Title :
The “packing” and the “scheduling packet” switch architectures for almost all-optical lossless networks
Author :
Varvarigos, Emmanouel Manos
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., California Univ., Santa Barbara, CA, USA
fDate :
10/1/1998 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
This paper proposes two almost all-optical packet switch architectures, called the “packing switch” and the “scheduling switch” architecture, which when combined with appropriate wait-for-reservation or tell-and-go connection and how control protocols provide lossless communication for traffic that satisfies certain smoothness properties. Both switch architectures preserve the order of packets that use a given input-output pair, and are consistent with virtual circuit switching, The scheduling switch requires 2klogT+k2 two-state elementary switches (or 2klogT+2klogk elementary switches, if a different version is used) where k is the number of inputs and T is a parameter that measures the allowed burstiness of the traffic. The packing switch requires very little processing of the packet header, and uses k2logT+klogk two-state switches. We also examine the suitability of the proposed architectures for the design of circuit switched networks. We find that the scheduling switch combines low hardware cost with little processing requirements at the nodes, and is an attractive architecture for both packet-switched and circuit-switched high-speed networks
Keywords :
optical fibre losses; optical fibre networks; optical switches; packet switching; telecommunication traffic; transport protocols; all-optical lossless networks; all-optical packet switch architectures; circuit switched networks; circuit-switched high-speed networks; control protocols; input-output pair; k2logT+klogk two-state switches; lossless communication; packet header; packet-switched high-speed networks; packing switch; scheduling packet; scheduling switch; smoothness properties; switch architectures; tell-and-go connection; traffic burstiness; two-state elementary switches; virtual circuit switching; wait-for-reservation connection; Communication switching; Communication system traffic control; Costs; Hardware; High-speed networks; Packet switching; Protocols; Switches; Switching circuits; Telecommunication traffic;
Journal_Title :
Lightwave Technology, Journal of