scholarly journals Towards an Efficient and Exact Algorithm for Dynamic Dedicated Path Protection

Entropy ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (9) ◽  
pp. 1116
Author(s):  
Ireneusz Szcześniak ◽  
Ireneusz Olszewski ◽  
Bożena Woźna-Szcześniak

We present a novel algorithm for dynamic routing with dedicated path protection which, as the presented simulation results suggest, can be efficient and exact. We present the algorithm in the setting of optical networks, but it should be applicable to other networks, where services have to be protected, and where the network resources are finite and discrete, e.g., wireless radio or networks capable of advance resource reservation. To the best of our knowledge, we are the first to propose an algorithm for this long-standing fundamental problem, which can be efficient and exact, as suggested by simulation results. The algorithm can be efficient because it can solve large problems, and it can be exact because its results are optimal, as demonstrated and corroborated by simulations. We offer a worst-case analysis to argue that the search space is polynomially upper bounded. Network operations, management, and control require efficient and exact algorithms, especially now, when greater emphasis is placed on network performance, reliability, softwarization, agility, and return on investment. The proposed algorithm uses our generic Dijkstra algorithm on a search graph generated “on-the-fly” based on the input graph. We corroborated the optimality of the results of the proposed algorithm with brute-force enumeration for networks up to 15 nodes large. We present the extensive simulation results of dedicated-path protection with signal modulation constraints for elastic optical networks of 25, 50, and 100 nodes, and with 160, 320, and 640 spectrum units. We also compare the bandwidth blocking probability with the commonly-used edge-exclusion algorithm. We had 48,600 simulation runs with about 41 million searches.

2016 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 1050-1061 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marija Furdek ◽  
Nina Skorin-Kapov ◽  
Lena Wosinska

2013 ◽  
Vol 21 (10) ◽  
pp. 1823-1836 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yiyuan Xie ◽  
Mahdi Nikdast ◽  
Jiang Xu ◽  
Xiaowen Wu ◽  
Wei Zhang ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (5) ◽  
pp. 4245-4249

In the last few years, internet traffic increases continuously due to the more use of live streaming and social sites. To accommodate such high traffic demand the more bandwidth is required. The elastic optical network (EON) is a promising solution for the capacity expansion that can meet the future bandwidth requirement. The EON can provide a higher bit rate. In this paper we purposed a recovery strategy for failure in EON. Our purposed strategy shows the more acceptance rate for randomly generated source (s)-destination (d) requests. Here we considered two topologies viz. COST239 and NSFNET. Then evaluate their performance for Recovery Time, bandwidth blocking probability (BBP) and network capacity utilization (NCU), in which our purposed scheme provides lesser BBP and lower NCU for both topologies and low recovery time than shared path protection (SPP and dedicated path protection (DPP).


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Feng Wang ◽  
Qingcheng Zhu ◽  
Xiaolong Li ◽  
Jiaming Gu ◽  
Zhenhua Yan ◽  
...  

Mixed-grid optical networks are in a migration state where fixed-grid and flex-grid optical networks coexist. To carry point-to-multipoint (P2MP) services in mixed-grid optical networks, routing and resource allocation (RRA) problems need to be solved. Once the RRA fails, services will be blocked and then influence quality of service. The minimized spectrum for satisfying the bandwidth request of services is called as a frequency block (FB). For a service, the total number of available FBs embodies the spectrum availability on a link. Because the fixed-grid and flex-grid links have different channel spacing, spectrum availability on fixed-grid and flex-grid links needs different evaluation method. We propose a RRA algorithm in mixed-grid optical networks for P2MP services by being aware of spectrum availability. The spectrum availability is evaluated according to fixed-grid and flex-grid constraints. Our proposed algorithm achieves the lower blocking probability (BP) than that of benchmark RRA algorithms according to simulation results.


Author(s):  
Paolo Monti ◽  
Lena Wosinska ◽  
Cicek Cavdar ◽  
Andrea Fumagalli ◽  
Jiajia Chen

<div>Originally, networks were engineered to provide only one type of service, i.e. either voice or data, so only one level of resiliency was requested. This trend has changed, and today’s approach in service provisioning is quite different. A Service Level Agreement (SLA) stipulated between users and service providers (or network operators) regulates a series of specific requirements, e.g., connection set-up times and connection availability that has to be met in order to avoid monetary fines. In recent years this has caused a paradigm shift on how to provision these services. From a “one-solution-fits-all” scenario, we witness now a more diversified set of approaches where trade-offs among different network parameters (e.g., level of protection vs. cost and/or level of protection vs. blocking probability) play an important role.</div><div>This chapter aims at presenting a series of network resilient methods that are specifically tailored for a dynamic provisioning with such differentiated requirements. Both optical backbone and access networks are considered. In the chapter a number of provisioning scenarios - each one focusing on a specific Quality of Service (QoS) parameter - are considered. First the effect of delay tolerance, defined as the amount of time a connection request can wait before being set up, on blocking probability is investigated when Shared Path Protection is required. Then the problem of how to assign “just-enough” resources to meet each connection availability requirement is described, and a possible solution via a Shared Path Protection Scheme with Differentiated Reliability is presented. Finally a possible trade off between deployment cost and level of reliability performance in Passive Optical Networks (PONs) is investigated.&nbsp;The presented results highlight the importance of carefully considering each connection’s QoS parameters while devising a resilient provisioning strategy. By doing so the benefits in terms of cost saving and blocking probability improvement becomes relevant, allowing network operators and service providers to maintain satisfied customers at reasonable capital and operational expenditure levels</div>


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