JOURNAL ARTICLE

Traffic grooming for survivable WDM networks-shared protection

Canhui OuKeyao ZhuHui ZangL.H. SahasrabuddheBiswanath Mukherjee

Year: 2003 Journal:   IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications Vol: 21 (9)Pages: 1367-1383   Publisher: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers

Abstract

We investigate the survivable traffic-grooming problem for optical mesh networks employing wavelength-division multiplexing (WDM). In the dynamic provisioning context, a typical connection request may require bandwidth less than that of a wavelength channel, and it may also require protection from network failures, typically fiber cuts. Based on a generic grooming-node architecture, we propose three approaches for grooming a connection request with shared protection: protection-at-lightpath level (PAL); mixed protection-at-connection level (MPAC); separate protection-at-connection level (SPAC). In shared-mesh protection, backup paths can share resources as long as their corresponding working paths are unlikely to fail simultaneously. These three schemes explore different ways of backup sharing, and they trade-off between wavelengths and grooming ports. Since the existing version of the problem for provisioning one connection request with shared protection is NP-complete, we propose effective heuristics. Under today's typical connection-bandwidth distribution where lower bandwidth connections outnumber higher bandwidth connections, we find the following: 1) it is beneficial to groom working paths and backup paths separately, as in PAL and SPAC; 2) separately protecting each individual connection, i.e., SPAC, yields the best performance when the number of grooming ports is sufficient; 3) protecting each specific lightpath, i.e., PAL, achieves the best performance when the number of grooming ports is moderate or small.

Keywords:
Traffic grooming Computer network Computer science Backup Provisioning Bandwidth (computing) Wavelength-division multiplexing Path protection Mesh networking Distributed computing Telecommunications Wireless Wavelength

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154
Cited By
14.10
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
39
Refs
0.99
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Citation History

Topics

Advanced Optical Network Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Optical Network Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Advanced Photonic Communication Systems
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering

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