management While the first technology is proposed to handle the traffic growth requirements, the softwarization and autonomous management are expected to play, in synergy, to ensure the desired trade-off between reducing the CAPEX and OPEX, while guaranteeing the quality of service (QoS) Softwarization is expected to transform the network design, from one size fits all, to more demand oriented adaptive resource allocation In this work, we focus on this point, by discussing how these technologies act in synergy towards enabling RAN sharing Particularly, we focus on how they fit into the issue of energy efficient Multi-Operator Resource Allocation (MO-RA) After a survey and classification of schemes leveraging this synergy for distinct resource allocation (RA) objectives, we present a detailed survey and qualitative classification of RA schemes with respect to energy efficiency This work presents an innovative survey, since it concentrates on multiple operators, and the enabling of Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNOs), which will come into play with the complete virtualization of mobile networks Based on the deep literature analysis of the different operations that can bring energy savings to MO-RA, we conclude the work with listing open challenges and future research directions

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

OpenFlow: enabling innovation in campus networks

TL;DR: This whitepaper proposes OpenFlow: a way for researchers to run experimental protocols in the networks they use every day, based on an Ethernet switch, with an internal flow-table, and a standardized interface to add and remove flow entries.
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Cloud RAN for Mobile Networks—A Technology Overview

TL;DR: This paper surveys the state-of-the-art literature on C-RAN and can serve as a starting point for anyone willing to understand C- RAN architecture and advance the research on the network.
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Network densification: the dominant theme for wireless evolution into 5G

TL;DR: This article explores network densification as the key mechanism for wireless evolution over the next decade if it is complemented by backhaul densification, and advanced receivers capable of interference cancellation.
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Ultra-Dense Networks: A Survey

TL;DR: This paper provides a survey-style introduction to dense small cell networks and considers many research directions, namely, user association, interference management, energy efficiency, spectrum sharing, resource management, scheduling, backhauling, propagation modeling, and the economics of UDN deployment.
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Energy-efficient wireless communications: tutorial, survey, and open issues

TL;DR: Basic concepts of energy-efficient communications are first introduced and then existing fundamental works and advanced techniques for energy efficiency are summarized, including information-theoretic analysis, OFDMA networks, MIMO techniques, relay transmission, and resource allocation for signaling.
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