Title :
Defining provably-correct escalation policies for multilayer network restoration
Author :
Kroculick, Joseph ; Hood, Cynthia
Author_Institution :
Illinois Inst. of Technol., Chicago, IL, USA
fDate :
6/21/1905 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Automatic protection switching (APS) protocols assigned to different layers in wide-area networks require interworking functionality in order to restore a wide variety of services and accommodate an evolving network infrastructure. Without some coordination between restoration mechanisms, an outage duration would be lengthened as methods assigned to different layers interfere with each other, and the network would be locked up in a deadlocked state that never converges to a new topology. A set of control policies can be specified to schedule different restoration mechanisms in a network that spans multiple layers and administrative boundaries. These control policies, which are expressed as if-then rules, are denoted as the escalation strategy. As rules for coordinating between restoration mechanisms are formally expressed in a policy definition language, a mathematical proof could be provided to prove that the agents have consistent knowledge of the network state, allowing individual APS protocols to cooperate with each other
Keywords :
asynchronous transfer mode; computer network reliability; network topology; packet switching; protocols; software agents; telecommunication computing; telecommunication control; wide area networks; APS protocols; ATM; WAN; administrative boundaries; automatic protection switching protocols; control policies; deadlocked state; if-then rules; interworking function; mathematical proof; multi-agent management architecture; multilayer network restoration; network infrastructure; network state knowledge; network topology; outage duration; policy definition language; provably-correct escalation policies; services restoration; wide-area networks; Bridges; Communication system traffic control; Computer architecture; Network topology; Nonhomogeneous media; Protection switching; Protocols; Switches; System recovery; Telecommunication network topology;
Conference_Titel :
Global Telecommunications Conference, 1999. GLOBECOM '99
Conference_Location :
Rio de Janeireo
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-5796-5
DOI :
10.1109/GLOCOM.1999.830098