Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
464980 Optical Switching and Networking 2012 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

In WDM networks, path protection has emerged as a widely accepted technique for providing guaranteed survivability of network traffic. However, it requires allocating resources for backup lightpaths, which remain idle under normal fault-free conditions. In this paper, we introduce a new design strategy for survivable network design, which guarantees survivability of all ongoing connections that requires significantly fewer network resources than protection based techniques. In survivable routing, the goal is to find a Route and Wavelength Assignment (RWA) such that the logical topology remains connected for all single link failures. However, even if the logical topology remains connected after any single link fault, it may not have sufficient capacity to support all the requests for data communication, for all single fault scenarios. To address this deficiency, we have proposed two independent but related problem formulations. To handle our first formulation, we have presented an Integer Linear Program (ILP) that augments the concept of survivable routing by allowing rerouting of sub-wavelength traffic carried on each lightpath and finding an RWA that maximizes the amount of traffic that can be supported by the network in the presence of any single link failure. To handle our second formulation, we have proposed a new design approach that integrates the topology design and the RWA in such a way that the resulting logical topology is able to handle the entire set of traffic requests after any single link failure. For the second problem, we have first presented an ILP formulation for optimally designing a survivable logical topology, and then proposed a heuristic for larger networks. Experimental results demonstrate that this new approach is able to provide guaranteed bandwidth, and is much more efficient in terms of resource utilization, compared to both dedicated and shared path protection schemes.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Networks and Communications
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