13 research outputs found

    Optical control plane: theory and algorithms

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    In this thesis we propose a novel way to achieve global network information dissemination in which some wavelengths are reserved exclusively for global control information exchange. We study the routing and wavelength assignment problem for the special communication pattern of non-blocking all-to-all broadcast in WDM optical networks. We provide efficient solutions to reduce the number of wavelengths needed for non-blocking all-to-all broadcast, in the absence of wavelength converters, for network information dissemination. We adopt an approach in which we consider all nodes to be tap-and-continue capable thus studying lighttrees rather than lightpaths. To the best of our knowledge, this thesis is the first to consider “tap-and-continue” capable nodes in the context of conflict-free all-to-all broadcast. The problem of all to-all broadcast using individual lightpaths has been proven to be an NP-complete problem [6]. We provide optimal RWA solutions for conflict-free all-to-all broadcast for some particular cases of regular topologies, namely the ring, the torus and the hypercube. We make an important contribution on hypercube decomposition into edge-disjoint structures. We also present near-optimal polynomial-time solutions for the general case of arbitrary topologies. Furthermore, we apply for the first time the “cactus” representation of all minimum edge-cuts of graphs with arbitrary topologies to the problem of all-to-all broadcast in optical networks. Using this representation recursively we obtain near-optimal results for the number of wavelengths needed by the non-blocking all-to-all broadcast. The second part of this thesis focuses on the more practical case of multi-hop RWA for non- blocking all-to-all broadcast in the presence of Optical-Electrical-Optical conversion. We propose two simple but efficient multi-hop RWA models. In addition to reducing the number of wavelengths we also concentrate on reducing the number of optical receivers, another important optical resource. We analyze these models on the ring and the hypercube, as special cases of regular topologies. Lastly, we develop a good upper-bound on the number of wavelengths in the case of non-blocking multi-hop all-to-all broadcast on networks with arbitrary topologies and offer a heuristic algorithm to achieve it. We propose a novel network partitioning method based on “virtual perfect matching” for use in the RWA heuristic algorithm

    Reconfigurable Optically Interconnected Systems

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    With the immense growth of data consumption in today's data centers and high-performance computing systems driven by the constant influx of new applications, the network infrastructure supporting this demand is under increasing pressure to enable higher bandwidth, latency, and flexibility requirements. Optical interconnects, able to support high bandwidth wavelength division multiplexed signals with extreme energy efficiency, have become the basis for long-haul and metro-scale networks around the world, while photonic components are being rapidly integrated within rack and chip-scale systems. However, optical and photonic interconnects are not a direct replacement for electronic-based components. Rather, the integration of optical interconnects with electronic peripherals allows for unique functionalities that can improve the capacity, compute performance and flexibility of current state-of-the-art computing systems. This requires physical layer methodologies for their integration with electronic components, as well as system level control planes that incorporates the optical layer characteristics. This thesis explores various network architectures and the associated control plane, hardware infrastructure, and other supporting software modules needed to integrate silicon photonics and MEMS based optical switching into conventional datacom network systems ranging from intra-data center and high-performance computing systems to the metro-scale layer networks between data centers. In each of these systems, we demonstrate dynamic bandwidth steering and compute resource allocation capabilities to enable significant performance improvements. The key accomplishments of this thesis are as follows. In Part 1, we present high-performance computing network architectures that integrate silicon photonic switches for optical bandwidth steering, enabling multiple reconfigurable topologies that results in significant system performance improvements. As high-performance systems rely on increased parallelism by scaling up to greater numbers of processor nodes, communication between these nodes grows rapidly and the interconnection network becomes a bottleneck to the overall performance of the system. It has been observed that many scientific applications operating on high-performance computing systems cause highly skewed traffic over the network, congesting only a small percentage of the total available links while other links are underutilized. This mismatch of the traffic and the bandwidth allocation of the physical layer network presents the opportunity to optimize the bandwidth resource utilization of the system by using silicon photonic switches to perform bandwidth steering. This allows the individual processors to perform at their maximum compute potential and thereby improving the overall system performance. We show various testbeds that integrates both microring resonator and Mach-Zehnder based silicon photonic switches within Dragonfly and Fat-Tree topology networks built with conventional equipment, and demonstrate 30-60% reduction in execution time of real high-performance benchmark applications. Part 2 presents a flexible network architecture and control plane that enables autonomous bandwidth steering and IT resource provisioning capabilities between metro-scale geographically distributed data centers. It uses a software-defined control plane to autonomously provision both network and IT resources to support different quality of service requirements and optimizes resource utilization under dynamically changing load variations. By actively monitoring both the bandwidth utilization of the network and CPU or memory resources of the end hosts, the control plane autonomously provisions background or dynamic connections with different levels of quality of service using optical MEMS switching, as well as initializing live migrations of virtual machines to consolidate or distribute workload. Together these functionalities provide flexibility and maximize efficiency in processing and transferring data, and enables energy and cost savings by scaling down the system when resources are not needed. An experimental testbed of three data center nodes was built to demonstrate the feasibility of these capabilities. Part 3 presents Lightbridge, a communications platform specifically designed to provide a more seamless integration between processor nodes and an optically switched network. It addresses some of the crucial issues faced by the works presented in the previous chapters related to optical switching. When optical switches perform switching operations, they change the physical topology of the network, and they lack the capability to buffer packets, resulting in certain optical circuits being unavailable. This prompts the question of whether it is safe to transmit packets by end hosts at any given time. Lightbridge was developed to coordinate switching and routing of optical circuits across the network, by having the processors gain information about the current state of the optical network before transmitting packets, and being able to buffer packets when the optical circuit is not available. This part describes details of Lightbridge which is constituted by a loadable Linux kernel module along with other supporting modifications to the Linux kernel in order to achieve the necessary functionalities

