Authors:
A. Drakos
;
T. Orphanoudakis
;
C. (T) Politi
and
A. Stavdas
Affiliation:
University of Peloponnese, Greece
Keyword(s):
Optical Networks, Optical Communications, Statistical Multiplexing, OBS, CANON.
Related
Ontology
Subjects/Areas/Topics:
Data Communication Networking
;
Network Architectures
;
Network Protocols
;
Next-Generation Communication Networks
;
Performance Evaluation
;
Quality-Of-Service
;
Software Engineering
;
Software Project Management
;
Telecommunications
Abstract:
Statistical multiplexing at the optical layer has been considered a critical requirement in order to build the next generation of ultra-high capacity optical transport networks in a cost-efficient manner. However, even today, the state of the art of commercially available optical core networks is based on mature wavelength switching and routing technologies, which lack a transport and control plane architecture that can support statistical traffic multiplexing with guaranteed Quality of Service (QoS) across a wide range of QoS parameters even if they can support fast reconfiguration at msec time scales. For several years, most research efforts have focused on the concepts of Optical Burst Switching (OBS) and Optical Packet Switching (OPS), which are based on the hybrid use of electronic nodes and optical switches to exploit Time Division Multiplexing (TDM) in order to achieve statistical multiplexing and dynamic resource reservation over optical networks. While burst switching has be
en experimentally proven as a technically feasible technique, its performance suffers especially under strict requirements for QoS guarantees. In this paper we evaluate the performance gains that can be achieved exploiting statistical multiplexing over a large scale core optical network and we demonstrate the efficiency of the CANON architecture (Clustered Architecture for Nodes in an Optical Network) as a viable alternative to OBS, which can achieve both targets for statistical multiplexing gains and QoS guarantees at the same time.
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