464 research outputs found

    The Scalability and Performance of Common Vector Solution to Generalized Label Continuity Constraint in Hybrid Optical/Packet Networks

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    Abstract—In hybrid Optical/packet networks, wavelength and VLAN tag continuity along a Label Switched Path are two common constraints. These two types of constraints, referred to as Generalized Label Continuity Constraints, have global significance in a network; namely, the label should appear only in other link- or node- disjoint paths. In considering these constraints, a solution is the common vector approach, which seeks a common available label along the path determined by CSPF without label constraints. In this paper, we provide an estimation method to compute the upper bound of the blocking probability for the above approach. We also address the scalability problem of the existing traffic engineering algorithms. We then present the simulation results corroborating with our analytical model.h

    A Survey on the Path Computation Element (PCE) Architecture

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    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

    Particle swarm optimization for routing and wavelength assignment in next generation WDM networks.

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    PhDAll-optical Wave Division Multiplexed (WDM) networking is a promising technology for long-haul backbone and large metropolitan optical networks in order to meet the non-diminishing bandwidth demands of future applications and services. Examples could include archival and recovery of data to/from Storage Area Networks (i.e. for banks), High bandwidth medical imaging (for remote operations), High Definition (HD) digital broadcast and streaming over the Internet, distributed orchestrated computing, and peak-demand short-term connectivity for Access Network providers and wireless network operators for backhaul surges. One desirable feature is fast and automatic provisioning. Connection (lightpath) provisioning in optically switched networks requires both route computation and a single wavelength to be assigned for the lightpath. This is called Routing and Wavelength Assignment (RWA). RWA can be classified as static RWA and dynamic RWA. Static RWA is an NP-hard (non-polynomial time hard) optimisation task. Dynamic RWA is even more challenging as connection requests arrive dynamically, on-the-fly and have random connection holding times. Traditionally, global-optimum mathematical search schemes like integer linear programming and graph colouring are used to find an optimal solution for NP-hard problems. However such schemes become unusable for connection provisioning in a dynamic environment, due to the computational complexity and time required to undertake the search. To perform dynamic provisioning, different heuristic and stochastic techniques are used. Particle Swarm Optimisation (PSO) is a population-based global optimisation scheme that belongs to the class of evolutionary search algorithms and has successfully been used to solve many NP-hard optimisation problems in both static and dynamic environments. In this thesis, a novel PSO based scheme is proposed to solve the static RWA case, which can achieve optimal/near-optimal solution. In order to reduce the risk of premature convergence of the swarm and to avoid selecting local optima, a search scheme is proposed to solve the static RWA, based on the position of swarm‘s global best particle and personal best position of each particle. To solve dynamic RWA problem, a PSO based scheme is proposed which can provision a connection within a fraction of a second. This feature is crucial to provisioning services like bandwidth on demand connectivity. To improve the convergence speed of the swarm towards an optimal/near-optimal solution, a novel chaotic factor is introduced into the PSO algorithm, i.e. CPSO, which helps the swarm reach a relatively good solution in fewer iterations. Experimental results for PSO/CPSO based dynamic RWA algorithms show that the proposed schemes perform better compared to other evolutionary techniques like genetic algorithms, ant colony optimization. This is both in terms of quality of solution and computation time. The proposed schemes also show significant improvements in blocking probability performance compared to traditional dynamic RWA schemes like SP-FF and SP-MU algorithms

    Software Defined Applications in Cellular and Optical Networks

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    abstract: Small wireless cells have the potential to overcome bottlenecks in wireless access through the sharing of spectrum resources. A novel access backhaul network architecture based on a Smart Gateway (Sm-GW) between the small cell base stations, e.g., LTE eNBs, and the conventional backhaul gateways, e.g., LTE Servicing/Packet Gateways (S/P-GWs) has been introduced to address the bottleneck. The Sm-GW flexibly schedules uplink transmissions for the eNBs. Based on software defined networking (SDN) a management mechanism that allows multiple operator to flexibly inter-operate via multiple Sm-GWs with a multitude of small cells has been proposed. This dissertation also comprehensively survey the studies that examine the SDN paradigm in optical networks. Along with the PHY functional split improvements, the performance of Distributed Converged Cable Access Platform (DCCAP) in the cable architectures especially for the Remote-PHY and Remote-MACPHY nodes has been evaluated. In the PHY functional split, in addition to the re-use of infrastructure with a common FFT module for multiple technologies, a novel cross functional split interaction to cache the repetitive QAM symbols across time at the remote node to reduce the transmission rate requirement of the fronthaul link has been proposed.Dissertation/ThesisDoctoral Dissertation Electrical Engineering 201

