41 research outputs found
Planning Solar in Energy-managed Cellular Networks
There has been a lot of interest recently on the energy efficiency and
environmental impact of wireless networks. Given that the base stations are the
network elements that use most of this energy, much research has dealt with
ways to reduce the energy used by the base stations by turning them off during
periods of low load. In addition to this, installing a solar harvesting sys-
tem composed of solar panels, batteries, charge con- trollers and inverters is
another way to further reduce the network environmental impact and some
research has been dealing with this for individual base stations. In this
paper, we show that both techniques are tightly coupled. We propose a
mathematical model that captures the synergy between solar installation over a
network and the dynamic operation of energy-managed base stations. We study the
interactions between the two methods for networks of hundreds of base stations
and show that the order in which each method is intro- duced into the system
does make a difference in terms of cost and performance. We also show that
installing solar is not always the best solution even when the unit cost of the
solar energy is smaller than the grid cost. We conclude that planning the solar
installation and energy management of the base stations have to be done
jointly
SPIDER: Fault Resilient SDN Pipeline with Recovery Delay Guarantees
When dealing with node or link failures in Software Defined Networking (SDN),
the network capability to establish an alternative path depends on controller
reachability and on the round trip times (RTTs) between controller and involved
switches. Moreover, current SDN data plane abstractions for failure detection
(e.g. OpenFlow "Fast-failover") do not allow programmers to tweak switches'
detection mechanism, thus leaving SDN operators still relying on proprietary
management interfaces (when available) to achieve guaranteed detection and
recovery delays. We propose SPIDER, an OpenFlow-like pipeline design that
provides i) a detection mechanism based on switches' periodic link probing and
ii) fast reroute of traffic flows even in case of distant failures, regardless
of controller availability. SPIDER can be implemented using stateful data plane
abstractions such as OpenState or Open vSwitch, and it offers guaranteed short
(i.e. ms) failure detection and recovery delays, with a configurable trade off
between overhead and failover responsiveness. We present here the SPIDER
pipeline design, behavioral model, and analysis on flow tables' memory impact.
We also implemented and experimentally validated SPIDER using OpenState (an
OpenFlow 1.3 extension for stateful packet processing), showing numerical
results on its performance in terms of recovery latency and packet losses.Comment: 8 page
An analytical model for jitter in IP networks
ABSTRACT: Traditionally, IP network planning and design is mostly based on the average delay or loss constraints which can often be easily calculated. Jitter, on the other hand, is much more difficult to evaluate, but it is particularly important to manage the QoS of real-time and interactive services such as VoIP and streaming video. In this paper, we present simple formulas for the jitter of Poisson traffic in a single queue that can be quickly calculated . It takes into account the packets delay correlation and also the correlation of tandem queues that have a significant impact on the end-to-end jitter. We then extend them to the end-to-end jitter of a tagged stream based on a tandem queueing network. The results given by the model are then compared with event-driven simulations. We find that they are very accurate for Poisson traffic over a wide range of traffic loads and more importantly that they yield conservative values for the jitter so that they can be used in network design procedures. We also find some very counter-intuitive results. We show that jitter actually decreases with increasing load and the total jitter on a path depends on the position of congested links on that path. We finally point out some consequences of these results for network design procedures
Robust Energy Management for Green and Survivable IP Networks
Despite the growing necessity to make Internet greener, it is worth pointing
out that energy-aware strategies to minimize network energy consumption must
not undermine the normal network operation. In particular, two very important
issues that may limit the application of green networking techniques concern,
respectively, network survivability, i.e. the network capability to react to
device failures, and robustness to traffic variations. We propose novel
modelling techniques to minimize the daily energy consumption of IP networks,
while explicitly guaranteeing, in addition to typical QoS requirements, both
network survivability and robustness to traffic variations. The impact of such
limitations on final network consumption is exhaustively investigated. Daily
traffic variations are modelled by dividing a single day into multiple time
intervals (multi-period problem), and network consumption is reduced by putting
to sleep idle line cards and chassis. To preserve network resiliency we
consider two different protection schemes, i.e. dedicated and shared
protection, according to which a backup path is assigned to each demand and a
certain amount of spare capacity has to be available on each link. Robustness
to traffic variations is provided by means of a specific modelling framework
that allows to tune the conservatism degree of the solutions and to take into
account load variations of different magnitude. Furthermore, we impose some
inter-period constraints necessary to guarantee network stability and preserve
the device lifetime. Both exact and heuristic methods are proposed.
