18 research outputs found
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Towards Scalable Cost-Effective Service and Survivability Provisioning in Ultra High Speed Networks
Optical transport networks based on wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) are considered to be the most appropriate choice for future Internet backbone. On the other hand, future DOE networks are expected to have the ability to dynamically provision on-demand survivable services to suit the needs of various high performance scientific applications and remote collaboration. Since a failure in aWDMnetwork such as a cable cut may result in a tremendous amount of data loss, efficient protection of data transport in WDM networks is therefore essential. As the backbone network is moving towards GMPLS/WDM optical networks, the unique requirement to support DOE’s science mission results in challenging issues that are not directly addressed by existing networking techniques and methodologies. The objectives of this project were to develop cost effective protection and restoration mechanisms based on dedicated path, shared path, preconfigured cycle (p-cycle), and so on, to deal with single failure, dual failure, and shared risk link group (SRLG) failure, under different traffic and resource requirement models; to devise efficient service provisioning algorithms that deal with application specific network resource requirements for both unicast and multicast; to study various aspects of traffic grooming in WDM ring and mesh networks to derive cost effective solutions while meeting application resource and QoS requirements; to design various diverse routing and multi-constrained routing algorithms, considering different traffic models and failure models, for protection and restoration, as well as for service provisioning; to propose and study new optical burst switched architectures and mechanisms for effectively supporting dynamic services; and to integrate research with graduate and undergraduate education. All objectives have been successfully met. This report summarizes the major accomplishments of this project. The impact of the project manifests in many aspects: First, the project addressed many essential problems that arisen in current and future WDM optical networks, and provided a host of innovative solutions though there was no invention or patent filing. This project resulted in more than 2 dozens publications in major journals and conferences (including papers in IEEE Transactions and journals, as well as a book chapter). Our publications have been cited by many peer researchers. In particular, one of our conference papers was nominated for the best paper award of IEEE/Create-Net Broadnets (International Conference on Broadband Communications, Networks, and Systems) 2006. Second, the results and solutions of this project were well received by DOE Labs where presentations were given by the PI. We hope to continue the collaboration with DOE Labs in the future. Third, the project was the first to propose and extensively study multicast traffic grooming, new traffic models such as sliding scheduled traffic model and scheduled traffic model. Our research has sparkled a flurry of recent studies and publications by the research community in these areas. Fourth, the project has benefited a diverse population of students by motivating, engaging, enhancing their learning and skills. The project has been conducted in a manner conducive to the training of students both at graduate and undergraduate levels. As a result, one Ph.D., Dr. Abdur Billah, was graduated. Another Ph.D. student, Tianjian Li, will graduate in January 2007. In addition, four MS students were graduated. One undergraduate student, Jeffrey Alan Shininger, completed his university honors project. Fifth, thanks to the support of this ECPI project, the PI has obtained additional funding from the National Science Foundation, the Air Force Research Lab, and other sources. A few other proposals are pending. Finally, this project has also significantly impacted the curricula and resulted in the enhancement of courses at the graduate and undergraduate levels, therefore strengthening the bond between research and education
Resilient virtual topologies in optical networks and clouds
Optical networks play a crucial role in the development of Internet by providing a high speed infrastructure to cope with the rapid expansion of high bandwidth demand applications such as video, HDTV, teleconferencing, cloud computing, and so on. Network virtualization has been proposed as a key enabler for the next generation networks and the future Internet because it allows diversification the underlying architecture of Internet and lets multiple heterogeneous network architectures coexist.
Physical network failures often come from natural disasters or human errors, and thus cannot be fully avoided. Today, with the increase of network traffic and the popularity of virtualization and cloud computing, due to the sharing nature of network virtualization, one single failure in the underlying physical network can affect thousands of customers and cost millions of dollars in revenue. Providing resilience for virtual network topology over optical network infrastructure thus becomes of prime importance.
This thesis focuses on resilient virtual topologies in optical networks and cloud computing. We aim at finding more scalable models to solve the problem of designing survivable logical topologies for more realistic and meaningful network instances while meeting the requirements on bandwidth, security, as well as other quality of service such as recovery time.
To address the scalability issue, we present a model based on a column generation decomposition. We apply the cutset theorem with a decomposition framework and lazy constraints. We are able to solve for much larger network instances than the ones in literature. We extend the model to address the survivability problem in the context of optical networks where the characteristics of optical networks such as lightpaths and wavelength continuity and traffic grooming are taken into account.
