TY - GEN
T1 - Dynamic scheduling of survivable connections with delay tolerance in wdm networks
AU - Cavdar, Cicek
AU - Buzluca, Feza
AU - Tornatore, Massimo
AU - Mukherjee, Biswanath
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - In optical wavelength-division multiplexing (WDM) networks, recent technological progress is enabling dynamic optical transport in which leasable circuits (connections) can be set up and released for a specific duration of time, providing large capacity to bandwidth-hungry applications. Set-up times can be flexible or fixed, depending on the type of the application. Since the interruption of a high-speed optical connection could lead to huge loss of data, such connections need to be protected against failures. We study the problem of dynamic provisioning of user-controlled connection requests that have specified holding times and particular delay tolerances with shared path protection. The metric of delay tolerance is a measure of customer patience, and it is defined as the time a connection request can be held until it is set up. A connection that cannot be established at the instant of its request could potentially be set up in the remaining duration of its delay tolerance. We show that a reduction of up to 50 percent can be achieved on blocking probability by exploiting delay tolerance in networks without using extra backup capacity. In this study we explore different queuing policies for impatient customers. Different dynamic scheduling algorithms are applied and compared by giving priority to connections according to their arrival rates, delay tolerances and holding times alternatively.
AB - In optical wavelength-division multiplexing (WDM) networks, recent technological progress is enabling dynamic optical transport in which leasable circuits (connections) can be set up and released for a specific duration of time, providing large capacity to bandwidth-hungry applications. Set-up times can be flexible or fixed, depending on the type of the application. Since the interruption of a high-speed optical connection could lead to huge loss of data, such connections need to be protected against failures. We study the problem of dynamic provisioning of user-controlled connection requests that have specified holding times and particular delay tolerances with shared path protection. The metric of delay tolerance is a measure of customer patience, and it is defined as the time a connection request can be held until it is set up. A connection that cannot be established at the instant of its request could potentially be set up in the remaining duration of its delay tolerance. We show that a reduction of up to 50 percent can be achieved on blocking probability by exploiting delay tolerance in networks without using extra backup capacity. In this study we explore different queuing policies for impatient customers. Different dynamic scheduling algorithms are applied and compared by giving priority to connections according to their arrival rates, delay tolerances and holding times alternatively.
KW - Availability guarantee
KW - Connection delay tolerance
KW - Connection holding time
KW - Dynamic connection provisioning
KW - Optical network
KW - Shared-path protection
KW - Sliding scheduled traffic
KW - Survivability
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=70349664776&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/INFCOMW.2009.5072134
DO - 10.1109/INFCOMW.2009.5072134
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:70349664776
SN - 9781424439683
T3 - Proceedings - IEEE INFOCOM
BT - IEEE INFOCOM Workshops 2009
T2 - IEEE INFOCOM Workshops 2009
Y2 - 19 April 2009 through 25 April 2009
ER -