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Benefits of Link Protection at Connection Granularity
San Jose, California, USA October 25-October 29
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/BROADNETS.2004.18First International Conference on Bro ...
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Karthikeyan Sathyamurthy, University of Arizona, Tucson
Srinivasan Ramasubramanian, University of Arizona, Tucson
This paper develops a connection establishment framework for protecting connections against single-link failures using link protection at the granularity of a connection, referred to as Connection Switched Link Protection (CSLP). As a connection is routed only around a failed link, the channel assignment for the connection on the backup path of the failed link must be consistent with that of the primary path. Such a consistency is guaranteed at the time of call admission. The advantages of employing link protection at the connection level is established by comparing its performance through extensive simulations against link protection at the granularity of a fiber, referred to as Fiber Switched Link Protection (FSLP). Link protection at the connection level is shown to significantly outperform that at the granularity of a fiber, specifically when some traffic requires protection while others do not.
Index Terms:
Optical networks, Traffic grooming, Dynamic routing, Link Protection
Citation:
Karthikeyan Sathyamurthy, Srinivasan Ramasubramanian, "Benefits of Link Protection at Connection Granularity," broadnets, pp.300-309, First International Conference on Broadband Networks (BROADNETS'04), 2004
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