November 18, Traffic Grooming in Optical WDM Networks Presented by : Md. Shamsul Wazed University of Windsor
November 18, Abstract
3 Abstract Requested bandwidth of a traffic stream can be lower than the wavelength capacity Grooming the low-speed traffic streams onto high capacity optical channels Objective : Improve network throughput Minimizing network cost
November 18, Abstract Most previous work on traffic grooming in the ring network topology Traffic grooming is an important problem for Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) network Recent research works with a mathematical formulation will be discussed here
November 18, Outline IntroductionIntroduction Multiplexing TechniquesMultiplexing Techniques Minimizing Network ResourcesMinimizing Network Resources Grooming Switch ArchitectureGrooming Switch Architecture Grooming with ProtectionGrooming with Protection Mathematical (ILP) FormulationMathematical (ILP) Formulation ConclusionConclusion
November 18, Introduction
7 Introduction 3 generation of networks : Choice of optical fiber : High bandwidthHigh bandwidth, low error rate, reliability High bandwidth 1 st generation network – copper wire based 2 nd generation network – mix of copper wire and optical fiber (SONET, WDM, SDH etc) 3 rd generation network – all-optical based
November 18, Objective of Traffic Grooming : To combine low-speed traffic streams onto high-capacity wavelengths Improve bandwidth utilization Optimize network throughput Minimize the network cost (transmitter, receiver, fiber link, OXC, ADM, amplifier, wavelength converter etc) (transmitter, receiver, fiber link, OXC, ADM, amplifier, wavelength converter etc)OXCADMOXCADM Introduction
November 18, Multiplexing Techniques
November 18, Multiplexing Techniques Different multiplexing techniques used in traffic grooming : Space-division multiplexing (SDM) - bundling a set of fibers into a single cable, or using several cables within a network link Frequency-division multiplexing (FDM) – a given fiber to carry traffic on many distinct wavelengths. Time-division multiplexing (TDM) – multiple signals can share a given wavelength if they are non-overlapping in time.
November 18, 6 node network Wavelength Capacity OC-48 3 connection requests OC-12 at (0,2) OC-12 at (2,4) OC-3 at (0,4) 2 lightpaths 1 carrying Connection 3 Multiplexing Techniques 1 logical communication route between two nodes established if wavelength is available
November 18, Minimizing Network Resources
November 18, Minimizing Network Resources Network resources must be used efficiently Electronic ADMs can be saved and network cost will be reduced WDM add/drop multiplexers (WADMs) is capable to drop or add wavelength Depends upon designing of Network topology
November 18, Minimizing Network Resources Minimizing Network Resources SONET/WDM ring (Ungroomed)
November 18, Minimizing Network Resources SONET/WDM ring (Groomed)
November 18, Grooming Switch Architecture
November 18, Grooming Switch Architecture Grooming Switch Architecture Static traffic grooming can be measured by fixed traffic matrices traffic matricestraffic matrices WADM allows wavelength to either be dropped and electronically processed at the node or optically bypass Node architecture for a WDM mesh network has the static traffic grooming capability
November 18, Grooming Switch Architecture Grooming Switch Architecture
November 18, Grooming with Protection
November 18, Grooming with Protection Connection also requires protection from network failure A single failure may affect a large volume of traffic Working path carrying traffic at normal operation Backup path re-routed the traffic after path failure
November 18, Grooming with Protection
November 18, Mathematical (ILP) Formulation
November 18, Mathematical (ILP) Formulation A six-node multi-hop network Capacity (C) of each wavelength OC-48 OC-48 3 types of connection request (OC-1, OC-3, and OC-12) 3 Traffic matrices generated randomly Traffic matricesTraffic matrices Total traffic demand ≤ OC-988 A six-node network six-node networksix-node network In our example, we consider :
