thesis

Providing quality of service over high speed electronic and optical switches

Abstract

Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2003.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 235-239).This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in the Institute Archives and Special Collections.In a network, multiple links are interconnected by means of switches. A switch is a device with multiple input and output links, and its job is to move data from the input links to the output links. In this thesis, we focus on a number of fundamental issues concerning the quality of service provided by electronic and optical switches. We discuss various mechanisms that enable the support of quality of service requirements. In particular, we explore fundamental limitations of current high speed packet switches and develop new techniques and architectures that make possible the provision of certain service guarantees. We then study optical wavelength switches and illustrate how similar ideas can be applied in a manner consistent with the current state of optical switching technology. First, we focus on providing rate guarantees over packet switches. We develop a method called rate quantization which converts the set of desired rates into a certain discrete set such that the quality of service guarantees can be greatly improved with a small resource speedup. Moreover, quantization simplifies rate provisioning for dynamically changing traffic demands since it allows service opportunities for different input output link pairs to be scheduled with minimal dependence. We illustrate an isomorphism between packet switch schedulers and Clos networks to develop such schedulers.(cont.) Next, we evaluate the amount of resource speedup necessary for single stage switches to support multicast rates. This speedup limits the scalability of a single stage multicast switch a great deal. We present an in depth study of multistage switches and propose a number of architectures, along with associated routing and scheduling algorithms. We illustrate how the presence of multiple paths between input output pairs can be exploited to improve the performance of a switch and simplify the scheduling algorithms. Some of our architectures are capable of providing multicast rate guarantees without a need for a resource speedup. We extend our results on switch schedulers and use them for providing service guarantees over optical wavelength switches. We will take the limitations of the optical crossconnects and unavailability of optical memory technology into account, and modify the procedure we developed for electronic switches to make them suitable for various optical wavelength switches. These results will provide understanding of when to move optical switching closer to the end users for an efficient utilization of resources in networks with both optical and electronic technologies.by Can Emre Koksal.Ph.D

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