We analyze and compare the bandwidth requirement between the two main approaches in providing resiliency for logical topologies. In the first approach, called optical protection, the resilient mechanism is provided by the optical layer. In the second one, called logical restoration, the resilient mechanism is done at the virtual layer. Next, we extend the survivability problem into the context of cloud computing where the major complexity arises from the anycast principle. We are able to solve the problem for much larger network instances than in the previous studies. Moreover, our model is more comprehensive that takes into account other QoS criteria, such that recovery time and delay requirement
A Survey on the Path Computation Element (PCE) Architecture
Quality of Service-enabled applications and services rely on Traffic Engineering-based (TE) Label Switched Paths (LSP) established in core networks and controlled by the GMPLS control plane. Path computation process is crucial to achieve the desired TE objective. Its actual effectiveness depends on a number of factors. Mechanisms utilized to update topology and TE information, as well as the latency between path computation and resource reservation, which is typically distributed, may affect path computation efficiency. Moreover, TE visibility is limited in many network scenarios, such as multi-layer, multi-domain and multi-carrier networks, and it may negatively impact resource utilization. The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) has promoted the Path Computation Element (PCE) architecture, proposing a dedicated network entity devoted to path computation process. The PCE represents a flexible instrument to overcome visibility and distributed provisioning inefficiencies. Communications between path computation clients (PCC) and PCEs, realized through the PCE Protocol (PCEP), also enable inter-PCE communications offering an attractive way to perform TE-based path computation among cooperating PCEs in multi-layer/domain scenarios, while preserving scalability and confidentiality. This survey presents the state-of-the-art on the PCE architecture for GMPLS-controlled networks carried out by research and standardization community. In this work, packet (i.e., MPLS-TE and MPLS-TP) and wavelength/spectrum (i.e., WSON and SSON) switching capabilities are the considered technological platforms, in which the PCE is shown to achieve a number of evident benefits
Domain/Multi-Domain Protection and Provisioning in Optical Networks
L’évolution récente des commutateurs de sélection de longueurs d’onde (WSS -Wavelength Selective Switch) favorise le développement du multiplexeur optique d’insertionextraction reconfigurable (ROADM - Reconfigurable Optical Add/Drop Multiplexers) à plusieurs degrés sans orientation ni coloration, considéré comme un équipement fort prometteur pour les réseaux maillés du futur relativement au multiplexage en longueur d’onde (WDM -Wavelength Division Multiplexing ). Cependant, leur propriété de commutation asymétrique complique la question de l’acheminement et de l’attribution des longueur d’ondes (RWA - Routing andWavelength Assignment). Or la plupart des algorithmes de RWA existants ne tiennent pas compte de cette propriété d’asymétrie.
L’interruption des services causée par des défauts d’équipements sur les chemins
optiques (résultat provenant de la résolution du problème RWA) a pour conséquence la
perte d’une grande quantité de données. Les recherches deviennent ainsi incontournables afin d’assurer la survie fonctionnelle des réseaux optiques, à savoir, le maintien des services, en particulier en cas de pannes d’équipement. La plupart des publications antérieures portaient particulièrement sur l’utilisation d’un système de protection permettant de garantir le reroutage du trafic en cas d’un défaut d’un lien. Cependant, la conception de la protection contre le défaut d’un lien ne s’avère pas toujours suffisante en termes de survie des réseaux WDM à partir de nombreux cas des autres types de pannes devenant courant de nos jours, tels que les bris d’équipements, les pannes de deux ou trois liens, etc. En outre, il y a des défis considérables pour protéger les grands réseaux optiques multidomaines composés de réseaux associés à un domaine simple, interconnectés par des liens interdomaines, où les détails topologiques internes d’un domaine ne sont généralement pas partagés à l’extérieur.
La présente thèse a pour objectif de proposer des modèles d’optimisation de grande
taille et des solutions aux problèmes mentionnés ci-dessus. Ces modèles-ci permettent de générer des solutions optimales ou quasi-optimales avec des écarts d’optimalité mathématiquement prouvée. Pour ce faire, nous avons recours à la technique de génération de colonnes afin de résoudre les problèmes inhérents à la programmation linéaire de
grande envergure.
