DocumentCode
414990
Title
Traffic engineering using new VS routing scheme
Author
Saraph, Girish P. ; Singh, Pushpraj
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Indian Inst. of Technol., Mumbai, India
Volume
2
fYear
2004
fDate
20-24 June 2004
Firstpage
1237
Abstract
Goal of traffic engineering in packet networks is to improve the network performance by providing support for congestion management, higher bandwidth utilization (or throughput), and QoS or priority-based services. Open shortest path first with traffic engineering extensions (OSPF-TE) (J. Moy, April 1998) and multiprotocol label switching (MPLS) protocols are commonly viewed as possible solutions. Both, the OSPF-TE with optimized link weights or MPLS with explicit optimal path set-ups, work ideally under static network conditions with a known demand-matrix. However, these methods do not provide scalability and flexibility to adapt to arbitrary, dynamic demand patterns in large networks. A novel traffic engineering scheme based on the virtual space (VS) routing (G. P. Saraph and P. Singh) is proposed here, which has the scalability, flexibility, and robustness to rapidly adapt to arbitrary, dynamic load conditions in large networks. Simulations are carried out on randomly constructed 40, 80, and 200-node networks with arbitrary demand matrices, which demonstrate excellent capability of the VS routing in terms of load balancing, packet throughput, and congestion avoidance. The proposed VS scheme is used for path selection in MPLS and integrated with the signaling protocols for path establishment, such as the constraint based routing (CR-LDP) (J. Ash et al., Jan. 2002) or resource reservation (RSVP-TE) (D. Awduche et. al., Jan 2002) protocols.
Keywords
bandwidth allocation; multiprotocol label switching; network topology; quality of service; stability; telecommunication links; telecommunication network management; telecommunication network routing; telecommunication signalling; telecommunication traffic; virtual reality; QoS; VS routing scheme; arbitrary demand matrices; congestion avoidance; congestion management; constraint based routing; dynamic demand patterns; multiprotocol label switching protocols; open shortest path first with traffic engineering extensions; packet networks; priority-based services; quality of service; resource reservation protocol; signaling protocols; traffic engineering; virtual space; Bandwidth; Engineering management; Multiprotocol label switching; Protocols; Robustness; Routing; Scalability; Telecommunication traffic; Throughput; Traffic control;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Communications, 2004 IEEE International Conference on
Print_ISBN
0-7803-8533-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICC.2004.1312697
Filename
1312697
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