573 research outputs found
Service level agreement framework for differentiated survivability in GMPLS-based IP-over-optical networks
In the next generation optical internet, GMPLS based IP-over-optical networks, ISPs will be required to support a wide variety of applications each having their own requirements. These requirements are contracted by means of the SLA. This paper describes a recovery framework that may be included in the SLA contract between ISP and customers in order to provide the required level of survivability. A key concern with such a recovery framework is how to present the different survivability alternatives including recovery techniques, failure scenario and layered integration into a transparent manner for customers. In this paper, two issues are investigated. First, the performance of the recovery framework when applying a proposed mapping procedure as an admission control mechanism in the edge router considering a smart-edge simple-core GMPLS-based IP/WDM network is considered. The second issue pertains to the performance of a pre-allocated restoration and its ability to provide protected connections under different failure scenarios
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Cross-Layer Platform for Dynamic, Energy-Efficient Optical Networks
The design of the next-generation Internet infrastructure is driven by the need to sustain the massive growth in bandwidth demands. Novel, energy-efficient, optical networking technologies and architectures are required to effectively meet the stringent performance requirements with low cost and ultrahigh energy efficiencies. In this thesis, a cross-layer communications platform is proposed to enable greater intelligence and functionality on the physical layer. Providing the optical layer with advanced networking capabilities will facilitate the dynamic management and optimization of optical switching based on performance monitoring measurements and higher-layer attributes. The cross-layer platform aims to create a new framework for networks to incorporate packet-scale measurement subsystems and techniques for monitoring the health of the optical channel. This will allow for quality-of-service- and energy-aware routing schemes, as well as an enhanced awareness of the optical data signals. This thesis first presents the design and development of an optical packet switching fabric. Leveraging a networking test-bed environment to validate networking hypotheses, advanced switching functionalities are demonstrated, including the support for quality-of-service based routing and packet multicasting. The investigated cross-layering is based on emerging optical technologies, enabling packet protection techniques and packet-rate switching fabric reconfiguration. Coupled with fast performance monitoring, the platform will achieve significant performance gains within the endeavor of all-optical switching. Allowing for a more intelligent, programmable optical layer aims to support greater flexibility with respect to bandwidth allocation and potentially a significant reduction in the network's energy consumption. The ultimate deliverable of this work is a high-performance, cross-layer enabled optical network node. The experimental demonstration of an initial prototype creates a dynamic network element with distributed control plane management, featuring fast packet-rate optical switching capabilities and embedded physical-layer performance monitoring modules. The cross-layer box enables an intelligent traffic delivery system that can dynamically manipulate optical switching on a packet-granular scale. With the goal of achieving advanced multi-layer routing and control algorithms, the network node requires an intelligent co-optimization across all the layers. The proposed cross-layer design should drive optical technologies and architectures in an innovative way, in order to fulfill the void between the design of basic photonic devices and the networking protocols that use them. The performance of the entire network -- from the optical components, to the routing algorithms and user applications -- should be optimized in concert. This contribution to the area of cross-layer network design creates an adaptable optical pipe that is extremely flexible and intelligent aware of both the physical optical signals and higher-layer requirements. The impact of this work will be seen in the realization of dynamic, energy-efficient optical communication links in future networking infrastructures
A Survey on the Path Computation Element (PCE) Architecture
Quality of Service-enabled applications and services rely on Traffic Engineering-based (TE) Label Switched Paths (LSP) established in core networks and controlled by the GMPLS control plane. Path computation process is crucial to achieve the desired TE objective. Its actual effectiveness depends on a number of factors. Mechanisms utilized to update topology and TE information, as well as the latency between path computation and resource reservation, which is typically distributed, may affect path computation efficiency. Moreover, TE visibility is limited in many network scenarios, such as multi-layer, multi-domain and multi-carrier networks, and it may negatively impact resource utilization. The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) has promoted the Path Computation Element (PCE) architecture, proposing a dedicated network entity devoted to path computation process. The PCE represents a flexible instrument to overcome visibility and distributed provisioning inefficiencies. Communications between path computation clients (PCC) and PCEs, realized through the PCE Protocol (PCEP), also enable inter-PCE communications offering an attractive way to perform TE-based path computation among cooperating PCEs in multi-layer/domain scenarios, while preserving scalability and confidentiality. This survey presents the state-of-the-art on the PCE architecture for GMPLS-controlled networks carried out by research and standardization community. In this work, packet (i.e., MPLS-TE and MPLS-TP) and wavelength/spectrum (i.e., WSON and SSON) switching capabilities are the considered technological platforms, in which the PCE is shown to achieve a number of evident benefits
