40 research outputs found

    Service level agreement framework for differentiated survivability in GMPLS-based IP-over-optical networks

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    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

    Availability-Aware Spare Capacity Allocation with Partially Protected Rings

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    This thesis work focuses on designing a survivable IP-core network with the minimal investment of spare capacity. A span-oriented spare capacity allocation (SCA) scheme is proposed to satisfy customers' availability requirements in the end-to-end (E2E) sense. The novelty of the proposed SCA scheme is that it meets the E2E availability requirements despite the lack of knowledge of E2E bandwidth by employing protection rings covering all links in the network. Different ring selection methods are presented and also compared from the aspect of network redundancy and LP feasibility which provide more flexibility to the design. The proposed SCA algorithm further minimizes total cost of spare capacity by incorporating partial protection within the proposed architecture. The simulation results show that it can significantly reduce the spare capacity consumption depending on the availability. The proposed SCA scheme also performs better in terms of redundancy than that of two other dominant methods available these days

    Survivability and resilience mechanisms in modern optical fibre systems

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    Optical fibre networks play an increasingly prominent role in communications. As networks grow in size and complexity, the probability and impact of failures increase. In this dissertation, different optical network concepts, survivability and resilience methods are considered. Link and Path failures are discussed and Static Path Protection (SPP), Shared Backup Path Protection (SBPP), as well as Path Restoration (PR) are investigated. A Shared Backup Path Protection model and simulation tool is designed and implemented. This implementation is compared with other studies. Dual-link failures are considered under specific network topologies. Shortest Path algorithms are used to reprovision optimal routes for backup protection. Results and conclusions are discussed in detail, giving valuable insight into resilience methods. Availability and protectability are discussed and evaluated as measures of resilience and network survivability. Results vary between compromising little availability and bringing a significant improvement in availability. It is concluded that the implementation of SBPP is a necessity in highly-meshed networks with high availability needs, but doesn’t necessarily provide the best solution for sparsely-connected networks. The additional cost involved in the implementation needs to be considered carefully.Dissertation (MEng)--University of Pretoria, 2007.Electrical, Electronic and Computer Engineeringunrestricte

    Multi-layer survivability in IP-over-WDM networks

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    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH

    Time-varying Resilient Virtual Networking Mapping for Multi-location Cloud Data Centers

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    Abstract In the currently dominant cloud computing paradigm, applications are being served in data centers (DCs), which are connected to high capacity optical networks. For bandwidth and consequently cost efficiency reasons, in both DC and optical network domains, virtualization of the physical hardware is exploited. In a DC, it means that multiple so-called virtual machines (VMs) are being hosted on the same physical server. Similarly, the network is partitioned into separate virtual networks, thus providing isolation between distinct virtual network operators (VNOs). Thus, the problem of virtual network mapping arises: how to decide which physical resources to allocate for a particular virtual network? In this thesis, we study that problem in the context of cloud computing with multiple DC sites. This introduces additional flexibility, due to the anycast routing principle: we have the freedom to decide at what particular DC location to serve a particular application. We can exploit this choice to minimize the required resources when solving the virtual network mapping problem. This thesis solves a resilient virtual network mapping problem that optimally decides on the mapping of both network and data center resources, considering time-varying traffic conditions and protecting against possible failures of both network and DC resources. We consider the so-called VNO resilience scheme: rerouting under failure conditions is provided in the virtual network layer. To minimize physical resource capacity requirements, we allow reuse of both network and DC resources: we can reuse the same resources for the rerouting under failure scenarios that are assumed not to occur simultaneously. Since we also protect against DC failures, we allocate backup DC resources, and account for synchronization between primary and backup DCs. To deal with the time variations in the volume and geographical pattern of the application traffic, we investigate the potential benefits (in terms iii of overall bandwidth requirements) of reconfiguring the virtual network mapping from one time period to the next. We provide models with good scalability, and investigate different scenarios to check whether it is worth to change routing for service requirement between time periods. The results come up with our experiments show that the benefits for rerouting is very limited. Keywords: Cloud Computing, Optical Networks, Virtualization, Anycast, VNO resilienc

    Designing Survivable Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) Mesh Networks

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    This thesis focuses on the survivable routing problem in WDM mesh networks where the objective is to minimize the total number of wavelengths used for establishing working and protection paths in the WDM networks. The past studies for survivable routing suffers from the scalability problem when the number of nodes/links or connection requests grow in the network. In this thesis, a novel path based shared protection framework namely Inter-Group Shared protection (I-GSP) is proposed where the traffic matrix can be divided into multiple protection groups (PGs) based on specific grouping policy. Optimization is performed on these PGs such that sharing of protection wavelengths is considered not only inside a PG, but between the PGs. Simulation results show that I-GSP based integer linear programming model, namely, ILP-II solves the networks in a reasonable amount of time for which a regular integer linear programming formulation, namely, ILP-I becomes computationally intractable. For most of the cases the gap between the optimal solution and the ILP-II ranges between (2-16)%. The proposed ILP-II model yields a scalable solution for the capacity planning in the survivable optical networks based on the proposed I-GSP protection architecture

    Design of survivable WDM network based on pre-configured protection cycle

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    Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) is an important technique which allows the trans- port of large quantities of data over optical networks. All optical WDM-based networks have been used to improve overall communication capacity and provide an excellent choice for the design of backbone networks. However, due to the high traffic load that each link can carry in a WDM network, survivability against failures becomes very important. Survivability in this context is the ability of the network to maintain continuity of service against failures, since a failure can lead to huge data losses. In recent years, many survivability mechanisms have been studied and their performance assessed through capacity efficiency, restoration time and restorability. Survivability mechanisms for ring and mesh topologies have received particular attention
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