3 research outputs found

    Efficient routing and wavelength assignment for reconfigurable WDM networks with wavelength converters

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    Abstract—We consider the problem of wavelength assignment in reconfigurable WDM networks with wavelength converters. We show that for-node-port bidirectional rings, a minimum number of R wavelengths are required to support all possible connected virtual topologies in a rearrangeably nonblocking fashion, and provide an algorithm that meets this bound using no more than P wavelength converters. This improves over the tight lower bound of Q wavelengths required for such rings given in [1] if no wavelength conversion is available. We extend this to the general-port case where each node may have a different number of ports, and show that no more than R CIwavelengths are required. We then provide a second algorithm that uses more wavelengths yet requires significantly fewer converters. We also develop a method that allows the wavelength converters to be arbitrarily located at any node in the ring. This gives significant flexibility in the design of the networks. For example, all P converters can be collocated at a single hub node, or distributed evenly among the nodes with �� � P CI converters at each node. Index Terms—Dynamic traffic, optical network, ring network, routing, wavelength assignment, wavelength division multiplexing (WDM). I
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