Concernant la question de l’approvisionnement dans les réseaux optiques, nous proposons
un nouveau modèle de programmation linéaire en nombres entiers (ILP - Integer
Linear Programming) au problème RWA afin de maximiser le nombre de requêtes acceptées
(GoS - Grade of Service). Le modèle résultant constitue celui de l’optimisation
d’un ILP de grande taille, ce qui permet d’obtenir la solution exacte des instances RWA
assez grandes, en supposant que tous les noeuds soient asymétriques et accompagnés
d’une matrice de connectivité de commutation donnée. Ensuite, nous modifions le modèle
et proposons une solution au problème RWA afin de trouver la meilleure matrice de
commutation pour un nombre donné de ports et de connexions de commutation, tout en
satisfaisant/maximisant la qualité d’écoulement du trafic GoS.
Relativement à la protection des réseaux d’un domaine simple, nous proposons des
solutions favorisant la protection contre les pannes multiples. En effet, nous développons
la protection d’un réseau d’un domaine simple contre des pannes multiples, en utilisant
les p-cycles de protection avec un chemin indépendant des pannes (FIPP - Failure Independent
Path Protecting) et de la protection avec un chemin dépendant des pannes
(FDPP - Failure Dependent Path-Protecting). Nous proposons ensuite une nouvelle formulation
en termes de modèles de flots pour les p-cycles FDPP soumis à des pannes
multiples. Le nouveau modèle soulève un problème de taille, qui a un nombre exponentiel
de contraintes en raison de certaines contraintes d’élimination de sous-tour. Par
conséquent, afin de résoudre efficacement ce problème, on examine : (i) une décomposition
hiérarchique du problème auxiliaire dans le modèle de décomposition, (ii) des
heuristiques pour gérer efficacement le grand nombre de contraintes.
À propos de la protection dans les réseaux multidomaines, nous proposons des systèmes
de protection contre les pannes d’un lien. Tout d’abord, un modèle d’optimisation
est proposé pour un système de protection centralisée, en supposant que la gestion du
réseau soit au courant de tous les détails des topologies physiques des domaines. Nous
proposons ensuite un modèle distribué de l’optimisation de la protection dans les réseaux
optiques multidomaines, une formulation beaucoup plus réaliste car elle est basée
sur l’hypothèse d’une gestion de réseau distribué. Ensuite, nous ajoutons une bande pasiv
sante partagée afin de réduire le coût de la protection. Plus précisément, la bande passante
de chaque lien intra-domaine est partagée entre les p-cycles FIPP et les p-cycles
dans une première étude, puis entre les chemins pour lien/chemin de protection dans une
deuxième étude. Enfin, nous recommandons des stratégies parallèles aux solutions de
grands réseaux optiques multidomaines.
Les résultats de l’étude permettent d’élaborer une conception efficace d’un système
de protection pour un très large réseau multidomaine (45 domaines), le plus large examiné
dans la littérature, avec un système à la fois centralisé et distribué.Recent developments in the wavelength selective switch (WSS) technology enable
multi-degree reconfigurable optical add/drop multiplexers (ROADM) architectures with
colorless and directionless switching, which is regarded as a very promising enabler for
future reconfigurable wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) mesh networks. However,
its asymmetric switching property complicates the optimal routing and wavelength
assignment (RWA) problem, which is NP-hard. Most of the existing RWA algorithms
do not consider such property.
Disruption of services through equipment failures on the lightpaths (output of RWA
problem) is consequential as it involves the lost of large amounts of data. Therefore,
substantial research efforts are needed to ensure the functional survivability of optical
networks, i.e., the continuation of services even when equipment failures occur. Most
previous publications have focused on using a protection scheme to guarantee the traffic
connections in the event of single link failures. However, protection design against single
link failures turns out not to be always sufficient to keep the WDM networks away from
many downtime cases as other kinds of failures, such as node failures, dual link failures,
triple link failures, etc., become common nowadays. Furthermore, there are challenges
to protect large multi-domain optical networks which are composed of several singledomain
networks, interconnected by inter-domain links, where the internal topological
details of a domain are usually not shared externally.
The objective of this thesis is to propose scalable models and solution methods for
the above problems. The models enable to approach large problem instances while producing
optimal or near optimal solutions with mathematically proven optimality gaps.
For this, we rely on the column generation technique which is suitable to solve large
scale linear programming problems.
For the provisioning problem in optical networks, we propose a new ILP (Integer
Linear Programming) model for RWA problem with the objective of maximizing the
Grade of Service (GoS). The resulting model is a large scale optimization ILP model,
which allows the exact solution of quite large RWA instances, assuming all nodes are
asymmetric and with a given switching connectivity matrix. Next, we modify the model
and propose a solution for the RWA problem with the objective of finding the best switching
connectivity matrix for a given number of ports and a given number of switching
connections, while satisfying/maximizing the GoS.
