JOURNAL ARTICLE

Analyzing Nonblocking Switching Networks using Linear Programming (Duality)

Abstract

The main task in analyzing a switching network design (including circuit-, multirate-, and photonic-switching) is to determine the minimum number of some switching components so that the design is non-blocking in some sense (e.g., stridor wide-sense). We show that, in many cases, this task can be accomplished with a simple two-step strategy: (1) formulate a linear program whose optimum value is a bound for the minimum number we are seeking, and (2) specify a solution to the dual program, whose objective value by weak duality immediately yields a sufficient condition for the design to be non-blocking. We illustrate this technique through a variety of examples, ranging from circuit to multirate to photonic switching, from unicast to f-cast and multicast, and from strict- to wide-sense non-blocking. The switching architectures in the examples are of Clos-type and Banyan-type, which are the two most popular architectural choices for designing non-blocking switching networks. To prove the result in the multirate Clos network case, we formulate a new problem called DYNAMIC WEIGHTED EDGE COLORING which generalizes the DYNAMIC BIN PACKING problem. We then design an algorithm with competitive ratio 5.6355 for the problem. The algorithm is analyzed using the linear programming technique. We also show that no algorithm can have competitive ratio better than 4-O (log n/n) for this problem. New lower- and upper-bounds for multirate wide-sense non-blocking Clos networks follow, improving upon a couple of 10-year-old bounds on the same problem.

Keywords:
Clos network Blocking (statistics) Computer science Unicast Multistage interconnection networks Upper and lower bounds Linear programming Circuit switching Multicast Hypercube Mathematical optimization Connection (principal bundle) Duality (order theory) Topology (electrical circuits) Mathematics Discrete mathematics Algorithm Routing (electronic design automation) Computer network Combinatorics Parallel computing

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38
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0.65
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Citation History

Topics

Advanced Optical Network Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Interconnection Networks and Systems
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Computer Networks and Communications
Advanced Graph Theory Research
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Computational Theory and Mathematics
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