    GMPLS-OBS interoperability and routing acalability in internet

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    The popularization of Internet has turned the telecom world upside down over the last two decades. Network operators, vendors and service providers are being challenged to adapt themselves to Internet requirements in a way to properly serve the huge number of demanding users (residential and business). The Internet (data-oriented network) is supported by an IP packet-switched architecture on top of a circuit-switched, optical-based architecture (voice-oriented network), which results in a complex and rather costly infrastructure to the transport of IP traffic (the dominant traffic nowadays). In such a way, a simple and IP-adapted network architecture is desired. From the transport network perspective, both Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching (GMPLS) and Optical Burst Switching (OBS) technologies are part of the set of solutions to progress towards an IP-over-WDM architecture, providing intelligence in the control and management of resources (i.e. GMPLS) as well as a good network resource access and usage (i.e. OBS). The GMPLS framework is the key enabler to orchestrate a unified optical network control and thus reduce network operational expenses (OPEX), while increasing operator's revenues. Simultaneously, the OBS technology is one of the well positioned switching technologies to realize the envisioned IP-over-WDM network architecture, leveraging on the statistical multiplexing of data plane resources to enable sub-wavelength in optical networks. Despite of the GMPLS principle of unified control, little effort has been put on extending it to incorporate the OBS technology and many open questions still remain. From the IP network perspective, the Internet is facing scalability issues as enormous quantities of service instances and devices must be managed. Nowadays, it is believed that the current Internet features and mechanisms cannot cope with the size and dynamics of the Future Internet. Compact Routing is one of the main breakthrough paradigms on the design of a routing system scalable with the Future Internet requirements. It intends to address the fundamental limits of current stretch-1 shortest-path routing in terms of RT scalability (aiming at sub-linear growth). Although "static" compact routing works fine, scaling logarithmically on the number of nodes even in scale-free graphs such as Internet, it does not handle dynamic graphs. Moreover, as multimedia content/services proliferate, the multicast is again under the spotlight as bandwidth efficiency and low RT sizes are desired. However, it makes the problem even worse as more routing entries should be maintained. In a nutshell, the main objective of this thesis in to contribute with fully detailed solutions dealing both with i) GMPLS-OBS control interoperability (Part I), fostering unified control over multiple switching domains and reduce redundancy in IP transport. The proposed solution overcomes every interoperability technology-specific issue as well as it offers (absolute) QoS guarantees overcoming OBS performance issues by making use of the GMPLS traffic-engineering (TE) features. Keys extensions to the GMPLS protocol standards are equally approached; and ii) new compact routing scheme for multicast scenarios, in order to overcome the Future Internet inter-domain routing system scalability problem (Part II). In such a way, the first known name-independent (i.e. topology unaware) compact multicast routing algorithm is proposed. On the other hand, the AnyTraffic Labeled concept is also introduced saving on forwarding entries by sharing a single forwarding entry to unicast and multicast traffic type. Exhaustive simulation campaigns are run in both cases in order to assess the reliability and feasible of the proposals

    On the resource abstraction, partitioning and composition for virtual GMPLS-controlled multi-layer optical networks