For protection in single domain networks, we propose solutions for the protection
against multiple failures. Indeed, we extent the protection of a single domain network
against multiple failures, using FIPP and FDPP p-cycles. We propose a new generic
flow formulation for FDPP p-cycles subject to multiple failures. Our new model ends
up with a complex pricing problem, which has an exponential number of constraints due
to some subtour elimination constraints. Consequently, in order to efficiently solve the
pricing problem, we consider: (i) a hierarchical decomposition of the original pricing
problem; (ii) heuristics in order to go around the large number of constraints in the
pricing problem.
For protection in multi-domain networks, we propose protection schemes against
single link failures. Firstly, we propose an optimization model for a centralized protection
scheme, assuming that the network management is aware of all the details of the
physical topologies of the domains. We then propose a distributed optimization model
for protection in multi-domain optical networks, a much more realistic formulation as it
is based on the assumption of a distributed network management. Then, we add bandwidth
sharing in order to reduce the cost of protection. Bandwidth of each intra-domain
link is shared among FIPP p-cycles and p-cycles in a first study, and then among paths
for link/path protection in a second study. Finally, we propose parallel strategies in order
to obtain solutions for very large multi-domain optical networks.
The result of this last study allows the efficent design of a protection scheme for a
very large multi-domain network (45 domains), the largest one by far considered in the
literature, both with a centralized and distributed scheme
Resource Management in Survivable Multi-Granular Optical Networks
The last decade witnessed a wild growth of the Internet traffic, promoted by bandwidth-hungry applications such as Youtube, P2P, and VoIP. This explosive increase is expected to proceed with an annual rate of 34% in the near future, which leads to a huge challenge to the Internet infrastructure. One foremost solution to this problem is advancing the optical networking and switching, by which abundant bandwidth can be provided in an energy-efficient manner. For instance, with Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) technology, each fiber can carry a mass of wavelengths with bandwidth up to 100 Gbits/s or higher. To keep up with the traffic explosion, however, simply scaling the number of fibers and/or wavelengths per fiber results in the scalability issue in WDM networks. One major motivation of this dissertation is to address this issue in WDM networks with the idea of waveband switching (WBS). This work includes the author\u27s study on multiple aspects of waveband switching: how to address dynamic user demand, how to accommodate static user demand, and how to achieve a survivable WBS network. When combined together, the proposed approaches form a framework that enables an efficient WBS-based Internet in the near future or the middle term. As a long-term solution for the Internet backbone, the Spectrum Sliced Elastic Optical Path (SLICE) Networks recently attract significant interests. SLICE aims to provide abundant bandwidth by managing the spectrum resources as orthogonal sub-carriers, a finer granular than wavelengths of WDM networks. Another important component of this dissertation is the author\u27s timely study on this new frontier: particulary, how to efficiency accommodate the user demand in SLICE networks. We refer to the overall study as the resource management in multi-granular optical networks. In WBS networks, the multi-granularity includes the fiber, waveband, and wavelength. While in SLICE networks, the traffic granularity refers to the fiber, and the variety of the demand size (in terms of number of sub-carriers)
Disaster Resilient Optical Core Networks
During the past few years, the number of catastrophic disasters has increased and its impact sometimes incapacitates the infrastructures within a region. The communication network infrastructure is one of the affected systems during these events. Thus, building a resilient network backbone is essential due to the big role of networks during disaster recovery operations. In this thesis, the research efforts in building a disaster-resilient network are reviewed and open issues related to building disaster-resilient networks are discussed. Large size disasters not necessarily impact the communication networks, but instead it can stimulate events that cause network performance degradation. In this regard, two open challenges that arise after disasters are considered one is the short-term capacity exhaustion and the second is the power outage.
First, the post-disaster traffic floods phenomena is considered. The impact of the traffic floods on the optical core network performance is studied. Five mitigation approaches are proposed to serve these floods and minimise the incurred blocking. The proposed approaches explore different technologies such as excess or overprovisioned capacity exploitation, traffic filtering, protection paths rerouting, rerouting all traffic and finally using the degrees of freedom offered by differentiated services. The mitigation approaches succeeded in reducing the disaster induced traffic blocking.
