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A wavelength sharing and assignment heuristic to minimize the number of wavelength converters in resilient WDM networks

Authors :
Hars Vardhan
Paolo Monti
Arularasi Sivasankaran
Marco Tacca
Miguel Razo
Wanjun Huang
Shreejith Billenahalli
Andrea Fumagalli
Limin Tang
Source :
2009 7th International Workshop on Design of Reliable Communication Networks.
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
IEEE, 2009.

Abstract

With the successful introduction of reconfigurable optical add-drop multiplexers (ROADMs) and related technologies, WDM networks are now growing in the number of optical nodes, wavelengths, and lambda services supported. In addition, shared path protection mechanisms — whereby lambda services are allowed to share protection wavelength channels — are possible at the optical (WDM) layer. Efficient strategies must be devised to both determine the set of services that must share a common protection wavelength channel and assign wavelengths to every service. One objective of these strategies is to minimize the total number of wavelength converters (WCs), which are required every time the wavelength continuity constraint cannot be met. This paper presents a scalable and efficient heuristic, whose goal is to minimize the number of WCs in resilient WDM networks supporting static sets of shared path protection lambda services. The heuristic comprises a set of polynomial algorithms that are executed sequentially to obtain a sub-optimal solution. In small size instances of the problem, the heuristic is compared against the optimal solution obtained from ILP formulation. For large size instances — tens of thousands of lambda services and hundreds of nodes — the heuristic yields an average number of WCs that is close to be linear in the number of services, despite the fact that the wavelength sharing factor increases.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
2009 7th International Workshop on Design of Reliable Communication Networks
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........be8bd64b2ab75c7dc38d55da1945465d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1109/drcn.2009.5339989