Title :
Integrated, Distributed Traffic Control in Multidomain Networks
Author :
Wenjing Su ; Chunyu Liu ; Lagoa, Constantino M. ; Hao Che ; Ke Xu ; Yong Cui
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Pennsylvania State Univ., University Park, PA, USA
Abstract :
In this paper, we put forward an integrated traffic control structure and the associated control laws for multidomain networks. This control structure performs per-edge-to-edge-based multinext-hop or multipath rate adaptation and load balancing among domain edge nodes in a multidomain network. This control structure is underpinned by a large family of distributed control laws, with provable convergence and optimality properties. With any user-defined global design objective, a set of control laws can be selected from this family of control laws that track an operational point where the global design objective is achieved, while providing traffic engineering (TE) and fast failure recovery (FFR) features for class-of-service (CoS)-aware flow aggregates. The structure allows the user to have full control over how the domains should be created and whether to use point-to-multipoint and/or point-to-point multipath. The flexibility and versatility of the control structure makes it an ideal theoretical underpinning for the development of integrated traffic control solutions for large-scale networking systems, in particular, software-defined networks in which the data plane is fully programmable via a well-defined south-bound interface, such as OpenFlow. The simulation testing demonstrates the viability of the solution in providing TE, FFR, and CoS features.
Keywords :
convergence; distributed control; resource allocation; software defined networking; telecommunication control; telecommunication traffic; CoS-aware flow aggregates; FFR features; OpenFlow; TE features; class-of-service; control structure flexibility; control structure versatility; distributed control laws; distributed traffic control; domain edge nodes; fast failure recovery; integrated traffic control structure; large-scale networking systems; load balancing; multidomain networks; multipath rate adaptation; optimality properties; per-edge-to-edge-based multinext-hop; point-to-multipoint multipath; provable convergence; software-defined networks; south-bound interface; traffic engineering; user-defined global design objective; Aggregates; Decentralized control; IP networks; Internet; Load management; Protocols; Resource management; Decentralized control; multidomain traffic engineering (TE); optimization; quality of service; sliding mode control; sliding mode control.;
Journal_Title :
Control Systems Technology, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TCST.2014.2366724