Experimentations carried out with realistic networks operated with flow-based
routing protocols (i.e. MPLS) show that significant savings, up to 30%, can be
achieved also when both survivability and robustness are fully guaranteed
Energy management in communication networks: a journey through modelling and optimization glasses
The widespread proliferation of Internet and wireless applications has
produced a significant increase of ICT energy footprint. As a response, in the
last five years, significant efforts have been undertaken to include
energy-awareness into network management. Several green networking frameworks
have been proposed by carefully managing the network routing and the power
state of network devices.
Even though approaches proposed differ based on network technologies and
sleep modes of nodes and interfaces, they all aim at tailoring the active
network resources to the varying traffic needs in order to minimize energy
consumption. From a modeling point of view, this has several commonalities with
classical network design and routing problems, even if with different
objectives and in a dynamic context.
With most researchers focused on addressing the complex and crucial
technological aspects of green networking schemes, there has been so far little
attention on understanding the modeling similarities and differences of
proposed solutions. This paper fills the gap surveying the literature with
optimization modeling glasses, following a tutorial approach that guides
through the different components of the models with a unified symbolism. A
detailed classification of the previous work based on the modeling issues
included is also proposed
Planning solar in energy-managed cellular networks
Recently, there has been a lot of interest on the energy efficiency and environmental impact of wireless networks. Given that the base stations are the network elements that use most of this energy, much research has dealt with ways to reduce the energy used by the base stations by turning them off during periods of low load. In addition to this, installing a solar harvesting system made up of solar panels, batteries, charge controllers, and inverters is another way to further reduce the network environmental impact, and some research has been dealing with this for individual base stations. In this paper, we show that both techniques are tightly coupled. We propose a mathematical model that captures the synergy between solar installation over a network and the dynamic operation of energy-managed base stations. We study the interactions between the two methods for networks of hundreds of base stations and show that the order in which each method is introduced into the system does make a difference in terms of cost and performance. We also show that installing solar is not always the best solution even when the unit cost of the solar energy is smaller than the grid cost. We conclude that planning the solar installation and energy management of the base stations has to be done jointly
Detour Planning for Fast and Reliable Failure Recovery in SDN with OpenState
A reliable and scalable mechanism to provide protection against a link or
node failure has additional requirements in the context of SDN and OpenFlow.
Not only it has to minimize the load on the controller, but it must be able to
react even when the controller is unreachable. In this paper we present a
protection scheme based on precomputed backup paths and inspired by MPLS
crankback routing, that guarantees instantaneous recovery times and aims at
zero packet-loss after failure detection, regardless of controller
reachability, even when OpenFlow's "fast-failover" feature cannot be used. The
proposed mechanism is based on OpenState, an OpenFlow extension that allows a
programmer to specify how forwarding rules should autonomously adapt in a
stateful fashion, reducing the need to rely on remote controllers. We present
the scheme as well as two different formulations for the computation of backup
paths.Comment: 8 pages, pre-print, Design of Reliable Communication Networks (DRCN),
2015 11th International Conference on th
Priority queueing models for cognitive radio networks with traffic differentiation
In this paper, we present a new queueing model providing the accurate average system time for packets transmitted over a cognitive radio (CR) link for multiple traffic classes with the preemptive and non-preemptive priority service disciplines. The analysis considers general packet service time, general distributions for the channel availability periods and service interruption periods, and a service-resume transmission. We further introduce and analyze two novel priority service disciplines for opportunistic spectrum access (OSA) networks which take advantage of interruptions to preempt low priority traffic at a low cost. Analytical results, in addition to simulation results to validate their accuracy, are also provided and used to illustrate the impact of different OSA network parameters on the average system time. We particularly show that, for the same average CR transmission link availability, the packet system time significantly increases in a semi-static network with long operating and interruption periods compared to an OSA network with fast alternating operating and interruption periods. We also present results indicating that, due to the presence of interruptions, priority queueing service disciplines provide a greater differentiated service in OSA networks than in traditional networks. The analytical tools presented in this paper are general and can be used to analyze the traffic metrics of most OSA networks carrying multiple classes of traffic with priority queueing service differentiation