2nd International ICST Conference on Broadband Networks

Research Article

Design of tunnel-based protection schemes in multigranularity optical cross-connect networks

  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.1109/ICBN.2005.1589631,
        author={Tse Yu  Lo and Chien Chen and Ying Yu Chen},
        title={Design of tunnel-based protection schemes in multigranularity optical cross-connect networks},
        proceedings={2nd International ICST Conference on Broadband Networks},
        publisher={IEEE},
        proceedings_a={BROADNETS},
        year={2006},
        month={2},
        keywords={},
        doi={10.1109/ICBN.2005.1589631}
    }
    
  • Tse Yu Lo
    Chien Chen
    Ying Yu Chen
    Year: 2006
    Design of tunnel-based protection schemes in multigranularity optical cross-connect networks
    BROADNETS
    IEEE
    DOI: 10.1109/ICBN.2005.1589631
Tse Yu Lo1, Chien Chen1, Ying Yu Chen1
  • 1: Department of Computer and Information Science, National Chiao Tung University, Hsinchu, Taiwan

Abstract

As the technology advances to increase the number of wavelengths in fiber links, multigranularity optical cross-connects (MG-OXCs) have emerged as a solution to reduce the manufacturing cost of the traditional optical cross-connects (OXCs). In this paper, we aim to provide an efficient fault-recovery protection scheme for the lightpaths in the MG-OXC networks. A segment-based protection scheme, called tunnel based segment protection (TSP) is proposed to recover the communications interrupted by a fiber cut. TSP first allocates all the tunnels off-line according to the historical traffic matrix and then starts to serve the incoming requests. When allocating a tunnel, a backup tunnel is always allocated as well. Consequently, a lightpath is naturally divided into segments according to the switching types along the path. Therefore, after a working path is found for a connection request, only a shared backup path for those segments in the corresponding wavelength-switching layers need to be found. In addition, TSP utilizes wavelength-switching ports efficiently since working and backup tunnels can share the same wavelength-switching ports at two ends of the tunnel. Simulation results show that the network performance is improved comparing to adapt a straightforward path protection scheme for MG-OXC networks.