2,505 research outputs found

    Field-Trial of a high-budget, filterless, lambda-to-the-user, UDWDM-PON enabled by an innovative class of low-cost coherent transceivers

    Get PDF
    ©2017 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.We experimentally demonstrate an innovative ultradense wavelength division multiplexing (UDWDM) passive optical networks (PON) that implements the full ¿-to-the-user concept in a filterless distribution network. Key element of the proposed system is a novel class of coherent transceivers, purposely developed with a nonconventional technical approach. Indeed, they are designed and realized to avoid D/A-A/D converter stages and digital signal processing in favor of simple analog processing so that they match system, cost, and power consumption requirements of the access networks without sacrificing the overall performance. These coherent transceivers target different use case scenarios (residential, business, fixed, wireless) still keeping perfect compatibility and co-existence with legacy infrastructures installed to support gray, time division multiplexed PON systems. Moreover, the availability of coherent transceivers of different cost/performance ratios allows for deployments of different quality service grades. In this paper, we report the successful field trial of the proposed systems in a testbed where 14 UDWDM channels (and one legacy E-PON system) are transmitted simultaneously in a dark-fiber network deployed in the city of Pisa (Italy), delivering real-time and/or test traffic. The trial demonstrated filterless operations (each remote node selects individually its own UDWDM channel on a fine 6.25-GHz grid), real-time GbE transmissions (by using either fully analog or light digital signal processing), multirate transmission (1.25 and 10 Gb/s), high optical distribution network loss (18-40 dB) as well as a bidirectional channel monitoring system.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Energy Efficiency of P2P and Distributed Clouds Networks

    Get PDF
    Since its inception, the Internet witnessed two major approaches to communicate digital content to end users: peer to peer (P2P) and client/server (C/S) networks. Both approaches require high bandwidth and low latency physical underlying networks to meet the users’ escalating demands. Network operators typically have to overprovision their systems to guarantee acceptable quality of service (QoS) and availability while delivering content. However, more physical devices led to more ICT power consumption over the years. An effective approach to confront these challenges is to jointly optimise the energy consumption of content providers and transportation networks. This thesis proposes a number of energy efficient mechanisms to optimise BitTorrent based P2P networks and clouds based C/S content distribution over IP/WDM based core optical networks. For P2P systems, a mixed integer linear programming (MILP) optimisation, two heuristics and an experimental testbed are developed to minimise the power consumption of IP/WDM networks that deliver traffic generated by an overlay layer of homogeneous BitTorrent users. The approach optimises peers’ selection where the goal is to minimise IP/WDM network power consumption while maximising peers download rate. The results are compared to typical C/S systems. We also considered Heterogeneous BitTorrent peers and developed models that optimise P2P systems to compensate for different peers behaviour after finishing downloading. We investigated the impact of core network physical topology on the energy efficiency of BitTorrent systems. We also investigated the power consumption of Video on Demand (VoD) services using CDN, P2P and hybrid CDN-P2P architectures over IP/WDM networks and addressed content providers efforts to balance the load among their data centres. For cloud systems, a MILP and a heuristic were developed to minimise content delivery induced power consumption of both clouds and IP/WDM networks. This was done by optimally determining the number, location and internal capability in terms of servers, LAN and storage of each cloud, subject to daily traffic variation. Different replication schemes were studied revealing that replicating content into multiple clouds based on content popularity is the optimum approach with respect to energy. The model was extended to study Storage as a Service (StaaS). We also studied the problem of virtual machine placement in IP/WDM networks and showed that VM Slicing is the best approach compared to migration and replication schemes to minimise energy. Finally, we have investigated the utilisation of renewable energy sources represented by solar cells and wind farms in BitTorrent networks and content delivery clouds, respectively. Comprehensive modelling and simulation as well as experimental demonstration were developed, leading to key contributions in the field of energy efficient telecommunications

    Power consumption evaluation of circuit-switched versus packet-switched optical backbone networks

    Get PDF
    While telecommunication networks have historically been dominated by a circuit-switched paradigm, the last decades have seen a clear trend towards packet-switched networks. In this paper we evaluate how both paradigms perform in optical backbone networks from a power consumption point of view, and whether the general agreement of circuit switching being more power-efficient holds. We consider artificially generated topologies of various sizes, mesh degrees and not yet previously explored in this context transport linerates. We cross-validate our findings with a number of realistic topologies. Our results show that, as a generalization, packet switching can become preferable when the traffic demands are lower than half the transport linerate. We find that an increase in the network node count does not consistently increase the energy savings of circuit switching over packet switching, but is heavily influenced by the mesh degree and (to a minor extent) by the average link length

    A green open access optical distribution network with incremental deployment support

    Get PDF
    This paper proposes an optical distribution network (ODN) architecture for open access networks. The proposed scheme ensures co-existence of multiple business partners (BPs) e.g., service, network equipment, and infrastructure providers at different levels of the distribution network, along with physicallayer security. Further, physical-layer isolation is provided to each subscriber, preventing network disruption by malicious subscribers. The proposed open access ODN supports BPs with different granularities (sizes) and discourages monopoly; thus, allowing multiple BPs to co-exist. It also supports incremental deployability (ID) which allows the BPs to cope with an expanding user base. Thus, small BPs can take up a market share with reasonable initial investment and grow with differential expenditures. ID further allows us to incrementally scale up the power consumption as a function of the network load, making the architecture green. The proposed ODN is based on a passive optical network (PON) architecture resulting in low operational expenditures (OpEx) and high availability. Besides a new ODN architecture, a novel architecture for the optical line terminal (OLT), based on hybrid time and wavelength-division multiplexing (TWDM), is proposed. The BPs can adopt typical TWDM, wavelength division multiplexing, or the TWDM-based OLT architecture (introduced in this paper) over the proposed ODN

    Protection strategies for next generation passive optical networks -2

    Get PDF
    Next Generation Passive Optical Networks-2 (NGPON2) are being considered to upgrade the current PON technology to meet the ever increasing bandwidth requirements of the end users while optimizing the network operators' investment. Reliability performance of NG-PON2 is very important due to the extended reach and, consequently, large number of served customers per PON segment. On the other hand, the use of more complex and hence more failure prone components than in the current PON systems may degrade reliability performance of the network. Thus designing reliable NG-PON2 architectures is of a paramount importance. Moreover, for appropriately evaluating network reliability performance, new models are required. For example, the commonly used reliability parameter, i.e., connection availability, defined as the percentage of time for which a connection remains operable, doesn't reflect the network wide reliability performance. The network operators are often more concerned about a single failure affecting a large number of customers than many uncorrelated failures disconnecting fewer customers while leading to the same average failure time. With this view, we introduce a new parameter for reliability performance evaluation, referred to as the failure impact. In this paper, we propose several reliable architectures for two important NGPON2 candidates: wavelength division multiplexed (WDM) PON and time and wavelength division multiplexed (TWDM) PON. Furthermore, we evaluate protection coverage, availability, failure impact and cost of the proposed schemes in order to identify the most efficient protection architecture

    Trade-off between end-to-end reliable and cost-effective TDMA/WDM passive optical networks

    Get PDF
    Hybrid TDMA/VVDM (TWDM) Passive Optical Network (PON) is a promising candidate for Next-Generation PON (NG-PON) solutions. We propose end-to end reliable architectures for business users and a cost-effective network for residential users. We evaluate the proposed reliable architectures in terms of protection coverage, connection availability, impact of failure (i.e. to avoid a huge number of end users being affected by any single failure) and cost in different populated scenarios
    • …
    corecore