5 research outputs found

    Traffic grooming and wavelength conversion in optical networks

    Get PDF
    Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) using wavelength routing has emerged as the dominant technology for use in wide area and metropolitan area networks. Traffic demands in networks today are characterized by dynamic, heterogeneous flows. While each wavelength has transmission capacity at gigabit per second rates, users require connections at rates that are lower than the full wavelength capacity. In this thesis, we explore network design and operation methodologies to improve the network utilization and blocking performance of wavelength routing networks which employ a layered architecture with electronic and optical switching. First we provide an introduction to first generation SONET/SDH networks and wavelength routing networks, which employ optical crossconnects. We explain the need and role of wavelength conversion in optical networks and present an algorithm to optimally place wavelength conversion devices at the network nodes so as to optimize blocking performance. Our algorithm offers significant savings in computation time when compared to the exhaustive method.;To make the network viable and cost-effective, it must be able to offer sub-wavelength services and be able to pack these services efficiently onto wavelengths. The act of multiplexing, demultiplexing and switching of sub-wavelength services onto wavelengths is defined as traffic grooming. Constrained grooming networks perform grooming only at the network edge. Sparse grooming networks perform grooming at the network edge and the core. We study and compare the effect of traffic grooming on blocking performance in such networks through simulations and analyses. We also study the issue of capacity fairness in such networks and develop a connection admission control (CAC) algorithm to improve the fairness among connections with different capacities. We finally address the issues involved in dynamic routing and wavelength assignment in survivable WDM grooming networks. We develop two schemes for grooming primary and backup traffic streams onto wavelengths: Mixed Primary-Backup Grooming Policy (MGP) and Segregated Primary-Backup Grooming Policy (SGP). MGP is useful in topologies such as ring, characterized by low connectivity and high load correlation and SGP is useful in topologies, such as mesh-torus, with good connectivity and a significant amount of traffic switching and mixing at the nodes

    Protection schemes and wavelength conversion in WDM optical networks

    Get PDF
    Orientador: Helio WaldmanDissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Faculdade de Engenharia Eletrica e de ComputaçãoResumo: Este trabalho tem como objetivo analisar a redução na probabilidade de bloqueio com o uso de conversores de comprimento de onda e esquemas de proteção em redes Ăłpticas. É apresentada a proteção por roteamento em sub-grafos, um mĂ©todo de criar caminhos de proteção dependentes a falha para cada conexĂŁo. Alguns esquemas para eliminar realocaçÔes desnecessĂĄrias de conexĂ”es no caso de falha, sem penalizar fortemente a aceitação de novas conexĂ”es, foram sugeridos e comparados. Outro tema abordado no trabalho foi o ganho do uso de conversores de comprimento de onda em redes em malha em um ambiente dinĂąmico de trĂĄfego. Foi utilizado nas simulaçÔes um nĂșmero limitado de conversores plenos espalhados pela rede. Foi analisada a quantidade suficiente de conversores para se ter uma probabilidade de bloqueio satisfatĂłria, pensando em minimizar os investimentos a serem feitos no momento de uma expansĂŁo da rede. Para um melhor entendimento dos problemas estudados hĂĄ uma descrição do funcionamento da rede Ăłptica e seus elementos principais e dos algoritmos de roteamento e alocação de comprimento de onda utilizados e descritos na literaturaAbstract: This work examines the blocking reduction with the use of wavelength converters and some protection schemes in optical networks. Sub-Graph Routing Protection, a protection method that creates different failure-dependent protection paths for each connection is presented. Some schemes were proposed and compared, aiming at eliminating unnecessary connection reallocations on a failure occurrence, without compromising the acceptance of new connections. Another topic studied for this work is the conversion gain, when wavelength converters are used in mesh topology networks under dynamic traffic. A limited number of total converters were used in the simulations. The sufficient amount of converters for a satisfactory blocking probability was analyzed, for minimizing investments in a network upgrade. For a better problem formulation understanding the optical network and its elements were explained. The routing and wavelength allocation algorithms proposed in the literature are also detailed.MestradoTelecomunicaçÔes e TelemĂĄticaMestre em Engenharia ElĂ©tric

    Investigation of the tolerance of wavelength-routed optical networks to traffic load variations.

