Title :
Routing and capacity allocation for multirate and multipoint circuit-switched networks
Author :
Jin, Kan ; Hayes, J.F. ; Comeau, M.A.
Author_Institution :
Centre of Excellence in Telecommun. Res., Concordia Univ., Montreal, Que., Canada
Abstract :
In this paper, some routing and capacity allocation problems for multirate and multipoint circuit-switched networks are formulated and solved. Given are N nodes or points and stationary traffic rates for call arrivals between arbitrary pairs of points and among arbitrary subsets of points. When sufficient capacity is available, traffic will be carried along primary routes belonging to the network. Overflow traffic due to call blocking on primary routes can be carried on alternate routes belonging to a third party carrier. The third party offers circuit-switched capacity on a point-to-point basis at a cost proportional to the carried load. Point-to-point circuit-switched voice traffic is considered first. Integrated point-to-point voice and video traffic are then incorporated into the optimization problem, where it is assumed that the third party carrier can also offer the higher-rate circuit-switched capacity between all pairs of points. Finally, a multipoint routing problem is discussed and a modified flow-deviation algorithm is suggested for its solution. The algorithm incorporates a minimum spanning tree heuristic to compute an approximation to a Steiner tree in each iteration
Keywords :
channel capacity; circuit switching; iterative methods; optimisation; switching networks; telecommunication network routing; telecommunication traffic; Steiner tree; call arrivals; call blocking; capacity allocation; circuit-switched capacity; iteration; minimum spanning tree; modified flow-deviation algorithm; multipoint circuit-switched networks; multirate networks; optimization problem; overflow traffic; point-to-point basis; primary routes; routing; stationary traffic rates; video traffic; voice traffic; Circuit switching (communication systems); Communication system routing; Communication system traffic; Information rates; Iterative methods; Optimization methods;
Conference_Titel :
Electrical and Computer Engineering, 1994. Conference Proceedings. 1994 Canadian Conference on
Conference_Location :
Halifax, NS
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-2416-1
DOI :
10.1109/CCECE.1994.405812