391 research outputs found

    Spare capacity modelling and its applications in survivable iP-over-optical networks

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    As the interest in IP-over-optical networks are becoming the preferred core network architecture, survivability has emerged as a major concern for network service providers; a result of the potentially huge traffic volumes that will be supported by optical infrastructure. Therefore, implementing recovery strategies is critical. In addition to the traditional recovery schemes based around protection and restoration mechanisms, pre-allocated restoration represents a potential candidate to effect and maintain network resilience under failure conditions. Preallocated restoration technique is particularly interesting because it provides a trade-off in terms of recovery performance and resources between protection and restoration schemes. In this paper, the pre-allocated restoration performance is investigated under single and dual-link failures considering a distributed GMPLSbased IP/WDM mesh network. Two load-based spare capacity optimisation methods are proposed in this paper; Local Spare Capacity Optimisation (LSCO) and Global Spare Capacity Optimisation (GSCO)

    Protection and restoration algorithms for WDM optical networks

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    Currently, Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) optical networks play a major role in supporting the outbreak in demand for high bandwidth networks driven by the Internet. It can be a catastrophe to millions of users if a single optical fiber is somehow cut off from the network, and there is no protection in the design of the logical topology for a restorative mechanism. Many protection and restoration algorithms are needed to prevent, reroute, and/or reconfigure the network from damages in such a situation. In the past few years, many works dealing with these issues have been reported. Those algorithms can be implemented in many ways with several different objective functions such as a minimization of protection path lengths, a minimization of restoration times, a maximization of restored bandwidths, etc. This thesis investigates, analyzes and compares the algorithms that are mainly aimed to guarantee or maximize the amount of remaining bandwidth still working over a damaged network. The parameters considered in this thesis are the routing computation and implementation mechanism, routing characteristics, recovering computation timing, network capacity assignment, and implementing layer. Performance analysis in terms of the restoration efficiency, the hop length, the percentage of bandwidth guaranteed, the network capacity utilization, and the blocking probability is conducted and evaluated

    Traffic engineering in dynamic optical networks

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    Traffic Engineering (TE) refers to all the techniques a Service Provider employs to improve the efficiency and reliability of network operations. In IP over Optical (IPO) networks, traffic coming from upper layers is carried over the logical topology defined by the set of established lightpaths. Within this framework then, TE techniques allow to optimize the configuration of optical resources with respect to an highly dynamic traffic demand. TE can be performed with two main methods: if the demand is known only in terms of an aggregated traffic matrix, the problem of automatically updating the configuration of an optical network to accommodate traffic changes is called Virtual Topology Reconfiguration (VTR). If instead the traffic demand is known in terms of data-level connection requests with sub-wavelength granularity, arriving dynamically from some source node to any destination node, the problem is called Dynamic Traffic Grooming (DTG). In this dissertation new VTR algorithms for load balancing in optical networks based on Local Search (LS) techniques are presented. The main advantage of using LS is the minimization of network disruption, since the reconfiguration involves only a small part of the network. A comparison between the proposed schemes and the optimal solutions found via an ILP solver shows calculation time savings for comparable results of network congestion. A similar load balancing technique has been applied to alleviate congestion in an MPLS network, based on the efficient rerouting of Label-Switched Paths (LSP) from the most congested links to allow a better usage of network resources. Many algorithms have been developed to deal with DTG in IPO networks, where most of the attention is focused on optimizing the physical resources utilization by considering specific constraints on the optical node architecture, while very few attention has been put so far on the Quality of Service (QoS) guarantees for the carried traffic. In this thesis a novel Traffic Engineering scheme is proposed to guarantee QoS from both the viewpoint of service differentiation and transmission quality. Another contribution in this thesis is a formal framework for the definition of dynamic grooming policies in IPO networks. The framework is then specialized for an overlay architecture, where the control plane of the IP and optical level are separated, and no information is shared between the two. A family of grooming policies based on constraints on the number of hops and on the bandwidth sharing degree at the IP level is defined, and its performance analyzed in both regular and irregular topologies. While most of the literature on DTG problem implicitly considers the grooming of low-speed connections onto optical channels using a TDM approach, the proposed grooming policies are evaluated here by considering a realistic traffic model which consider a Dynamic Statistical Multiplexing (DSM) approach, i.e. a single wavelength channel is shared between multiple IP elastic traffic flows

    A Heuristic Method of Logical Topology Reconfiguration in IP/WDM Optical Networks

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    Logical topology design for IP rerouting: ASONs versus static OTNs

