Description
Network Slice Management (NSM) is a comprehensive framework defined within the 3GPP Management and Orchestration (MANO) architecture, specifically detailed in TS 28.202 and TS 28.843. It encompasses the set of management functions and interfaces required to manage the lifecycle of a network slice. A network slice is an end-to-end logical network that provides specific network capabilities and characteristics, and NSM is responsible for its instantiation, configuration, activation, supervision, and decommissioning.
The NSM framework operates through a set of management services that interact with other management functions, such as the Communication Service Management Function (CSMF) and the Network Slice Management Function (NSMF). The NSM receives slice requirements from the CSMF, which translates business needs into technical specifications. It then decomposes these requirements into sub-network slice instance requirements and coordinates with Domain Management Functions (like the Network Slice Subnet Management Function - NSSMF) to manage the resources across different network domains (e.g., RAN, Core, Transport).
Key architectural components within NSM include the management interfaces (e.g., the Nsmf interface) and the defined management procedures for slice template management, slice instance management, and slice performance assurance. It handles the provisioning of the necessary virtualized network functions (VNFs) and physical network functions (PNFs), their connectivity, and the associated policies. NSM is crucial for ensuring that each slice operates in isolation according to its defined SLA, covering aspects like performance monitoring, fault management, and security policy enforcement. It acts as the central orchestration layer for slices, enabling automated and efficient operations.
Purpose & Motivation
NSM was introduced to address the operational complexity of deploying and managing multiple, isolated logical networks (slices) over a shared physical infrastructure. Prior to network slicing, operators managed a single, monolithic network offering a one-size-fits-all service. The advent of 5G and diverse use cases (eMBB, URLLC, mMTC) demanded the ability to create tailored networks with specific performance guarantees, which was not feasible with legacy management systems.
The creation of NSM was motivated by the need for a standardized, automated management framework. Without it, slice lifecycle operations would be manual, slow, and prone to error, negating the agility benefits of network slicing. NSM solves the problem of coordinating resources across multiple technological domains (RAN, Core, Transport) that are often managed by separate systems. It provides the necessary abstraction and automation to translate high-level service requests into detailed, cross-domain resource configurations, enabling efficient use of infrastructure and rapid service delivery.
Classification
Detected Changes Across Releases
from 3GPP Change RequestsSpecific changes extracted from the „Change history“ tables of 3GPP specifications (3 CRs across 3 releases). Complements the general historical overview above with the evidence-based evolution of this function.
In Release 16, the Network Slice Management (NSM) function introduced standardized converged charging for the lifecycle management operations of Network Slice Instances (NSIs), specifically for their creation, modification, and termination. This charging is enabled through a Charging Enablement Function (CEF) that consumes provisioning management services and interacts with the charging function, based on the management service architecture defined for network slicing.
- Correction of Abbreviation NSM TS 28.202CR0001
In Release 18, the NSM function introduced clarifications on the specific triggers for the content of NSM messages. This update provides more precise definitions for when charging-related information must be generated in response to management operations like Network Slice Instance creation, modification, and termination. The enhancement refines the procedures for the Charging Enablement Function (CEF) and Charging Trigger Function (CTF) when interacting with provisioning Management Services (MnS).
- Rel-18 CR 28.202 Clarification on triggers for NSM message content TS 28.202CR0005
In Release 19, the NSM function introduced support for energy-related information per network slice as a new charging consideration. This enhancement allows the collection of energy data to be integrated into the existing Network Slice Management charging framework for instance creation, modification, and termination. The specific energy information elements are now part of the charging information collected per Network Slice Instance.
- Rel-19 CR 28.202 Support the energy related information per network slice TS 28.202CR0006
Explore further
Broader topics and technologies where NSM plays a role.
Defining Specifications
3GPP specifications that define or reference NSM, with the latest known release. Sourced from the 3GPP document catalog — see methodology.
| Specification | Title | Release |
|---|---|---|
| TS 28.202 vj00 | 5G Network Slice Management Charging | Rel-19 |
| TR 28.843 vi10 | Technical Report on Charging Aspects for Vertical Scenarios | Rel-18 |