November 18, Mathematical (ILP) Formulation At most one fiber link between each node pair. Nodes do not have wavelength conversion capability (i.e. no wavelength converter). wavelength converterwavelength converter The transceivers in a network node are tunable to any wavelength on the fiber. Each node has unlimited multiplexing / demultiplexing capability Assumptions : A six-node network six-node networksix-node network
November 18, Mathematical (ILP) Formulation Maximize the total successfully-routed low- speed traffic, i.e. A six-node network six-node networksix-node network ILP formulation : Allowed low-speed stream, y {1,3,12,48} = 1 if success, 0 otherwise t {1, …,T y,s,d } , Lightpaths cannot exceed wavelength capacity
November 18, Mathematical (ILP) Formulation A six-node network six-node networksix-node network Numerical Result 1: Multi-hop ThroughputLightpath # T=3, W=374.7% (OC-78)18 T=4, W=393.8% (OC-927)24 T=5, W=397.9% (OC-967)28 T=7, W=397.9% (OC-967)28 T=3, W=474.7% (OC-738)18 T=4, W=494.4% (OC-933)24 T=5, W=4100% (OC-988)29 where, T is number of Transceivers and W is number of wavelength
November 18, Mathematical (ILP) Formulation A six-node network six-node networksix-node network Numerical Result 2: Node 0Node 1Node 2Node 3Node 4Node 5 Node 002 (70%)0 (100%)1 (89%)1 (100%) Node 11 (100%)0 2 (100%)1 (100%)0 Node 21 (100%)1 (95%)01 (100%)2 (100%)1 (70%) Node 32 (100%)1 (100%) 00 Node 41 (100%) 0001 (91%) Node 50 (100%)02 (98%)1 (100%) 0 Virtual Topology and Lightpath Utilization (T=5, W= 3)
November 18, Conclusion
November 18, Conclusion Recent research and development in traffic grooming in WDM network reviewed Objective – multiplexing low-speed traffic streams on to high-capacity optical channels Optimum utilization of bandwidth, lower the network resource cost Node architecture, Path/Link Protection Illustrated an example by using ILP formulation Many significant results of practical importance are forthcoming
November 18, References [1]R. S. Barr, M. S. Kingsley and R. A. Patterson, “Grooming Telecommunication Networks : Optimization Models and Methods,” Technical Report 05-EMIS-03, June [2]K. Zhu and B. Mukherjee, “Traffic Grooming in an Optical WDM Mesh Networks,” IEEE Journal Selected Areas in Communications, Vol. 20, No. 1, January [3]K. Zhu and B. Mukherjee, “A Review of Traffic Grooming in WDM Optical Networks : Architectures and Challenges,” Optical Networks Magazine, Vol. 4, No. 2, March/April 2003, pp [4]E. Modiano and P. Lin, “Traffic Grooming in WDM Networks,” IEEE Communication Magazine, Vol. 39, No. 6, July 2001, pp [5]B. Mukherjee, C (Sam) Ou, H. Zhu, K. Zhu, N. Singhal and S. Yao, “Traffic Grooming in Mesh Optical Networks,” IEEE Optical Fiber Communication (OFC) Conference’04, March [6]W. Yao and B. Ramamurthy, “Survivable Traffic Grooming With Path Protection at the Connection Level in WDM Mesh Networks”, Journal of Lightwave Technology, October 2005, Vol. 23, No. 10, pp
November 18, Slide outline Slide outline Slide outline
November 18, Optical level Bit rate OC-152 Mbps OC-3156 Mbps OC Mbps OC-482,488 Mbps OC-1929,953 Mbps OC-76839,813 Mbps (in near future) [ OC-nn * Mbps] Transmission Speed Optical level Bit rate OC-152 Mbps OC-3156 Mbps OC Mbps OC-482,488 Mbps OC-1929,953 Mbps OC-76839,813 Mbps (in near future) [ OC-nn * Mbps] Back to Introduction Introduction Back to ILP Formulation ILP FormulationILP Formulation
November 18, Optical Cross-Connect (OXC) Back to Introduction Introduction
November 18, Optical Add-Drop Multiplexer (ADM) Back to Introduction Introduction
November 18, Sample Traffic Matrix of OC-3 Connection Request Back to Switch Architecture Switch ArchitectureSwitch Architecture Back to ILP Formulation ILP FormulationILP Formulation
November 18, Wavelength Converter (WC) Back to ILP Formulation ILP FormulationILP Formulation
November 18, Physical Topology of a Six-Node Network Back to ILP Formulation ILP FormulationILP Formulation