    Get PDF
    This thesis focuses on the performance of circuit-switched wavelength-routed optical network with unpredictable traffic pattern variations. This characteristic of optical networks is termed traffic forecast tolerance. First, the increasing volume and heterogeneous nature of data and voice traffic is discussed. The challenges in designing robust optical networks to handle unpredictable traffic statistics are described. Other work relating to the same research issues are discussed. A general methodology to quantify the traffic forecast tolerance of optical networks is presented. A traffic model is proposed to simulate dynamic, non-uniform loads, and used to test wavelength-routed optical networks considering numerous network topologies. The number of wavelengths required and the effect of the routing and wavelength allocation algorithm are investigated. A new method of quantifying the network tolerance is proposed, based on the calculation of the increase in the standard deviation of the blocking probabilities with increasing traffic load non-uniformity. The performance of different networks are calculated and compared. The relationship between physical features of the network topology and traffic forecast tolerance is investigated. A large number of randomly connected networks with different sizes were assessed. It is shown that the average lightpath length and the number of wavelengths required for full interconnection of the nodes in static operation both exhibit a strong correlation with the network tolerance, regardless of the degree of load non-uniformity. Finally, the impact of wavelength conversion on network tolerance is investigated. Wavelength conversion significantly increases the robustness of optical networks to unpredictable traffic variations. In particular, two sparse wavelength conversion schemes are compared and discussed: distributed wavelength conversion and localized wavelength conversion. It is found that the distributed wavelength conversion scheme outperforms localized wavelength conversion scheme, both with uniform loading and in terms of the network tolerance. The results described in this thesis can be used for the analysis and design of reliable WDM optical networks that are robust to future traffic demand variations

    IP multicast over WDM networks

    Get PDF
    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH

    Joint optimization of topology, switching, routing and wavelength assignment

    Get PDF
    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2007.Includes bibliographical references (p. 279-285).To provide end users with economic access to high bandwidth, the architecture of the next generation metropolitan area networks (MANs) needs to be judiciously designed from the cost perspective. In addition to a low initial capital investment, the ultimate goal is to design networks that exhibit excellent scalability - a decreasing cost-per-node-per-unit-traffic as user number and transaction size increase. As an effort to achieve this goal, in this thesis we search for the scalable network architectures over the solution space that embodies the key aspects of optical networks: fiber connection topology, switching architecture selection and resource dimensioning, routing and wavelength assignment (RWA). Due to the inter-related nature of these design elements, we intended to solve the design problem jointly in the optimization process in order to achieve over-all good performance. To evaluate how the cost drives architectural tradeoffs, an analytical approach is taken in most parts of the thesis by first focusing on networks with symmetric and well defined structures (i.e., regular networks) and symmetric traffic patterns (i.e., all-to-all uniform traffic), which are fair representations that give us suggestions of trends, etc.(cont.) We starts with a examination of various measures of regular topologies. The average minimum hop distance plays a crucial role in evaluating the efficiency of network architecture. From the perspective of designing optical networks, the amount of switching resources used at nodes is proportional to the average minimum hop distance. Thus a smaller average minimum hop distance translates into a lower fraction of pass-through traffic and less switching resources required. Next, a first-order cost model is set up and an optimization problem is formulated for the purpose of characterizing the tradeoffs between fiber and switching resources. Via convex optimization techniques, the joint optimization problem is solved analytically for (static) uniform traffic and symmetric networks. Two classes of regular graphs - Generalized Moore Graphs and A-nearest Neighbors Graphs - are identified to yield lower and upper cost bounds, respectively. The investigation of the cost scalability further demonstrates the advantage of the Generalized Moore Graphs as benchmark topologies: with linear switching cost structure, the minimal normalized cost per unit traffic decreases with increasing network size for the Generalized Moore Graphs and their relatives.(cont.) In comparison, for less efficient fiber topologies (e.g., A-nearest Neighbors) and switching cost structures (e.g., quadratic cost), the minimal normalized cost per unit traffic plateaus or even increases with increasing network size. The study also reveals other attractive properties of Generalized Moore Graphs in conjunction with minimum hop routing - the aggregate network load is evenly distributed over each fiber. Thus, Generalized Moore Graphs also require the minimum number of wavelengths to support a given uniform traffic demand. Further more, the theoretical works on the Generalized Moore Graphs and their close relatives are extended to study more realistic design scenarios in two aspects. One aspect addresses the irregular topologies and (static) non-uniform traffic, for which the results of Generalized Moore networks are used to provide useful estimates of network cost, and are thus offering good references for cost-efficient optical networks. The other aspect deals with network design under random demands. Two optimization formulations that incorporate the traffic variability are presented.(cont.) The results show that as physical architecture, Generalized Moore Graphs are most robust (in cost) to the demand uncertainties. Analytical results also provided design guidelines on how optimum dimensioning, network connectivity, and network costs vary as functions of risk aversion, service level requirements, and probability distributions of demands.by Kyle Chi Guan.Ph.D
    corecore