Title :
A growable large scale ATM multicast switch
Author :
Law, K. L Eddie ; Leon-Garcia, Alberto
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Toronto Univ., Ont., Canada
Abstract :
This paper focuses on designing a large N×N high performance, broadband ATM switch. Despite advances in architectural designs, practical switch dimensions continue to be severely limited by both the technological and physical constraints of packaging. Here, we focus on augmentation in a “single-switch” design: we provide ways to construct arbitrarily large switches out of modest-size components and retain overall delay/throughput performance. We propose a growable switch architecture based on several key principles: (1) the knockout principle exploits the statistical behavior of cell arrivals and thereby reduces the interconnect complexity, (2) output queueing yields the best possible delay/throughput performance, (3) distributed control in routing (multicast) cells through the interconnect fabric without internal path conflicts and (4) simple basic building blocks facilitate scalability. Other attractive features of the proposed architecture include: (1) intrinsic broadcast and multicast capabilities, (2) built-in priority sorting functionality and (3) the guarantee of first-in-first-out cell sequence. To achieve 10-14 cell loss probability, only maximum-size 32×16 basic building modules are required, and no cross-over interconnects exist between modules in a three-dimensional configuration
Keywords :
asynchronous transfer mode; broadband networks; channel capacity; communication complexity; delays; electronic switching systems; packaging; queueing theory; telecommunication network routing; broadcast capabilities; building modules; cell arrivals; cell loss probability; delay; designs; distributed control; first-in-first-out cell sequence; growable large scale ATM multicast switch; growable switch architecture; interconnect complexity; knockout principle; large N×N high performance broadband ATM switch; multicast capabilities; output queueing; packaging; performance; priority sorting functionality; routing; scalability; single-switch design; throughput; Asynchronous transfer mode; Delay; Distributed control; Fabrics; Large-scale systems; Packaging; Routing; Scalability; Switches; Throughput;
Conference_Titel :
Communications, 1996. ICC '96, Conference Record, Converging Technologies for Tomorrow's Applications. 1996 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Dallas, TX
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-3250-4
DOI :
10.1109/ICC.1996.535296