An Overview on Application of Machine Learning Techniques in Optical Networks
Today's telecommunication networks have become sources of enormous amounts of
widely heterogeneous data. This information can be retrieved from network
traffic traces, network alarms, signal quality indicators, users' behavioral
data, etc. Advanced mathematical tools are required to extract meaningful
information from these data and take decisions pertaining to the proper
functioning of the networks from the network-generated data. Among these
mathematical tools, Machine Learning (ML) is regarded as one of the most
promising methodological approaches to perform network-data analysis and enable
automated network self-configuration and fault management. The adoption of ML
techniques in the field of optical communication networks is motivated by the
unprecedented growth of network complexity faced by optical networks in the
last few years. Such complexity increase is due to the introduction of a huge
number of adjustable and interdependent system parameters (e.g., routing
configurations, modulation format, symbol rate, coding schemes, etc.) that are
enabled by the usage of coherent transmission/reception technologies, advanced
digital signal processing and compensation of nonlinear effects in optical
fiber propagation. In this paper we provide an overview of the application of
ML to optical communications and networking. We classify and survey relevant
literature dealing with the topic, and we also provide an introductory tutorial
on ML for researchers and practitioners interested in this field. Although a
good number of research papers have recently appeared, the application of ML to
optical networks is still in its infancy: to stimulate further work in this
area, we conclude the paper proposing new possible research directions
Virtualisation and resource allocation in MECEnabled metro optical networks
The appearance of new network services and the ever-increasing network traffic and number
of connected devices will push the evolution of current communication networks towards the
Future Internet.
In the area of optical networks, wavelength routed optical networks (WRONs) are evolving
to elastic optical networks (EONs) in which, thanks to the use of OFDM or Nyquist WDM,
it is possible to create super-channels with custom-size bandwidth. The basic element in
these networks is the lightpath, i.e., all-optical circuits between two network nodes. The
establishment of lightpaths requires the selection of the route that they will follow and the
portion of the spectrum to be used in order to carry the requested traffic from the source to
the destination node. That problem is known as the routing and spectrum assignment (RSA)
problem, and new algorithms must be proposed to address this design problem.
Some early studies on elastic optical networks studied gridless scenarios, in which a slice
of spectrum of variable size is assigned to a request. However, the most common approach to
the spectrum allocation is to divide the spectrum into slots of fixed width and allocate multiple,
consecutive spectrum slots to each lightpath, depending on the requested bandwidth. Moreover,
EONs also allow the proposal of more flexible routing and spectrum assignment techniques,
like the split-spectrum approach in which the request is divided into multiple "sub-lightpaths".
In this thesis, four RSA algorithms are proposed combining two different levels of
flexibility with the well-known k-shortest paths and first fit heuristics. After comparing the
performance of those methods, a novel spectrum assignment technique, Best Gap, is proposed
to overcome the inefficiencies emerged when combining the first fit heuristic with highly
flexible networks. A simulation study is presented to demonstrate that, thanks to the use of
Best Gap, EONs can exploit the network flexibility and reduce the blocking ratio.
On the other hand, operators must face profound architectural changes to increase the
adaptability and flexibility of networks and ease their management. Thanks to the use of
network function virtualisation (NFV), the necessary network functions that must be applied
to offer a service can be deployed as virtual appliances hosted by commodity servers, which
can be located in data centres, network nodes or even end-user premises. The appearance of
new computation and networking paradigms, like multi-access edge computing (MEC), may
facilitate the adaptation of communication networks to the new demands. Furthermore, the
use of MEC technology will enable the possibility of installing those virtual network functions
(VNFs) not only at data centres (DCs) and central offices (COs), traditional hosts of VFNs, but
also at the edge nodes of the network. Since data processing is performed closer to the enduser,
the latency associated to each service connection request can be reduced. MEC nodes
will be usually connected between them and with the DCs and COs by optical networks.
