Traditional Radio Access Networks (RANs) have long been dominated by proprietary, monolithic systems tightly coupled to specialized hardware. This closed ecosystem limited innovation, interoperability, and deployment flexibility. Today, open source and cloud-native principles are reshaping this landscape. At the center of this transformation is the O-RAN Alliance, a collaboration of over 300 operators, vendors, researchers, and developers, working together to create an open, standardized, and disaggregated RAN.
This talk focuses on one of the most exciting innovations enabled by this openness: the xApp. These lightweight, containerized applications run on the Near-Real-Time RAN Intelligent Controller (Near-RT RIC) and bring programmability and intelligence to the RAN at timescales of 10 milliseconds to 1 second. xApps allow open source contributors and developers to directly influence critical network functions, including:
Handover and interference optimization
Load-aware traffic steering
Real-time QoS adjustments
Beamforming and radio resource management
We'll introduce the "xApps-Zero-to-Hero" open source toolkit, which lowers the barrier for building and deploying xApps using community-driven frameworks and interfaces. A live demonstration will showcase a KPI-monitoring xApp, illustrating how open innovation can be harnessed to enhance real-time RAN observability and control.
It highlights how open interfaces and modular software are disrupting a traditionally closed domain.
How OSS developers can contribute to 5G infrastructure and beyond through xApp innovation.
It connects the networking, cloud-native, and AI/ML communities in a single open RAN use case.
Technically rich proposal, bringing open source and cloud-native thinking into a traditionally closed space one (RAN)
I agree that more awareness need to be brought to this historically closed space. There are so many potential opportunities with having a FOSS telcom stack, we need more hacker knowing and hacking on this platform. Any demo or demo recording you can do will be very enlightening, I don't know if many know how accessible it is to start developing on 5G.