DocumentCode
2264120
Title
Advance bandwidth scheduling with minimal impact on immediate reservations in high-performance networks
Author
Wu, Qishi ; Dharam, Poonam
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Memphis, Memphis, TN, USA
fYear
2012
fDate
16-20 April 2012
Firstpage
679
Lastpage
682
Abstract
Many network-intensive applications in various science, engineering, and business domains require high bandwidths to support large-scale data transfer over long distances. Such bandwidth requirements give rise to the development and deployment of high-performance networks that are capable of provisioning dedicated channels with reserved bandwidths through circuit/lambda-switching or MPLS/GMPLS techniques. We consider both advance and immediate bandwidth reservations, the former reserving bandwidth ahead of time in a future time slot to provide guaranteed bandwidth, while the latter allocating bandwidth upon availability in the next immediate time slot. As a result, an ongoing data transfer task based on an immediate reservation may be preempted by the activation of an advance reservation due to the lack of bandwidth. We formulate the advance bandwidth scheduling problem to minimize the impact on immediate reservations. Based on rigorous statistical analysis of reservation dynamics, we propose a scheduling solution to route incoming advance reservations such that the number of preempted immediate reservations by the advance reservations is minimized. The performance superiority of the proposed scheduling solution is illustrated by extensive simulations in comparison with existing algorithms.
Keywords
bandwidth allocation; multiprotocol label switching; scheduling; statistical analysis; telecommunication network routing; GMPLS techniques; advance bandwidth scheduling problem; advance reservation routing; bandwidth allocation; bandwidth reservations; circuit-lambda-switching; data transfer task; dedicated channel provisioning; high-performance networks; immediate reservation minimal impact; reservation dynamics statistical analysis; Availability; Bandwidth; Computational modeling; Dynamic scheduling; Quality of service; Routing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Network Operations and Management Symposium (NOMS), 2012 IEEE
Conference_Location
Maui, HI
ISSN
1542-1201
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-0267-8
Electronic_ISBN
1542-1201
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/NOMS.2012.6211985
Filename
6211985
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