DocumentCode
84586
Title
Survivable Traffic Grooming in Elastic Optical Networks—Shared Protection
Author
Menglin Liu ; Tornatore, Massimo ; Mukherjee, Biswanath
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of California, Davis, Davis, CA, USA
Volume
31
Issue
6
fYear
2013
fDate
15-Mar-13
Firstpage
903
Lastpage
909
Abstract
This study investigates the survivable traffic grooming problem for elastic optical networks with flexible spectrum grid employing new transmission technologies. In such networks, instead of following the traditional fixed ITU-T wavelength grid, optical transponders are capable of properly tuning their rates, and consequently their spectrum occupation, by introducing the fine-granular spectrum unit, called a frequency slot. The number of contiguous frequency slots allocated to an optical path (i.e., lightpath) is adjusted to the current network flow. In this study, we propose a novel shared protection specific to elastic networks, namely, elastic separate-protection-at-connection (ESPAC). It not only provides traditional backup sharing, but also offers a new opportunity of spectrum sharing enabled by the elasticity of the transponders: 1) if the working paths of two connections are link disjoint physically, and 2) if their backup paths traverse two lightpaths which are adjacent on a fiber link, then the two backup lightpaths can share spectrum. The new opportunity of spectrum sharing is realized by using First-Fit to assign working traffic and Last-Fit to assign backup traffic, and allowing spectrum overlap between adjacent backup wavelengths. The elasticity of the transponder enables the expansion and contraction of the lightpaths, thus when a single failure occurs in the network, lightpaths carrying backup flows can be tuned to appropriate rates in such a way that the overlap spectrum is used by only one of the adjacent lightpaths. The results show ESPAC is very spectrum efficient in elastic network setting.
Keywords
optical communication; telecommunication network reliability; telecommunication traffic; transponders; ESPAC; adjacent backup wavelength; contiguous frequency slots; current network flow; elastic network setting; elastic optical networks; elastic separate protection at connection; fine granular spectrum unit; fixed ITU-T wavelength grid; flexible spectrum grid; optical path; optical transponders; spectrum occupation; spectrum sharing; survivable traffic grooming problem; transmission technology; transponder elasticity; Bandwidth; Indexes; Optical fiber networks; Radio spectrum management; Routing; Transponders; WDM networks; Dynamic provisioning; elastic optical network; shared protection; spectrum assignment; traffic grooming;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Lightwave Technology, Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0733-8724
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JLT.2012.2231663
Filename
6374628
Link To Document