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    Virtual optical networking supports the dynamic provisioning of dedicated networks over the same network infrastructure, which has received a lot of attention by network providers. The stringent network requirements (e.g., Quality of Service -QoS-, Service Level Agreement -SLA-, dynamicity) of the emerging high bandwidth and dynamic applications such as high-definition video streaming (e.g., telepresence, television, remote surgery, etc.), and cloud computing (e.g., real-time data backup, remote desktop, etc.) can be supported by the deployment of dynamic infrastructure services to build ad-hoc Virtual Optical Networks (VON), which is known as Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS). Future Internet should support two separate entities: infrastructure providers (who manage the physical infrastructure) and service providers (who deploy network protocols and offer end-to-end services). Thus, network service providers shall request, on a per-need basis, a dedicated and application-specific VON and have full control over it. Optical network virtualization technologies allow the partitioning/composition of the network infrastructure (i.e., physical optical nodes and links) into independent virtual resources, adopting the same functionality as the physical resource. The composition of these virtual resources (i.e., virtual optical nodes and links) allows the deployment of multiple VONs. A VON must be composed of not only a virtual transport plane but also of a virtual control plane, with the purpose of providing the required independent and full control functionalities (i.e., automated connection provisioning and recovery (protection/restauration), traffic engineering (e.g., QoS, SLA), etc.). This PhD Thesis focuses on optical network virtualization, with three main objectives. The first objective consists on the design, implementation and evaluation of an architecture and the necessary protocols and interfaces for the virtualization of a Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching (GMPLS) controlled Wavelength Switched Optical Network (WSON) and the introduction of a resource broker for dynamic virtual GMPLS-controlled WSON infrastructure services, whose task is to dynamically deploy VONs from service provider requests. The introduction of a resource broker implies the need for virtual resource management and allocation algorithms for optimal usage of the shared physical infrastructure. Also, the deployment of independent virtual GMPLS control plane on top of each VON shall be performed by the resource broker. This objective also includes the introduction of optical network virtualization for Elastic Optical Networks (EON). The second objective is to design, implement and experimentally evaluate a system architecture for deploying virtual GMPLS-controlled Multi-Protocol Label Switching Transport Profile (MPLS-TP) networks over a shared WSON. With this purpose, this PhD Thesis also focuses on the design and development of MPLS-TP nodes which are deployed on the WSON of the ADRENALINE Testbed at CTTC premises. Finally, the third objective is the composition of multiple virtual optical networks with heterogeneous control domains (e.g., GMPLS, OpenFlow). A multi-domain resource broker has been designed, implemented and evaluated.La gestió de xarxes òptiques virtuals permet la provisió dinàmica de xarxes dedicades a sobre la mateixa infraestructura de xarxa i ha cridat molt l’atenció als proveïdors de xarxes. Els requisits de xarxa (per exemple la qualitat de servei, els acords de nivell de servei o la dinamicitat) són cada cop més astringents per a les aplicacions emergents d'elevat ample de banda i dinàmiques, que inclouen per exemple la reproducció en temps real de vídeo d'alta definició (telepresència, televisió, telemedicina) i serveis d’informàtica en núvol (còpies de seguretat en temps real, escriptori remot). Aquests requisits poden ser assolits a través del desplegament de serveis de infraestructura dinàmics per construir xarxes òptiques virtuals (VON, en anglès), fet que és conegut com a infraestructura com a servei (IaaS). La internet del futur hauria de suportar dos entitats diferenciades: els proveïdors d'infraestructures (responsables de gestionar la infraestructura física), i els proveïdors de serveis (responsables dels protocols de xarxa i d'oferir els serveis finals). D'aquesta forma els proveïdors de serveis podrien sol•licitar i gestionar en funció de les necessitats xarxes òptiques virtuals dedicades i específiques per les aplicacions. Les tecnologies de virtualització de xarxes òptiques virtuals permeten la partició i composició de infraestructura de xarxa (nodes i enllaços òptics) en recursos virtuals independents que adopten les mateixes funcionalitats que els recursos físics. La composició d'aquests recursos virtuals (nodes i enllaços òptics virtuals) permet el desplegament de múltiples VONs. Una VON no sols està composada per un pla de transport virtual, sinó també per un pla de control virtual, amb l'objectiu d'incorporar les funcionalitats