216 research outputs found

    Architecture and sparse placement of limited-wavelength converters for optical networks

    Get PDF
    Equipping all nodes of a large optical network with full conversion capability is prohibitively costly. To improve performance at reduced cost, sparse converter placement algorithms are used to select a subset of nodes for full-conversion deployment. Further cost reduction can be obtained by deploying only limited conversion capability in the selected nodes. We present a limited wavelength converter placement algorithm based on the k-minimum dominating set (k-MDS) concept. We propose three different cost-effective optical switch designs using the technologically feasible nontunable optical multiplexers. These three switch designs are flexible node sharing, strict node sharing, and static mapping. Compared to the full search heuristic of O(N-3) complexity based on ranking nodes by blocking percentages, our algorithm not only has a better time complexity O(RN2), where R is the number of disjoint sets provided by k-MIDS, but also avoids the local minimum problem. The performance benefit of our algorithm is demonstrated by network simulation with the U.S Long Haul topology having 28 nodes (91 is 5) and the National Science Foundation (NSF) network having 16 nodes (91 is 4). Our simulation considers the case when the traffic is not uniformly distributed between node pairs in the network using a weighted placement approach, referred to as k-WMDS. From the optical network management point of view, our results also show that the limited conversion capability can achieve performance very close to that of the full conversion capability, while not only decreasing the optical switch cost but also enhancing its fault tolerance

    Resource Allocation Schemes And Performance Evaluation Models For Wavelength Division Multiplexed Optical Networks

    Get PDF
    Wavelength division multiplexed (WDM) optical networks are rapidly becoming the technology of choice in network infrastructure and next-generation Internet architectures. WDM networks have the potential to provide unprecedented bandwidth, reduce processing cost, achieve protocol transparency, and enable efficient failure handling. This dissertation addresses the important issues of improving the performance and enhancing the reliability of WDM networks as well as modeling and evaluating the performance of these networks. Optical wavelength conversion is one of the emerging WDM enabling technologies that can significantly improve bandwidth utilization in optical networks. A new approach for the sparse placement of full wavelength converters based on the concept of the k-Dominating Set (k-DS) of a graph is presented. The k-DS approach is also extended to the case of limited conversion capability using three scalable and cost-effective switch designs: flexible node-sharing, strict node-sharing and static mapping. Compared to full search algorithms previously proposed in the literature, the K-DS approach has better blocking performance, has better time complexity and avoids the local minimum problem. The performance benefit of the K-DS approach is demonstrated by extensive simulation. Fiber delay line (FDL) is another emerging WDM technology that can be used to obtain limited optical buffering capability. A placement algorithm, k-WDS, for the sparse placement of FDLs at a set of selected nodes in Optical Burst Switching (OBS) networks is proposed. The algorithm can handle both uniform and non-uniform traffic patterns. Extensive performance tests have shown that k-WDS provides more efficient placement of optical fiber delay lines than the well-known approach of placing the resources at nodes with the highest experienced burst loss. Performance results that compare the benefit of using FDLs versus using optical wavelength converters (OWCs) are presented. A new algorithm, A-WDS, for the placement of an arbitrary numbers of FDLs and OWCs is introduced and is evaluated under different non-uniform traffic loads. This dissertation also introduces a new cost-effective optical switch design using FDL and a QoS-enhanced JET (just enough time) protocol suitable for optical burst switched WDM networks. The enhanced JET protocol allows classes of traffic to benefit from FDLs and OWCs while minimizing the end-to-end delay for high priority bursts. Performance evaluation models of WDM networks represent an important research area that has received increased attention. A new analytical model that captures link dependencies in all-optical WDM networks under uniform traffic is presented. The model enables the estimation of connection blocking probabilities more accurately than previously possible. The basic formula of the dependency between two links in this model reflects their degree of adjacency, the degree of connectivity of the nodes composing them and their carried traffic. The usefulness of the model is illustrated by applying it to the sparse wavelength converters placement problem in WDM networks. A lightpath containing converters is divided into smaller sub-paths such that each sub-path is a wavelength continuous path and the nodes shared between these sub-paths are full wavelength conversion capable. The blocking probability of the entire path is obtained by computing the blocking probabilities of the individual sub-paths. The analytical-based sparse placement algorithm is validated by comparing it with its simulation-based counterpart using a number of network topologies. Rapid recovery from failure and high levels of reliability are extremely important in WDM networks. A new Fault Tolerant Path Protection scheme, FTPP, for WDM mesh networks based on the alarming state of network nodes and links is introduced. The results of extensive simulation tests show that FTPP outperforms known path protection schemes in terms of loss of service ratio and network throughput. The simulation tests used a wide range of values for the load intensity, the failure arrival rate and the failure holding time. The FTPP scheme is next extended to the differentiated services model and its connection blocking performance is evaluated. Finally, a QoS-enhanced FTPP (QEFTPP) routing and path protection scheme in WDM networks is presented. QEFTPP uses preemption to minimize the connection blocking percentage for high priority traffic. Extensive simulation results have shown that QEFTPP achieves a clear QoS differentiation among the traffic classes and provides a good overall network performance