    Application of Asynchronous Transfer Mode (Atm) technology to Picture Archiving and Communication Systems (Pacs): A survey

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    Broadband Integrated Services Digital Network (R-ISDN) provides a range of narrowband and broad-band services for voice, video, and multimedia. Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) has been selected by the standards bodies as the transfer mode for implementing B-ISDN; The ability to digitize images has lead to the prospect of reducing the physical space requirements, material costs, and manual labor of traditional film handling tasks in hospitals. The system which handles the acquisition, storage, and transmission of medical images is called a Picture Archiving and Communication System (PACS). The transmission system will directly impact the speed of image transfer. Today the most common transmission means used by acquisition and display station products is Ethernet. However, when considering network media, it is important to consider what the long term needs will be. Although ATM is a new standard, it is showing signs of becoming the next logical step to meet the needs of high speed networks; This thesis is a survey on ATM, and PACS. All the concepts involved in developing a PACS are presented in an orderly manner. It presents the recent developments in ATM, its applicability to PACS and the issues to be resolved for realising an ATM-based complete PACS. This work will be useful in providing the latest information, for any future research on ATM-based networks, and PACS

    Design and analysis of a 3-dimensional cluster multicomputer architecture using optical interconnection for petaFLOP computing

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    In this dissertation, the design and analyses of an extremely scalable distributed multicomputer architecture, using optical interconnects, that has the potential to deliver in the order of petaFLOP performance is presented in detail. The design takes advantage of optical technologies, harnessing the features inherent in optics, to produce a 3D stack that implements efficiently a large, fully connected system of nodes forming a true 3D architecture. To adopt optics in large-scale multiprocessor cluster systems, efficient routing and scheduling techniques are needed. To this end, novel self-routing strategies for all-optical packet switched networks and on-line scheduling methods that can result in collision free communication and achieve real time operation in high-speed multiprocessor systems are proposed. The system is designed to allow failed/faulty nodes to stay in place without appreciable performance degradation. The approach is to develop a dynamic communication environment that will be able to effectively adapt and evolve with a high density of missing units or nodes. A joint CPU/bandwidth controller that maximizes the resource allocation in this dynamic computing environment is introduced with an objective to optimize the distributed cluster architecture, preventing performance/system degradation in the presence of failed/faulty nodes. A thorough analysis, feasibility study and description of the characteristics of a 3-Dimensional multicomputer system capable of achieving 100 teraFLOP performance is discussed in detail. Included in this dissertation is throughput analysis of the routing schemes, using methods from discrete-time queuing systems and computer simulation results for the different proposed algorithms. A prototype of the 3D architecture proposed is built and a test bed developed to obtain experimental results to further prove the feasibility of the design, validate initial assumptions, algorithms, simulations and the optimized distributed resource allocation scheme. Finally, as a prelude to further research, an efficient data routing strategy for highly scalable distributed mobile multiprocessor networks is introduced
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