DocumentCode
984534
Title
Algorithms for computing QoS paths with restoration
Author
Bejerano, Yigal ; Breitbart, Yuri ; Orda, Ariel ; Rastogi, Rajeev ; Sprintson, Alexander
Author_Institution
Lucent Technol. Bell Labs., Murray Hill, NJ, USA
Volume
13
Issue
3
fYear
2005
fDate
6/1/2005 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
648
Lastpage
661
Abstract
There is a growing interest among service providers to offer new services with Quality of Service (QoS) guarantees that are also resilient to failures. Supporting QoS connections requires the existence of a routing mechanism, that computes the QoS paths, i.e., paths that satisfy QoS constraints (e.g., delay or bandwidth). Resilience to failures, on the other hand, is achieved by providing, for each primary QoS path, a set of alternative QoS paths used upon a failure of either a link or a node. The above objectives, coupled with the need to minimize the global use of network resources, imply that the cost of both the primary path and the restoration topology should be a major consideration of the routing process. We undertake a comprehensive study of problems related to finding suitable restoration topologies for QoS paths. We consider both bottleneck QoS constraints, such as bandwidth, and additive QoS constraints, such as delay and jitter. This is the first study to provide a rigorous solution, with proven guarantees, to the combined problem of computing QoS paths with restoration. It turns out that the widely used approach of disjoint primary and restoration paths is not an optimal strategy. Hence, the proposed algorithms construct a restoration topology , i.e., a set of bridges, each bridge protecting a portion of the primary QoS path. This approach guarantees to find a restoration topology with low cost when one exists.
Keywords
delays; jitter; quality of service; telecommunication links; telecommunication network reliability; telecommunication network routing; telecommunication network topology; QoS path computation; delay; jitter; network resources; quality of service; restoration topology; routing process; Bandwidth; Bridges; Costs; Delay; Jitter; Network topology; Protection; Quality of service; Resilience; Routing; Approximation algorithms; QoS routing; restoration; restricted shortest path;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Networking, IEEE/ACM Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1063-6692
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TNET.2005.850217
Filename
1458771
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