    Investigation of the tolerance of wavelength-routed optical networks to traffic load variations.

    Get PDF
    This thesis focuses on the performance of circuit-switched wavelength-routed optical network with unpredictable traffic pattern variations. This characteristic of optical networks is termed traffic forecast tolerance. First, the increasing volume and heterogeneous nature of data and voice traffic is discussed. The challenges in designing robust optical networks to handle unpredictable traffic statistics are described. Other work relating to the same research issues are discussed. A general methodology to quantify the traffic forecast tolerance of optical networks is presented. A traffic model is proposed to simulate dynamic, non-uniform loads, and used to test wavelength-routed optical networks considering numerous network topologies. The number of wavelengths required and the effect of the routing and wavelength allocation algorithm are investigated. A new method of quantifying the network tolerance is proposed, based on the calculation of the increase in the standard deviation of the blocking probabilities with increasing traffic load non-uniformity. The performance of different networks are calculated and compared. The relationship between physical features of the network topology and traffic forecast tolerance is investigated. A large number of randomly connected networks with different sizes were assessed. It is shown that the average lightpath length and the number of wavelengths required for full interconnection of the nodes in static operation both exhibit a strong correlation with the network tolerance, regardless of the degree of load non-uniformity. Finally, the impact of wavelength conversion on network tolerance is investigated. Wavelength conversion significantly increases the robustness of optical networks to unpredictable traffic variations. In particular, two sparse wavelength conversion schemes are compared and discussed: distributed wavelength conversion and localized wavelength conversion. It is found that the distributed wavelength conversion scheme outperforms localized wavelength conversion scheme, both with uniform loading and in terms of the network tolerance. The results described in this thesis can be used for the analysis and design of reliable WDM optical networks that are robust to future traffic demand variations

    A tabu search algorithm for sparse placement of wavelength converting nodes in optical networks

    Get PDF
    Cataloged from PDF version of article.All-optical Wavelength Division Multiplexing networks, providing extremely large bandwidths, are among the most promising solutions for the increasing need for high-speed data transport. In all-optical networks, data is transmitted solely in the optical domain along lightpaths from source to destination without being converted into the electronic form, and each lightpath is restricted to use the same wavelength on all the links along its path. This restriction is known as the wavelength continuity constraint. Optical wavelength conversion can increase the performance and capacity of optical networks by removing this restriction and relaxing the wavelength continuity constraint. However, optical wavelength conversion is a difficult and expensive technology. In this study, we analyze the problem of placing limited number of wavelength converting nodes in a multi- fiber network with static traffic demands. Optimum placement of wavelength converting nodes is an NP-complete problem. We propose a tabu search based heuristic algorithm for this problem. The objective of the algorithm is to achieve the performance of full wavelength conversion in terms of minimizing the total number of fibers used in the network by placing minimum number of wavelength converting nodes. Numerical results comparing the performance of the algorithm with the optimum solutions are presented. The proposed algorithm gives quite satisfactory results, it also has a relatively low computational complexity making it applicable to large scale networks.Şengezer, NamıkM.S

    Design And Analysis Of Effective Routing And Channel Scheduling For Wavelength Division Multiplexing Optical Networks

