DocumentCode :
1343234
Title :
Traffic engineering in next-generation optical Networks
Author :
Lee, Youngseok ; Mukherjee, Biswanath
Author_Institution :
Chungnam Nat. Univ., Daejeon, South Korea
Volume :
6
Issue :
3
fYear :
2004
Firstpage :
16
Lastpage :
33
Abstract :
In this article traffic-engineering issues regarding network survivability, traffic grooming, impairment-aware routing, virtual-topology engineering, and coordination among multiple layers of network architecture will be reviewed for next-generation optical networks based on wavelength-division multiplexing (WDM). Due to the recent progress and development of WDM technology, increasing traffic demands can be readily accommodated in the next-generation optical networks. In spite of the huge amount of capacity (e.g., OC-192) provided by a WDM channel, enhanced network services and network performance improvement can only be achieved with efficient traffic-engineering mechanisms. The fault-tolerant function is essential in order to provide seamless services to users by protecting their traffic against failures in the optical network because many connections can be carried on a fiber. Because the capacity of a WDM channel is very large, its bandwidth may not be efficiently utilized by a single connection. Hence, low-rate user connections need to be efficiently aggregated through the traffic-grooming scheme. An intelligent routing algorithm is especially necessary in the optical network where signal impairments due to device imperfections might degrade the signal quality. In addition, the virtual network connectivity (topology) should be flexibly maintained such that dynamic changes to the traffic demands can be easily absorbed, which can be implemented by the virtual-topology engineering method in a WDM network. As the dominant usage of Internet protocol (IP) of the Internet is expected to reside directly above the WDM layer in the future network, the coordinated traffic-engineering scheme should be deliberately designed for the multi-layer network by judiciously choosing where to put many overlapping functions in the different network layers.
Keywords :
Internet; optical fibre networks; protocols; telecommunication network topology; telecommunication traffic; wavelength division multiplexing; Internet protocol; fault tolerant function; impairment aware routing; network survivability; next-generation optical networks; overlapping functions; signal quality; traffic engineering; traffic grooming; virtual network connectivity; virtual topology engineering; wavelength division multiplexing; Bandwidth; Fault tolerance; IP networks; Next generation networking; Optical fiber networks; Protection; Telecommunication traffic; WDM networks; Wavelength division multiplexing; Wavelength routing;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Communications Surveys & Tutorials, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1553-877X
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/COMST.2004.5342291
Filename :
5342291
Link To Document :
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