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    IP-based backbone networks are gradually moving to a network model consisting of high-speed routers that are flexibly interconnected by a mesh of light paths set up by an optical transport network that consists of wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) links and optical cross-connects. In such a model, the generalized MPLS protocol suite could provide the IP centric control plane component that will be used to deliver rapid and dynamic circuit provisioning of end-to-end optical light paths between the routers. This is called an automatic switched optical (transport) network (ASON). An ASON enables reconfiguration of the logical IP topology by setting up and tearing down light paths. This allows to up- or downgrade link capacities during a router failure to the capacities needed by the new routing of the affected traffic. Such survivability against (single) IP router failures is cost-effective, as capacity to the IP layer can be provided flexibly when necessary. We present and investigate a logical topology optimization problem that minimizes the total amount or cost of the needed resources (interfaces, wavelengths, WDM line-systems, amplifiers, etc.) in both the IP and the optical layer. A novel optimization aspect in this problem is the possibility, as a result of the ASON, to reuse the physical resources (like interface cards and WDM line-systems) over the different network states (the failure-free and all the router failure scenarios). We devised a simple optimization strategy to investigate the cost of the ASON approach and compare it with other schemes that survive single router failures

    Benchmarking and viability assessment of optical packet switching for metro networks

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    Optical packet switching (OPS) has been proposed as a strong candidate for future metro networks. This paper assesses the viability of an OPS-based ring architecture as proposed within the research project DAVID (Data And Voice Integration on DWDM), funded by the European Commission through the Information Society Technologies (IST) framework. Its feasibility is discussed from a physical-layer point of view, and its limitations in size are explored. Through dimensioning studies, we show that the proposed OPS architecture is competitive with respect to alternative metropolitan area network (MAN) approaches, including synchronous digital hierarchy, resilient packet rings (RPR), and star-based Ethernet. Finally, the proposed OPS architectures are discussed from a logical performance point of view, and a high-quality scheduling algorithm to control the packet-switching operations in the rings is explained

    Effect Of Reconfiguration On Ip Packet Traffic In Wdm Networks

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    Tez (Yüksek Lisans) -- İstanbul Teknik Üniversitesi, Fen Bilimleri Enstitüsü, 2007Thesis (M.Sc.) -- İstanbul Technical University, Institute of Science and Technology, 2007Günümüzde iletişim ağlarına erişen insan sayısı ve iletişim uygulamalarının ihtiyaç duyduğu band genişliği ihtiyacı hızla artmaya devam etmektedir. Artan trafik istekleri daha geniş band genişliği kullanımına olanak verebilen optik iletişim ağlarının tasarımını tetiklemektedir. Bir veya daha fazla sayıda optik fiberi kapsayabilen bir ışıkyolu alt katmanda yer alan optik altyapının üzerinde iletişim kanalları sağlamaktadır. Sanal topoloji tasarımı, verilen bir trafik matrisine göre bir grup ışık yolunun kurulması olarak tanımlanabilir. Trafikte meydana gelecek bir değişiklik yeniden konfigürasyon kararının alınmasına neden olabilir. Sanal topoloji yeniden konfigürasyonu, hem yeni sanal topolojinin belirlenmesini hem de bu yeni topolojiye geçişi içermektedir. Bu tez çalışmasında IP/WDM ağlarda sanal topoloji yeniden konfigürasyonunun IP paket trafiği üzerindeki etkileri incelenmiştir. Çalışma kapsamında, çeşitli yeniden kofigürasyon algoritmaları gerçeklenmiş ve Fishnet tabanlı bir IP simülatörü üzerinde test edilmiştir. Gerçeklenen sanal topoloji tasarım algoritmalarına ait paket gecikmeleri/kayıpları incelenmiş ve algoritmaların başarımları karşılaştırılmıştır.Today, both the amount of people accessing communication networks and new communication applications which require high data transfer rates are exponentially increasing. Growing traffic demands triggered the design of optical communication networks which will be able to provide larger bandwidth utilization. A lightpath, which can span multiple fiber links, provides communication channels over the underlying optical communication infrastructure. Virtual Topology Design (VTD) means establishment of a set of lightpaths under a given traffic pattern. A change in traffic pattern may trigger reconfiguration decision. Virtual Topology Reconfiguration (VTR) contains determination of a new virtual topology and migration between the old and new virtual topologies. In this thesis, the effects of virtual topology reconfiguration on Internet Protocol (IP) packet traffic on IP over WDM networks were studied. Various reconfiguration algorithms were implemented and tested on a Fishnet based IP simulator. Packet delays/losses are investigated during reconfiguration procedure for performance comparison of implemented reconfiguration algorithms.Yüksek LisansM.Sc
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