    Get PDF
    Optical networking, employing wavelength division multiplexing (WDM), is seen as the technology of the future for the Internet. This dissertation investigates several important problems affecting optical circuit switching (OCS) and optical burst switching (OBS) networks. Novel algorithms and new approaches to improve the performance of these networks through effective routing and channel scheduling are presented. Extensive simulations and analytical modeling have both been used to evaluate the effectiveness of the proposed algorithms in achieving lower blocking probability, better fairness as well as faster switching. The simulation tests were performed over a variety of optical network topologies including the ring and mesh topologies, the U.S. Long-Haul topology, the Abilene high-speed optical network used in Internet 2, the Toronto Metropolitan topology and the European Optical topology. Optical routing protocols previously published in the literature have largely ignored the noise and timing jitter accumulation caused by cascading several wavelength conversions along the lightpath of the data burst. This dissertation has identified and evaluated a new constraint, called the wavelength conversion cascading constraint. According to this constraint, the deployment of wavelength converters in future optical networks will be constrained by a bound on the number of wavelength conversions that a signal can go through when it is switched all-optically from the source to the destination. Extensive simulation results have conclusively demonstrated that the presence of this constraint causes significant performance deterioration in existing routing and wavelength assignment (RWA) algorithms. Higher blocking probability and/or worse fairness have been observed for existing RWA algorithms when the cascading constraint is not ignored. To counteract the negative side effect of the cascading constraint, two constraint-aware routing algorithms are proposed for OCS networks: the desirable greedy algorithm and the weighted adaptive algorithm. The two algorithms perform source routing using link connectivity and the global state information of each wavelength. Extensive comparative simulation results have illustrated that by limiting the negative cascading impact to the minimum extent practicable, the proposed approaches can dramatically decrease the blocking probability for a variety of optical network topologies. The dissertation has developed a suite of three fairness-improving adaptive routing algorithms in OBS networks. The adaptive routing schemes consider the transient link congestion at the moment when bursts arrive and use this information to reduce the overall burst loss probability. The proposed schemes also resolve the intrinsic unfairness defect of existing popular signaling protocols. The extensive simulation results have shown that the proposed schemes generally outperform the popular shortest path routing algorithm and the improvement could be substantial. A two-dimensional Markov chain analytical model has also been developed and used to analyze the burst loss probabilities for symmetrical ring networks. The accuracy of the model has been validated by simulation. Effective proactive routing and preemptive channel scheduling have also been proposed to address the conversion cascading constraint in OBS environments. The proactive routing adapts the fairness-improving adaptive routing mentioned earlier to the environment of cascaded wavelength conversions. On the other hand, the preemptive channel scheduling approach uses a dynamic priority for each burst based on the constraint threshold and the current number of performed wavelength conversions. Empirical results have proved that when the cascading constraint is present, both approaches would not only decrease the burst loss rates greatly, but also improve the transmission fairness among bursts with different hop counts to a large extent

    Improving Routing Efficiency, Fairness, Differentiated Servises And Throughput In Optical Networks

    Get PDF
    Wavelength division multiplexed (WDM) optical networks are rapidly becoming the technology of choice in next-generation Internet architectures. This dissertation addresses the important issues of improving four aspects of optical networks, namely, routing efficiency, fairness, differentiated quality of service (QoS) and throughput. A new approach for implementing efficient routing and wavelength assignment in WDM networks is proposed and evaluated. In this approach, the state of a multiple-fiber link is represented by a compact bitmap computed as the logical union of the bitmaps of the free wavelengths in the fibers of this link. A modified Dijkstra\u27s shortest path algorithm and a wavelength assignment algorithm are developed using fast logical operations on the bitmap representation. In optical burst switched (OBS) networks, the burst dropping probability increases as the number of hops in the lightpath of the burst increases. Two schemes are proposed and evaluated to alleviate this unfairness. The two schemes have simple logic, and alleviate the beat-down unfairness problem without negatively impacting the overall throughput of the system. Two similar schemes to provide differentiated services in OBS networks are introduced. A new scheme to improve the fairness of OBS networks based on burst preemption is presented. The scheme uses carefully designed constraints to avoid excessive wasted channel reservations, reduce cascaded useless preemptions, and maintain healthy throughput levels. A new scheme to improve the throughput of OBS networks based on burst preemption is presented. An analytical model is developed to compute the throughput of the network for the special case when the network has a ring topology and the preemption weight is based solely on burst size. The analytical model is quite accurate and gives results close to those obtained by simulation. Finally, a preemption-based scheme for the concurrent improvement of throughput and burst fairness in OBS networks is proposed and evaluated. The scheme uses a preemption weight consisting of two terms: the first term is a function of the size of the burst and the second term is the product of the hop count times the length of the lightpath of the burst

    Regenerator placement and fault management in multi-wavelength optical networks.

