DocumentCode
1224906
Title
Survivable WDM mesh networks
Author
Ramamurthy, S. ; Sahasrabuddhe, Laxman ; Mukherjee, Biswanath
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of California, Davis, CA, USA
Volume
21
Issue
4
fYear
2003
fDate
4/1/2003 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
870
Lastpage
883
Abstract
In a wavelength-division-multiplexing (WDM) optical network, the failure of network elements (e.g., fiber links and cross connects) may cause the failure of several optical channels, thereby leading to large data losses. This study examines different approaches to protect a mesh-based WDM optical network from such failures. These approaches are based on two survivability paradigms: 1) path protection/restoration and 2) link protection/restoration. The study examines the wavelength capacity requirements, and routing and wavelength assignment of primary and backup paths for path and link protection and proposes distributed protocols for path and link restoration. The study also examines the protection-switching time and the restoration time for each of these schemes, and the susceptibility of these schemes to multiple link failures. The numerical results obtained for a representative network topology with random traffic demands demonstrate that there is a tradeoff between the capacity utilization and the susceptibility to multiple link failures. We find that, on one hand, path protection provides significant capacity savings over link protection, and shared protection provides significant savings over dedicated protection; while on the other hand, path protection is more susceptible to multiple link failures than link protection, and shared protection is more susceptible to multiple link failures than dedicated protection. We formulate a model of protection-switching times for the different protection schemes based on a fully distributed control network. We propose distributed control protocols for path and link restoration. Numerical results obtained by simulating these protocols indicate that, for a representative network topology, path restoration has a better restoration efficiency than link restoration, and link restoration has a faster restoration time compared with path restoration.
Keywords
channel capacity; distributed control; network topology; optical fibre networks; routing protocols; telecommunication control; telecommunication network reliability; wavelength division multiplexing; backup paths; capacity savings; capacity utilization; cross connects; dedicated protection; distributed control protocols; distributed protocols; fiber links; fully distributed control network; large data losses; link protection/restoration; multiple link failures; network element failure; network topology; optical channels; path protection/restoration; primary paths; protection-switching time; protection-switching times; random traffic demands; restoration time; routing assignment; shared protection; survivability paradigms; survivable WDM mesh networks; wavelength assignment; wavelength capacity requirements; wavelength-division-multiplexing optical network; Distributed control; Mesh networks; Network topology; Optical fiber losses; Optical fiber networks; Protection; Protocols; WDM networks; Wavelength division multiplexing; Wavelength routing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Lightwave Technology, Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0733-8724
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JLT.2002.806338
Filename
1207336
Link To Document