Title :
An analysis of `hot-potato´ routing in a fiber optic packet switched hypercube
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Columbia Univ., New York, NY, USA
Abstract :
Two implementations of a fiber-optic packet-switched hypercube are proposed. In the first, each directed link is implemented with a fixed wavelength laser and photodetector, and all optical transmissions are wavelength multiplexed onto one or more fibers. In the second, the electronic crosspoint matrices within the nodes are eliminated by allowing each laser to be tunable over a range of log N wavelengths. Assume that a hot potato, or deflection, routing algorithm is used; as soon as a packet is received at a node, a routing decision is made and the packet is sent out. The node attempts to send the packet towards its destination. The analysis indicates that a hypercube, hot-potato routing offers essentially optimal performance for random traffic, regardless of how large the hypercube grows, and it significantly outperforms traditional shortest-path routing with buffering and flow control. A few variations, including an algorithm which gives priority to packets closer to their destinations and one which gives priority to various classes of traffic, are also proposed and analyzed
Keywords :
computer networks; hypercube networks; optical links; packet switching; distributed computer network; fiber optic packet switched hypercube; hot-potato routing; localised multiprocessor interconnection network; optimal performance; random traffic; Fiber lasers; Hypercubes; Optical buffering; Optical fibers; Optical packet switching; Optimal control; Performance analysis; Photodetectors; Routing; Tunable circuits and devices;
Conference_Titel :
INFOCOM '90, Ninth Annual Joint Conference of the IEEE Computer and Communication Societies. The Multiple Facets of Integration. Proceedings, IEEE
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-2049-8
DOI :
10.1109/INFCOM.1990.91340