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3rd International ICST Conference on Broadband Communications, Networks, and Systems

Research Article

Wavelength Converter Placement for Dynamic Traffic Grooming in Optical Networks

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BibTeX Plain Text
  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.1109/BROADNETS.2006.4374411,
        author={Chunsheng Xin},
        title={Wavelength Converter Placement for Dynamic Traffic Grooming in Optical Networks},
        proceedings={3rd International ICST Conference on Broadband Communications, Networks, and Systems},
        publisher={IEEE},
        proceedings_a={BROADNETS},
        year={2006},
        month={10},
        keywords={Traffic grooming  converter placement  optical networks  wavelength conversion},
        doi={10.1109/BROADNETS.2006.4374411}
    }
    
  • Chunsheng Xin
    Year: 2006
    Wavelength Converter Placement for Dynamic Traffic Grooming in Optical Networks
    BROADNETS
    IEEE
    DOI: 10.1109/BROADNETS.2006.4374411
Chunsheng Xin1,*
  • 1: Dept. of Computer Science, Norfolk State University, Norfolk, VA 23504
*Contact email: cxin@nsu.edu

Abstract

With the huge capacity, wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) optical networks are predominantly used as the transport infrastructure to carry inter-domain traffic for client networks. WDM optical networks offer wavelength granularity high-capacity optical connections, whereas client traffic flows are usually at sub-wavelength granularity. Traffic grooming in WDM optical networks refers to the aggregation of low-rate client traffic flows onto high-capacity optical connections. When client traffic randomly arrives/departs, it is called dynamic traffic grooming. This paper focuses on wavelength converter placement for dynamic traffic grooming in optical networks. We propose an adaptive traffic load based converter placement heuristic and also study several other heuristics. The numerical results indicate that the adaptive traffic load based heuristic can obtain a similar performance as the greedy heuristics, in both blocking probabilities and throughputs, with lower computation complexity.

Keywords
Traffic grooming converter placement optical networks wavelength conversion
Published
2006-10-05
Publisher
IEEE
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/BROADNETS.2006.4374411
Copyright © 2006–2025 IEEE
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