    Get PDF
    Shen, Dong.Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2011.Includes bibliographical references (p. 98-106).Abstracts in English and Chinese.Abstract --- p.i摘要 --- p.ivAcknowledgements --- p.vTable of Contents --- p.viChapter Chapter 1 --- Background --- p.1Chapter 1.1 --- Translucent Optical Networks --- p.1Chapter 1.1.1 --- The Way Towards Translucent --- p.1Chapter 1.1.2 --- Translucent Optical Network Architecture Design and Planning --- p.3Chapter 1.1.3 --- Other Research Topics in Translucent Optical Networks --- p.6Chapter 1.2 --- Fault Monitoring in All-Optical Networks --- p.12Chapter 1.2.1 --- Fault Monitoring in Network Layer's Perspective --- p.12Chapter 1.2.2 --- Passive Optical Monitoring --- p.14Chapter 1.2.3 --- Proactive Optical Monitoring --- p.16Chapter 1.3 --- Contributions --- p.17Chapter 1.3.1 --- Translucent Optical Network Planning with Heterogeneous Modulation Formats --- p.17Chapter 1.3.2 --- Multiplexing Optimization in Translucent Optical Networks --- p.19Chapter 1.3.3 --- An Efficient Regenerator Placement and Wavelength Assignment Scheme in Translucent Optical Networks --- p.20Chapter 1.3.4 --- Adaptive Fault Monitoring in All-Optical Networks Utilizing Real-Time Data Traffic --- p.20Chapter 1.4 --- Organization of Thesis --- p.22Chapter Chapter 2 --- Regenerator Placement and Resource Allocation Optimization in Translucent Optical Networks --- p.23Chapter 2.1 --- Introduction --- p.23Chapter 2.2 --- Translucent Optical Network Planning with Heterogeneous Modulation Formats --- p.25Chapter 2.2.1 --- Motivation and Problem Statements --- p.25Chapter 2.2.2 --- A Two-Step Planning Algorithm Using Two Modulation Formats to Realize Any-to-Any Topology Connectivity --- p.28Chapter 2.2.3 --- Illustrative Examples --- p.30Chapter 2.2.3 --- ILP Formulation of Minimizing Translucent Optical Network Cost with Two Modulation Formats under Static Traffic Demands --- p.34Chapter 2.2.4 --- Illustrative Numeric Examples --- p.42Chapter 2.3 --- Resource Allocation Optimization in Translucent Optical Networks --- p.45Chapter 2.3.1 --- Multiplexing Optimization with Auxiliary Graph --- p.45Chapter 2.3.2 --- Simulation Study of Proposed Algorithm --- p.51Chapter 2.3.3 --- An Efficient Regenerator Placement and Wavelength Assignment Solution --- p.55Chapter 2.3.4 --- Simulation Study of Proposed Algorithm --- p.60Chapter 2.4 --- Summary --- p.64Chapter Chapter 3 --- Adaptive Fault Monitoring in All-Optical Networks Utilizing Real-Time Data Traffic --- p.65Chapter 3.1 --- Introduction --- p.65Chapter 3.2 --- Adaptive Fault Monitoring --- p.68Chapter 3.2.1 --- System Framework --- p.68Chapter 3.2.2 --- Phase 1: Passive Monitoring --- p.70Chapter 3.2.3 --- Phase 2: Proactive Probing --- p.71Chapter 3.2.4 --- Control Plane Design and Analysis --- p.80Chapter 3.2.5 --- Physical Layer Implementation and Suggestions --- p.83Chapter 3.3 --- Placement of Label Monitors --- p.83Chapter 3.3.1 --- ILP Formulation --- p.84Chapter 3.3.2 --- Simulation Studies --- p.86Chapter 3.3.3 --- Discussion of Topology Evolution Adaptiveness --- p.93Chapter 3.4 --- Summary --- p.95Chapter Chapter 4 --- Conclusions and Future Work --- p.95Chapter 4.1 --- Conclusions --- p.96Chapter 4.2 --- Future Work --- p.97Bibliography --- p.98Publications during M.Phil Study --- p.10

    Telecommunications Networks

    Get PDF
    This book guides readers through the basics of rapidly emerging networks to more advanced concepts and future expectations of Telecommunications Networks. It identifies and examines the most pressing research issues in Telecommunications and it contains chapters written by leading researchers, academics and industry professionals. Telecommunications Networks - Current Status and Future Trends covers surveys of recent publications that investigate key areas of interest such as: IMS, eTOM, 3G/4G, optimization problems, modeling, simulation, quality of service, etc. This book, that is suitable for both PhD and master students, is organized into six sections: New Generation Networks, Quality of Services, Sensor Networks, Telecommunications, Traffic Engineering and Routing
    • …
    corecore