Second, advance reservation provisioning in an energy-efficient approach is developed. Four scenarios are considered to minimise power consumption. The scenarios exploit the flexibility provided by the sliding-window advance reservation requests. This flexibility is studied through scheduling and rescheduling scenarios. The proposed scenarios succeeded in minimising the consumed power.
Third, the sliding-window flexibility is exploited for the objective of minimising network blocking during post-disaster traffic floods. The scheduling and rescheduling scenarios are extended to overcome the capacity exhaustion and improve the network blocking. The proposed schemes minimised the incurred blocking during traffic floods by exploiting sliding window.
Fourth, building blackout resilient networks is proposed. The network performance during power outages is evaluated. A remedy approach is suggested for maximising network lifetime during blackouts. The approach attempts to reduce the required backup power supply while minimising network outages due to limited energy production. The results show that the mitigation approach succeeds in keeping the network alive during a blackout while minimising the required backup power
Orchestrating datacenters and networks to facilitate the telecom cloud
In the Internet of services, information technology (IT) infrastructure providers play a critical role in making the services accessible to end-users. IT infrastructure providers host platforms and services in their datacenters (DCs). The cloud initiative has been accompanied by the introduction of new computing paradigms, such as Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) and Software as a Service (SaaS), which have dramatically reduced the time and costs required to develop and deploy a service.
However, transport networks become crucial to make services accessible to the user and to operate DCs. Transport networks are currently configured with big static fat pipes based on capacity over-provisioning aiming at guaranteeing traffic demand and other parameters committed in Service Level Agreement (SLA) contracts. Notwithstanding, such over-dimensioning adds high operational costs for DC operators and service providers. Therefore, new mechanisms to provide reconfiguration and adaptability of the transport network to reduce the amount of over-provisioned bandwidth are required. Although cloud-ready transport network architecture was introduced to handle the dynamic cloud and network interaction and Elastic Optical Networks (EONs) can facilitate elastic network operations, orchestration between the cloud and the interconnection network is eventually required to coordinate resources in both strata in a coherent manner.
In addition, the explosion of Internet Protocol (IP)-based services requiring not only dynamic cloud and network interaction, but also additional service-specific SLA parameters and the expected benefits of Network Functions Virtualization (NFV), open the opportunity to telecom operators to exploit that cloud-ready transport network and their current infrastructure, to efficiently satisfy network requirements from the services. In the telecom cloud, a pay-per-use model can be offered to support services requiring resources from the transport network and its infrastructure.
In this thesis, we study connectivity requirements from representative cloud-based services and explore connectivity models, architectures and orchestration schemes to satisfy them aiming at facilitating the telecom cloud.
The main objective of this thesis is demonstrating, by means of analytical models and simulation, the viability of orchestrating DCs and networks to facilitate the telecom cloud.
To achieve the main goal we first study the connectivity requirements for DC interconnection and services on a number of scenarios that require connectivity from the transport network. Specifically, we focus on studying DC federations, live-TV distribution, and 5G mobile networks. Next, we study different connectivity schemes, algorithms, and architectures aiming at satisfying those connectivity requirements. In particular, we study polling-based models for dynamic inter-DC connectivity and propose a novel notification-based connectivity scheme where inter-DC connectivity can be delegated to the network operator. Additionally, we explore virtual network topology provisioning models to support services that require service-specific SLA parameters on the telecom cloud. Finally, we focus on studying DC and network orchestration to fulfill simultaneously SLA contracts for a set of customers requiring connectivity from the transport network.En la Internet de los servicios, los proveedores de recursos relacionados con tecnologĂas de la informaciĂłn juegan un papel crĂtico haciĂ©ndolos accesibles a los usuarios como servicios. Dichos proveedores, hospedan plataformas y servicios en centros de datos. La oferta plataformas y servicios en la nube ha introducido nuevos paradigmas de computaciĂłn tales como ofrecer la infraestructura como servicio, conocido como IaaS de sus