Title: Lecture: 4 WDM Networks Design
1Lecture 4 WDM Networks Design Operation
Ajmal Muhammad, Robert Forchheimer Information
Coding Group ISY Department
2Outline
- Key Terminology in WDM Optical Network
- Different Core Network Topologies
- Designing Network Nodes
- Categorizations of WDM Networks
- Wavelength-routed and broadcast-and-select
- Static and dynamic
- Routing and Wavelength Assignment (RWA)
- Static, dynamic
- Grooming
3Optical core Networks
4Key Terminology in WDM Optical Networks
- Optical node/cross-connect/switch/router
- Optical node has a number of input (output)
fibers, each carrying one or more incoming
(outgoing) optical signals - The purpose of which is to direct each incoming
optical signal to an appropriate outgoing fiber - End nodes all possible sources or destinations
of data - Physical topology graph showing the major
physical components (i.e., fibers, nodes) of the
network
5Key Terminology.
- Lightpath optical connection from one end node
to another, used to carry data in the form of
encoded optical signals - Logical/Virtual topology graph whose nodes
indicate the end nodes and edges as lightpaths
From E1 to E3 From E2 to E4 From E1 to E2 From E3
to E4 From E4 to E1
Physical topology of WDM network with four end
nodes E1,..,E4, and four optical routers R1,..,R4
Lightpaths on physical topology
6Logical/Virtual Topology
From E1 to E3 From E2 to E4 From E1 to E2 From E3
to E4 From E4 to E1
Corresponding logical topology
Lightpaths on physical topology
7Topologies for core Networks
National scientific foundation (NSF) network
Optical cross-connect
8Topologies for core Networks
14 nodes, 21 bidirectional links
European optical network topology
German network topology
9Designing Network NodeExample
- 4 input and output fibers
- 32 wavelengths on each fiber
- Design the node such that
- 4 signals can be dropped/added
- Wavelengths are added/dropped through tunable
transponders
14 nodes, 21 bidirectional links
10Designing Network Node
- 4 Nos. of 1x32 DMUX
- 4 Nos. of 32x1 MUX
- 32 Nos. of 8x8 optical switch
- 1 144x144 optical switch
- 16 Nos. of transponder
14 nodes, 21 bidirectional links
11Constructing a Large Switch from Smaller Switches
4 wavelength channels in fiber
Optical add-drop multiplexer (OADM)constructed
from MUX, DEMUX, a 6x6 optical switch, and 2
tunable transponders
How to construct an OADM with the same
functionality by using 4x4 switches ?
12First Method
Constructing an OADM using 4x4 switches
4 wavelength channels in fiber
13Second Method
Constructing an OADM using 4x4 switches
4 wavelength channels in fiber
14Categorizations of WDM Networks
- Wavelength-routed and Broadcast-and-select
networks - Wavelength-routed optical signal is sent along
a specified path and not broadcast to all nodes
in the network - Broadcast-and-select source end node selects an
appropriate wavelength and broadcasts the data to
be transmitted to all end nodes in the network - Static and Dynamic lightpath allocation
- Static once the lightpaths are set-up between
the ordered pairs of the end nodes, they will
continue to exist for a relatively long period of
time (months or years) - Dynamic set-up on demand and, when the
communication is over, the corresponding
lightpath is taken down (i.e., no longer remain
operational)
15Categorizations of WDM.
- Single-hop and Multi-hop WDM networks
- Single-hop all data communication involves a
path length of one logical edge, i.e., one
lightpath is involved in each communication - Single-hop networks are also called
all-optical networks - Multi-hop some data communication involves more
than one lightpath
Multi-hop network
Single-hop network
16Static Routing and Wavelength Assignment (RWA)
- Assumption The amount of traffic for each
source-destination pair is in wavelength units - Traffic Model Set of lightpaths to be
established in the network is known in advance - Constraint Any two lightpaths sharing the same
physical link are assigned different wavelengths - Objective Establish a set of lightpaths in such
away to minimize the number of wavelengths used
in the network - Application Static RWA problem arises naturally
in the design and capacity planning of an optical
network
17Static RWA
- Decompose into two sub-problems
- Routing
- Fixed routing
- Alternate routing
- Adaptive routing
- Wavelength assignment (WA)
- Random WA
- First-fit
- Least-used/SPREAD
- Most-used/PACK
18WA Graph Coloring Problem
- Problem can be reduced to graph coloring
- Construct a graph G where nodes represents
lightpaths, an edge exists between two nodes if
the corresponding lightpaths pass through a
common physical link - Color the nodes in G such that no two adjacent
nodes have the same color
2
3
1
4
5
6
Network with eight routed-lightpaths
Auxiliary graph for the lightpaths in the network
19Static RWA a Layered Graph Approach
- Route and assign wavelength to each connection
one by one - Use layered graph to deal with wavelength
continuity constraint - Create W copies of the network graph, W number
of wavelengths in a fiber - RWA is solved by finding a path in one copy of
the network graph - Limited/fixed conversion add links between layers
20Static RWA with Wavelength Conversion
- If each node has full wavelength conversion
capability - Only need solve routing problem
- Minimizing the maximum flow will minimize the
number of wavelengths used
21Dynamic RWA
- Traffic Model Service requests arrive to and
depart from the network dynamically in a random
manner - Constraint Any two lightpaths sharing the same
physical link are assigned different wavelengths - Objective Route and assign wavelengths in such a
way as to minimize the blocking probability of
the network - Application Dynamic RWA problem is encountered
during the real-time network operational
performance of the optical networks
22Dynamic RWA Assumptions
- Each service request or call needs one wavelength
units of transmission rate - Service requests arrivals for source-destination
pair form a Poisson process - Source-destination pairs are uniformly
distributed among all network nodes - Each service request has the holding-time that is
exponentially distributed - Blocked calls are lost from the network there is
no reattempt
23RWA In General
24Sub-wavelength Traffic Traffic Grooming
- So far we assume that each source-destination
(s-d) pair has its traffic demand equal to an
integer multiple of wavelength unit - What if the traffic of an s-d equal to 0.3
wavelength unit ? - In this scenario, a single lightpath may carry
multiple traffic streams from different s-d pairs
-
- Traffic grooming multiplexing several traffic
streams onto a common lightpath -
- Necessary for efficient wavelength channel
usages
25Traffic Grooming Strategies
- Aim Minimize electronic costs by reducing the
number of add-drop multiplexers (ADMs) and make
efficient use of wavelengths - Each ADM can multiplex several lower rate streams
to form a higher rate stream OR demultiplex a
higher rate stream to several lower rate ones - Employs O-E-O conversion
- Works at a particular wavelength
- ADM works on a single wavelength, if there are W
wavelengths, every node would need NW ADMs -
26Example
Network Topology
a) Physical Network
b) Traffic on the Network
t1
0
1
0
1
t5
t6
fiber
t2
t4
2
3
3
2
t3
27Traffic Grooming Approach1 (Random)
Total number of ADMs needed 8
28Traffic Grooming Approach 2
Total number of ADMs needed 7
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