Abstract: The efficient use of resources and the lossless transfer of data bursts in future optical
networks requires the accurate knowledge of the available bandwidth for each network
link. Such information is important in monitoring congestions and can be used by
appropriate load balancing and congestion avoidance mechanisms. In this paper we
propose a mechanism for monitoring and subsequently managing bandwidth resources,
using the Simple NetworkManagement Protocol (SNMP). In the proposed mechanism,
link bandwidth availability is not a scalar parameter, but a function of time that records
the future utilization of the link. For every output port, each agent-node maintains a
simple data structure in the form of a table that records the utilization profile of that
outgoing link. With the addition of new objects in the Management Information Base
(MIB) of each agent-node and proper synchronization, SNMP can be used to update
and retrieve the reservations made on the links in order to obtain an instant picture of
the network traffic situation.
Abstract: The efficient use of resources and the lossless transfer of data bursts in future optical
networks requires the accurate knowledge of the available bandwidth for each network
link. Such information is important in monitoring congestions and can be used by
appropriate load balancing and congestion avoidance mechanisms. In this paper we
propose a mechanism for monitoring and subsequently managing bandwidth resources,
using the Simple NetworkManagement Protocol (SNMP). In the proposed mechanism,
link bandwidth availability is not a scalar parameter, but a function of time that records
the future utilization of the link. For every output port, each agent-node maintains a
simple data structure in the form of a table that records the utilization profile of that
outgoing link. With the addition of new objects in the Management Information Base
(MIB) of each agent-node and proper synchronization, SNMP can be used to update
and retrieve the reservations made on the links in order to obtain an instant picture of
the network traffic situation.
Abstract: In this paper, we present a new hybrid optical burst switch architecture (HOBS) that takes advantage of the pre-transmission idle
time during lightpath establishment. In dynamic circuit switching (wavelength routing) networks, capacity is immediately hardreserved
upon the arrival of a setup message at a node, but it is used at least a round-trip time delay later. This waste of resources
is significant in optical multi-gigabit networks and can be used to transmit traffic of a lower class of service in a non-competing
way. The proposed hybrid OBS architecture, takes advantage of this idle time to transmit one-way optical bursts of a lower class of
service, while high priority data explicitly requests and establishes end-to-end lightpaths. In the proposed scheme, the two control
planes (two-way and one-way OBS reservation) are merged, in the sense that each SETUP message, used for the two-way lightpath
establishment, is associated with one-way burst transmission and therefore it is modified to carry routing and overhead information
for the one-way traffic as well. In this paper, we present the main architectural features of the proposed hybrid scheme and further
we assess its performance by conducting simulation experiments on the NSF net backbone topology. The extensive network study
revealed that the proposed hybrid architecture can achieve and sustain an adequate burst transmission rate with a finite worst case
delay.
Abstract: We propose new burst assembly schemes and fast reservation (FR) protocols for Optical Burst Switched (OBS) networks that are based on traffic prediction. The burst assembly schemes aim at minimizing (for a given burst size) the average delay of the packets incurred during the burst assembly process, while the fast reservation protocols aim at further reducing the end-to-end delay of the data bursts. The burst assembly techniques use a linear prediction filter to estimate the number of packet arrivals at the ingress node in the following interval, and launch a new burst into the network when a certain criterion, different for each proposed scheme, is met. The fast reservation protocols use prediction filters to estimate the expected length of the burst and the time needed for the burst assembly process to complete. A Burst Header Packet (BHP) packet carrying these estimates is sent before the burst is completed, in order to reserve bandwidth at intermediate nodes for the time interval the burst is expected to pass from these nodes. Reducing the packet aggregation delay and the time required to perform the reservations, reduces the total time needed for a packet to be transported over an OBS network and is especially important for real-time applications. We evaluate the performance of the proposed burst assembly schemes and show that a number of them outperform the previously proposed timer-based, length-based and average delay-based burst assembly schemes. We also look at the performance of the fast reservation (FR) protocols in terms of the probability of successfully establishing the reservations required to transport the burst.
Abstract: In this paper, we demonstrate optical transparency
in packet formatting and network traffic offered by all-optical
switching devices. Exploiting the bitwise processing capabilities
of these “optical transistors,” simple optical circuits are designed
verifying the independency to packet length, synchronization
and packet-to-packet power fluctuations. Devices with these attributes
are key elements for achieving network flexibility, fine
granularity and efficient bandwidth-on-demand use. To this end, a
header/payload separation circuit operating with IP-like packets,
a clock and data recovery circuit handling asynchronous packets
and a burst-mode receiver for bursty traffic are presented. These
network subsystems can find application in future high capacity
data-centric photonic packet switched networks.
Abstract: In this paper a performanse analysis of the packet scheduling switch uses a series of feed forward delays interconnected with elementary optical switches. This series of programmable delay blocks constitute an optical buffer of depth T, whose purpose is to delay/re-arrange incoming packets that request packet contention.Performance results have been obtained for random Bernoulli traffic, Pareto traffic, as well as for smooth with an upper bound of inherent burstiness.
Abstract: This paper presents a summary of Optical Burst Switching (OBS) research within the VI framework program e-Photon/ONe network of excellence. The paper includes network aspects such as routing techniques, resilience and contention resolution, together with burst switch architectures. On the other hand, we also discuss traffic analysis issues, Quality of Service (QoS) schemes, TCP/IP over OBS and physical layer aspects for OBS.
Abstract: This paper presents a summary of Optical Burst Switching (OBS) research within the VI framework program e-Photon/ONe
network of excellence. The paper includes network aspects such as routing techniques, resilience and contention resolution, together
with burst switch architectures. On the other hand, we also discuss traffic analysis issues, Quality of Service (QoS) schemes, TCP/IP
over OBS and physical layer aspects for OBS.
Abstract: In this paper, the impact of burstification delay on the TCP
traffic statistics is presented as well as a new assembly scheme that uses
flow window size as the threshold criterion. It is shown that short assembly
times are ideally suitable for sources with small congestion windows,
allowing for a speed up in their transmission. In addition, large assembly
times do not yield any throughput gain, despite the large number of
segments per burst transmitted, but result in a low throughput variation, and
thus a higher notion of fairness among the individual flows. To this end, in
this paper, we propose a new burst assembly scheme that dynamically
assigns flows to different assembly queues with different assembly timers,
based on their instant window size. Results show that the proposed scheme
with different timers provides a higher average throughput together with a
smaller variance which is a good compromise for bandwidth dimensioning.
Abstract: Digital optical logic circuits capable of performing bit-wise signal processing are critical building blocks for the realization of future high-speed packet-switched networks. In this paper, we present recent advances in all-optical processing circuits and examine the potential of their integration into a system environment. On this concept, we demonstrate serial all-optical Boolean AND/XOR logic at 20 Gb/s and a novel all-optical packet clock recovery circuit, with low capturing time, suitable for burst-mode traffic. The circuits use the semiconductor-based ultrafast nonlinear interferometer (UNI) as the nonlinear switching element. We also present the integration of these circuits in a more complex unit that performs header and payload separation from short synchronous data packets at 10 Gb/s. Finally, we discuss a method to realize a novel packet scheduling switch architecture, which guarantees lossless communication for specific trafficburstiness constraints, using these logic units.