DocumentCode :
3431082
Title :
TCP switching: exposing circuits to IP
Author :
Molinero-Fernández, Pablo ; McKeown, Nick
Author_Institution :
Stanford Univ., CA, USA
fYear :
2001
fDate :
2001
Firstpage :
43
Lastpage :
48
Abstract :
There has been much discussion about the best way to combine the benefits of new optical circuit switching technology with the established packet switched Internet. In this paper, we explore how electronic and/or optical circuit switching might be introduced in an evolutionary manner. Circuit switches have much simpler data paths, and being potentially most faster than packet switches. As a result, very high capacity all-optical circuit switches are feasible today (e.g. WDM, MEMs, and wavelength conversion systems), whereas all-optical packet switches are a long way from being commercially practical, because we still do not know how to buffer photons. Of course, the main disadvantage of circuit switching is that link capacity must be peak-allocated, eliminating the benefits of statistical multiplexing, leading to the inefficient rise of links. It is a premise of this paper that link capacity is abundant and will become more so with time. The bottleneck in the Internet today is most often in the routers, not the links
Keywords :
Internet; circuit switching; multiplexing; optical switches; transport protocols; TCP switching; all-optical circuit switches; link capacity; optical circuit switching technology; packet switched Internet; IP networks; Internet; Optical buffering; Optical packet switching; Optical switches; Optical wavelength conversion; Packet switching; Robustness; Switching circuits; TCPIP;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Hot Interconnects 9, 2001.
Conference_Location :
Stanford, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-1357-3
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/HIS.2001.946692
Filename :
946692
Link To Document :
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