siglas en inglĂ©s, y el software como servicio, SaaS. La disponibilidad de recursos en la nube, ha contribuido a la reducciĂłn de tiempos y costes para desarrollar y desplegar un servicio. Sin embargo, para permitir el acceso de los usuarios a los servicios asĂ como para operar los centros de datos, las redes de transporte resultan imprescindibles. Actualmente, las redes de transporte están configuradas con conexiones estáticas y su capacidad sobredimensionada para garantizar la demanda de tráfico asĂ como los distintos parámetros relacionados con el nivel de servicio acordado. No obstante, debido a que el exceso de capacidad en las conexiones se traduce en un elevado coste tanto para los operadores de los centros de datos como para los proveedores de servicios, son necesarios nuevos mecanismos que permitan adaptar y reconfigurar la red de forma eficiente de acuerdo a las nuevas necesidades de los servicios a los que dan soporte. A pesar de la introducciĂłn de arquitecturas que permiten la gestiĂłn de redes de transporte y su interacciĂłn con los servicios en la nube de forma dinámica, y de la irrupciĂłn de las redes Ăłpticas elásticas, la orquestaciĂłn entre la nube y la red es necesaria para coordinar de forma coherente los recursos en los distintos estratos. Además, la explosiĂłn de servicios basados el Protocolo de Internet, IP, que requieren tanto interacciĂłn dinámica con la red como parámetros particulares en los niveles de servicio además de los habituales, asĂ como los beneficios que se esperan de la virtualizaciĂłn de funciones de red, representan una oportunidad para los operadores de red para explotar sus recursos y su infraestructura. La nube de operador permite ofrecer recursos del operador de red a los servicios, de forma similar a un sistema basado en pago por uso. En esta Tesis, se estudian requisitos de conectividad de servicios basados en la nube y se exploran modelos de conectividad, arquitecturas y modelos de orquestaciĂłn que contribuyan a la realizaciĂłn de la nube de operador. El objetivo principal de esta Tesis es demostrar la viabilidad de la orquestaciĂłn de centros de datos y redes para facilitar la nube de operador, mediante modelos analĂticos y simulaciones. Con el fin de cumplir dicho objetivo, primero estudiamos los requisitos de conectividad para la interconexiĂłn de centros de datos y servicios en distintos escenarios que requieren conectividad en la red de transporte. En particular, nos centramos en el estudio de escenarios basados en federaciones de centros de datos, distribuciĂłn de televisiĂłn en directo y la evoluciĂłn de las redes mĂłviles hacia 5G. A continuaciĂłn, estudiamos distintos modelos de conectividad, algoritmos y arquitecturas para satisfacer los requisitos de conectividad. Estudiamos modelos de conectividad basados en sondeos para la interconexiĂłn de centros de datos y proponemos un modelo basado en notificaciones donde la gestiĂłn de la conectividad entre centros de datos se delega al operador de red. Estudiamos la provisiĂłn de redes virtuales para soportar en la nube de operador servicios que requieren parámetros especĂficos en los acuerdos de nivel de servicio además de los habituales. Finalmente, nos centramos en el estudio de la orquestaciĂłn de centros de datos y redes con el objetivo de satisfacer de forma simultánea requisitos para distintos servicios.Postprint (published version
Survivability aspects of future optical backbone networks
In huidige glasvezelnetwerken kan een enkele vezel een gigantische hoeveelheid data dragen, ruwweg het equivalent van 25 miljoen gelijktijdige telefoongesprekken. Hierdoor zullen netwerkstoringen, zoals breuken van een glasvezelkabel, de communicatie van een groot aantal eindgebruikers verstoren. Netwerkoperatoren kiezen er dan ook voor om hun netwerk zo te bouwen dat zulke grote storingen automatisch opgevangen worden. Dit proefschrift spitst zich toe op twee aspecten rond de overleefbaarheid in toekomstige optische netwerken. De eerste doelstelling die beoogd wordt is het tot stand brengen vanrobuuste dataverbindingen over meerdere netwerken. Door voldoende betrouwbare verbindingen tot stand te brengen over een infrastructuur die niet door een enkele entiteit wordt beheerd kan men bv. weredwijd Internettelevisie van hoge kwaliteit aanbieden. De bestudeerde oplossing heeft niet enkel tot doel om deze zeer betrouwbare verbinding te berekenen, maar ook om dit te bewerkstelligen met een minimum aan gebruikte netwerkcapaciteit. De tweede doelstelling was om een antwoord te formuleren om de vraag hoe het toepassen van optische schakelsystemen gebaseerd op herconfigureerbare optische multiplexers een impact heeft op de overleefbaarheid van een optisch netwerk. Bij lagere volumes hebben optisch geschakelde netwerken weinig voordeel van dergelijke gesofistikeerde methoden. Elektronisch geschakelde netwerken vertonen geen afhankelijkheid van het datavolume en hebben altijd baat bij optimalisatie
Protection partagée pour les réseaux de transport multidomaines
Thèse numérisée par la Direction des bibliothèques de l'Université de Montréal