necessàries a la VON (provisió de connexions automàtiques i recuperació (protecció/restauració), enginyeria de tràfic, etc.). Aquesta tesis es centra en la virtualització de xarxes òptiques amb tres objectius principals. El primer objectiu consisteix en el disseny, implementació i avaluació de l'arquitectura i els protocols i interfícies necessaris per la virtualització de xarxes encaminades a través de la longitud d'ona i controlades per GMPLS. També inclou la introducció d'un gestor de recursos per desplegar xarxes òptiques virtuals de forma dinàmica. La introducció d'aquest gestor de recursos implica la necessitat d'una gestió dels recursos virtuals i d’algoritmes d’assignació de recursos per a la utilització òptima dels recursos físics. A més el gestor de recursos ha de ser capaç del desplegament dels recursos assignats, incloent un pla de control GMPLS virtual independent per a cada VON desplegada. Finalment, aquest objectiu inclou la introducció de mecanismes de virtualització per a xarxes elàstiques òptiques (EON, en anglès). El segon objectiu és el disseny, la implementació i l’avaluació experimental d'una arquitectura de sistema per oferir xarxes MPLS-TP virtuals controlades per GMPLS sobre una infraestructura i WSON compartida. Per això, aquesta tesis també es centra en el disseny i desenvolupament d'un node MPLS-TP que ha estat desplegat al demostrador ADRENALINE, al CTTC. Finalment, el tercer objectiu és la composició de múltiples xarxes òptiques virtuals en dominis de control heterogenis (GMPLS i OpenFlow). Un gestor de recursos multi-domini ha estat dissenyat, implementat i avaluat.La gestión de redes ópticas virtuales permite la provisión dinámica de redes dedicadas encima la misma infraestructura de red y ha llamado mucho la atención a los proveedores de redes. Los requisitos de red (por ejemplo la calidad de servicio, los acuerdos de nivel de servicio o la dinamicidad) son cada vez más estringentes para las aplicaciones emergentes de elevado ancho de banda y dinámicas, que incluyen por ejemplo la reproducción en tiempo real de vídeo de alta definición (telepresencia, televisión, telemedicina) y servicios de computación en la nube (copias de seguridad en tiempo real, escritorio remoto). Estos requisitos pueden ser logrados a través del despliegue de servicios de infraestructura dinámicos para construir redes ópticas virtuales (VON, en inglés), hecho que es conocido como infraestructura como servicio (IaaS). La internet del futuro tendrá que soportar dos entidades diferenciadas: los proveedores de infraestructuras (responsables de gestionar la infraestructura física), y los proveedores de servicios (responsables de los protocolos de red y de ofrecer los servicios finales). De esta forma los proveedores de servicios podrán solicitar y gestionar en función de las necesitados redes ópticas virtuales dedicadas y específicas por las aplicaciones. Las tecnologías de virtualización de redes ópticas virtuales permiten la partición y composición de infraestructura de red (nodos y enlaces ópticos) en recursos virtuales independientes que adoptan las mismas funcionalidades que los recursos físicos. La composición de estos recursos virtuales (nodos y enlaces ópticos virtuales) permite el despliegue de múltiples VONs. Una VON no sólo está compuesta por un plan de transporte virtual, sino también por un plan de control virtual, con el objetivo de incorporar las funcionalidades necesarias a la VON (provisión de conexiones automáticas y recuperación (protección/restauración), ingeniería de tráfico, etc.). Esta tesis se centra en la virtualización de redes ópticas con tres objetivos principales. El primer objetivo consiste en el diseño, implementación y evaluación de la arquitectura y los protocolos e interfaces necesarios por la virtualización de redes encaminadas a través de la longitud de ola y controladas por GMPLS. También incluye la introducción de un gestor de recursos para desplegar redes ópticas virtuales de forma dinámica. La introducción de este gestor de recursos implica la necesidad de una gestión de los recursos virtuales y de algoritmos de asignación de recursos para la utilización óptima de los recursos físicos. Además el gestor de recursos tiene que ser capaz del despliegue de los recursos asignados, incluyendo un plan de control GMPLS virtual independiente para cada VON desplegada. Finalmente, este objetivo incluye la introducción de mecanismos de virtualización para redes elásticas ópticas (EON, en inglés). El segundo objetivo es el diseño, la implementación y la evaluación experimental de una arquitectura de sistema para ofrecer redes MPLS-TP virtuales controladas por GMPLS sobre una infraestructura WSON compartida. Por eso, esta tesis también se centra en el diseño y desarrollo de un nodo MPLS-TP que ha sido desplegado al demostrador ADRENALINE, en el CTTC. Finalmente, el tercer objetivo es la composición de múltiples redes ópticas virtuales en dominios de control heterogéneos (GMPLS y OpenFlow). Un gestor de recursos multi-dominio ha sido diseñado, implementado y evaluado
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