In such a scenario, deploying a network service requires completing two phases: the
VNF-placement, i.e., deciding the number and location of VNFs, and the VNF-chaining,
i.e., connecting the VNFs that the traffic associated to a service must transverse in order to
establish the connection. In the chaining process, not only the existence of VNFs with available
processing capacity, but the availability of network resources must be taken into account to
avoid the rejection of the connection request. Taking into consideration that the backhaul of
this scenario will be usually based on WRONs or EONs, it is necessary to design the virtual
topology (i.e., the set of lightpaths established in the networks) in order to transport the tra c
from one node to another. The process of designing the virtual topology includes deciding the
number of connections or lightpaths, allocating them a route and spectral resources, and finally
grooming the traffic into the created lightpaths.
Lastly, a failure in the equipment of a node in an NFV environment can cause the
disruption of the SCs traversing the node. This can cause the loss of huge amounts of data
and affect thousands of end-users. In consequence, it is key to provide the network with faultmanagement
techniques able to guarantee the resilience of the established connections when a
node fails.
For the mentioned reasons, it is necessary to design orchestration algorithms which solve
the VNF-placement, chaining and network resource allocation problems in 5G networks
with optical backhaul. Moreover, some versions of those algorithms must also implements
protection techniques to guarantee the resilience system in case of failure.
This thesis makes contribution in that line. Firstly, a genetic algorithm is proposed to solve
the VNF-placement and VNF-chaining problems in a 5G network with optical backhaul based
on star topology: GASM (genetic algorithm for effective service mapping). Then, we propose
a modification of that algorithm in order to be applied to dynamic scenarios in which the
reconfiguration of the planning is allowed. Furthermore, we enhanced the modified algorithm
to include a learning step, with the objective of improving the performance of the algorithm.
In this thesis, we also propose an algorithm to solve not only the VNF-placement and
VNF-chaining problems but also the design of the virtual topology, considering that a WRON
is deployed as the backhaul network connecting MEC nodes and CO. Moreover, a version
including individual VNF protection against node failure has been also proposed and the
effect of using shared/dedicated and end-to-end SC/individual VNF protection schemes are
also analysed.
Finally, a new algorithm that solves the VNF-placement and chaining problems and
the virtual topology design implementing a new chaining technique is also proposed.
Its corresponding versions implementing individual VNF protection are also presented.
Furthermore, since the method works with any type of WDM mesh topologies, a technoeconomic
study is presented to compare the effect of using different network topologies in
both the network performance and cost.Departamento de TeorĂa de la Señal y Comunicaciones e IngenierĂa TelemáticaDoctorado en TecnologĂas de la InformaciĂłn y las Telecomunicacione
Optical Networks and Interconnects
The rapid evolution of communication technologies such as 5G and beyond, rely
on optical networks to support the challenging and ambitious requirements that
include both capacity and reliability. This chapter begins by giving an
overview of the evolution of optical access networks, focusing on Passive
Optical Networks (PONs). The development of the different PON standards and
requirements aiming at longer reach, higher client count and delivered
bandwidth are presented. PON virtualization is also introduced as the
flexibility enabler. Triggered by the increase of bandwidth supported by access
and aggregation network segments, core networks have also evolved, as presented
in the second part of the chapter. Scaling the physical infrastructure requires
high investment and hence, operators are considering alternatives to optimize
the use of the existing capacity. This chapter introduces different planning
problems such as Routing and Spectrum Assignment problems, placement problems
for regenerators and wavelength converters, and how to offer resilience to
different failures. An overview of control and management is also provided.
Moreover, motivated by the increasing importance of data storage and data
processing, this chapter also addresses different aspects of optical data
center interconnects. Data centers have become critical infrastructure to
operate any service. They are also forced to take advantage of optical
technology in order to keep up with the growing capacity demand and power
consumption. This chapter gives an overview of different optical data center
network architectures as well as some expected directions to improve the
resource utilization and increase the network capacity
Design of a fast and resource-efficient fault management system in optical networks to suit real-time multimedia applications
Today\u27s telecommunications networks are relying more and more on optical fibers as their physical medium. Currently the Wavelength Division Multiplexing technology enables hundreds of wavelengths to be multiplexed on a single fiber. Using this technology capacity can be dramatically increased, even to the order of Terabits per second. While WDM technology has given a satisfactory answer to the ever-increasing demand for capacity, there is still a problem which needs to be handled efficiently: survivability.
Our proposed fault restoration system optimized between restoration cost and speed. We extended the concept of Forward Equivalence Class (FEC) in Multi Protocol Label switching (MPLS) to our proposed fault restoration system. Speed was found to be in the order of 1 to 3 microseconds using predesigned protection, depending on the configuration of the system. Optimization was done between restoration speed and cost by introducing a priority field in the packet header
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