Title :
On wavelength assignment in WDM optical networks
Author :
Harder, Eric J. ; Lee, Sang-Kyu ; Choi, Hyeong-Ah
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., George Washington Univ., Washington, DC, USA
Abstract :
We address the problem of assigning wavelengths to paths (connections) in optical wavelength division multiplexed networks. The problem is formulated as follows: given the physical topology of a network with each edge of two opposite directed fiber links and a set of directed paths with no more than L paths over any fiber link, we assign a wavelength to each path in such a way that no two paths are assigned the same wavelength if they share a directed physical link. In this paper, we first prove that the problem is NP-complete for arbitrary network topologies. Our NP-completeness result is obtained through a polynomial time reduction from the graph k-colorability problem. This reduction implies that no polynomial time algorithm can solve the problem with the number of wavelengths bounded by a constant times L for the class of network topologies including meshes. We then consider tree topologies. For star networks (i.e. the length of any path is bounded by two), we give a polynomial time algorithm that requires L wavelengths. For trees with path lengths larger than two, we show that the problem is NP-complete and present a heuristic algorithm based on the polynomial time algorithm for star topologies. Our heuristic algorithm may require 2L wavelengths in the worst-case, but the simulation result shows that the average-case performance significantly outperforms the worst-case bound. This suggests that fewer excess wavelengths are required when most of the load is local.
Keywords :
communication complexity; multiprocessor interconnection networks; optical interconnections; parallel architectures; wavelength division multiplexing; NP-complete; WDM optical networks; average-case performance; directed paths; graph k-colorability; network topologies; optical wavelength division multiplexed networks; polynomial time reduction; star networks; tree topologies; wavelength assignment; Intelligent networks; Network topology; Optical fiber networks; Optical switches; Optical wavelength conversion; Polynomials; WDM networks; Wavelength assignment; Wavelength division multiplexing; Wavelength routing;
Conference_Titel :
Massively Parallel Processing Using Optical Interconnections, 1997., Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-7975-1
DOI :
10.1109/MPPOI.1997.609080