LF Networking
LF Networking (LFN) is a Linux Foundation project umbrella that coordinates open source networking platforms, frameworks, and standards-aligned initiatives for service providers, cloud operators, and enterprises.
- Collaborative governance model unifying multiple open source networking projects under a common structure
- Open source platforms for telecom, carrier-grade, and cloud-native networking workloads
- Community-driven reference architectures and blueprints for Software Defined Networking (SDN) and network automation
- Neutral forum for collaboration among network operators, vendors, integrators, and other stakeholders
- Training, documentation, and event programs to support adoption of open source networking technologies
More About LF Networking
LF Networking operates under the Linux Foundation as a coordinated umbrella for multiple open source networking projects used by communication service providers, cloud platforms, and enterprises that deploy software-based networking. Its scope spans network orchestration, automation, cloud-native networking, and integration with existing OSS/BSS and infrastructure stacks. The initiative provides a neutral environment where operators, vendors, and system integrators contribute to common code bases and technical guidance for production networking deployments.
In enterprise and institutional environments, LF Networking projects are used as building blocks for SDN, Network Functions Virtualization (NFV), and cloud-native network functions (CNFs). These projects are typically integrated into multi-vendor environments to support services such as 5G, edge computing, virtualized core networks, and automated network operations. LFN encourages use of modular, API-driven components so organizations can adopt individual projects or combined reference stacks based on their architectural requirements.
LF Networking documentation and blueprints reference architectures that align with standards bodies and frameworks such as ETSI NFV, 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) for mobile networks, and Model Evaluation Framework (MEF) service models where applicable. The projects commonly interact with technologies such as Kubernetes (cloud-native infrastructure), container orchestration, and service mesh platforms for traffic management and observability. Protocol support in LFN-related projects typically includes interfaces and models relevant to SDN controllers, programmable data planes, and network telemetry, although exact protocol sets depend on each project.
From a marketplace categorization perspective, LF Networking’s portfolio can be grouped into several high-level solution domains: SDN and NFV platforms (network virtualization and control), network orchestration and lifecycle automation (network automation), cloud-native networking for containers and microservices (cloud networking), and integration toolchains for telco and edge environments (telecom infrastructure). These domains support activities such as service provisioning, policy-driven configuration, closed-loop automation, and integration with operations support systems.
LF Networking also provides collaboration structures such as working groups, communities of practice, and interoperability initiatives. Through these mechanisms, participants define use cases, create reference implementations, and validate multi-vendor interoperability scenarios. Training resources, documentation, and events help technical teams evaluate LFN projects, understand deployment models, and align their architectures with open source networking practices. For enterprise technical stakeholders, LF Networking functions as a coordination layer that connects discrete open source networking projects into more coherent solution categories that can be evaluated alongside commercial networking products and services.