Difference between Traditional RAN vs O-RAN
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Introduction: Traditional RAN architectures tend to be monolithic, vendor locked and proprietary, constraining flexibility and innovation. O-RAN (Open Radio Access Network) uses standardized interfaces that enables multi-vendor ecosystems and AI-based control. This page explore the core differences betweeb traditional and open RAN architecture and more.
Traditional RAN
- In this legacy RAN, components such as Radio Unit (RU or RRH), Baseband Unit (BBU) and other protocol layers are tightly integrated. These units are often provided by single vendor.
- The hardware and software are proprietary.
- The interfaces between components are vendor specific and closed.
- Any upgradation requires working with the same vendor’s full stack.
- Limited flexibility in mixing or integrating components from different vendors.
O-RAN
- It is designed based on concepts of disaggregation, openness, virtualization, open interfaces etc.
- It is managed and developed by O-RAN Alliance.
- Disaggregation refers to separating functions into logical units such as O-RU, O-DU and O-CU.
- Open or standardized interfaces to enable multi-vendor interoperability.
- The components such as DU, CU run on vendor neutral hardware using virtualization, containers etc.
- Architecture includes components like RAN Intelligent Controllers (RICs), both near real time (RT) and non real time, service management & orchestration frameworks (SMO), which enable optimization using telemetry, AI/ML, policy control etc.
Key differences
Aspect | Traditional RAN | O-RAN |
---|---|---|
Architectural model | Monolithic/tightly integrated ; Hardware (HW) and Software (SW) are required to be bundled from the same vendor. | Modular/loosely coupled ; Separate units can be integrated to make whole system without any interface issues. |
Interfaces | Proprietary and vendor specific | Standardized open interfaces to enable multi-vendor system |
Vendor lock-in | High, Operators are often stuck with one vendor for their HW/SW enhancement need. | Lower, ability to mix components from different vendors. |
flaxibility & upgrades | Less flexible, HW and SW upgradation can be done from same vendor | More flexible, upgrades can be done by adding third party components or software patches. |
Cost (CAPEX/OPEX) | Higher | Lower |
Deployment Speed | Relatively slower | Faster deployment |
Optimization | Often very optimized for specific vendor hardware | Allows dynamic optimization via RIC |
Scalability | Scalability can be done by adding more hardware often from sane vendor | More scalable, can add cloud/edge resources easily. |
Management & Orchestration | Mostly vendor-specific tools; less automation; monitoring and optimization more manual. | Stronger support for orchestration (SMO), monitoring, AI/ML-based optimization via RICs, dynamic resource allocation. |
Challenges | Mature & Stable, security surface is smaller. | Newer and evolving, open interfaces increase attack surface |
Conclusion: The shift from traditional RAN to O-RAN is a paradigm shift toward openness, agility and vendor diversity. While the traditional model offers stability and maturity, O-RAN promises flexibility, cost savings and innovation at scale.
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