1st International IEEE Workshop on Optical Burst/Packet Switching

Research Article

Efficient Optical Burst-Switched Networks using only Fiber Delay Line Buffers for Contention Resolution

  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.1109/BROADNETS.2007.4550396,
        author={Jo\"{a}o Pedro and Paulo Monteiro and Jo\"{a}o Pires},
        title={Efficient Optical Burst-Switched Networks using only Fiber Delay Line Buffers for Contention Resolution},
        proceedings={1st International IEEE Workshop on Optical Burst/Packet Switching},
        proceedings_a={WOBS},
        year={2008},
        month={6},
        keywords={burst scheduling; fiber delay line buffers; optical burst switching; traffic engineering; wavelength assignment},
        doi={10.1109/BROADNETS.2007.4550396}
    }
    
  • João Pedro
    Paulo Monteiro
    João Pires
    Year: 2008
    Efficient Optical Burst-Switched Networks using only Fiber Delay Line Buffers for Contention Resolution
    WOBS
    IEEE
    DOI: 10.1109/BROADNETS.2007.4550396
João Pedro1,2,*, Paulo Monteiro1,3, João Pires2
  • 1: Nokia Siemens Networks Portugal S.A., R. Irmãos Siemens 1, 2720-093 Amadora, Portugal
  • 2: Instituto de Telecomunicações, Instituto Superior Técnico, Av. Rovisco Pais 1, 1049-001 Lisboa, Portugal
  • 3: Instituto de Telecomunicações, Universidade de Aveiro, Campus Universitário de Santiago, 3810-193 Aveiro, Portugal
*Contact email: joao.pedro@siemens.com

Abstract

The prospects of Optical Burst Switching (OBS) as a cost-effective switching paradigm for future all-optical transport networks could greatly benefit from avoiding the use of complex and expensive all-optical wavelength converters at the network nodes. However, contention resolution is essential to achieve reasonable bandwidth utilization efficiency in OBS networks and replacing the wavelength converters by Fiber Delay Line (FDL) buffers requires huge numbers of FDLs and large space switches, thus also rendering complex network nodes. This paper proposes combining the use of a priority-based wavelength assignment and burst scheduling strategy at the ingress nodes, which minimizes the probability of contention, with the use of shared FDL buffers at the core nodes to resolve the unavoidable contentions. The objective is to design OBS networks employing only moderate numbers of simple FDL buffers while matching the performance of a network using full-range wavelength converters. Simulation results using a reference network topology show that this goal is feasible. Moreover, the FDL buffer requirements are shown to depend on the offered traffic load, the number of wavelengths per link, and the maximum burst delay at the ingress node.