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The first experimental demonstration of a DREAM-based large-scale optical transport network with 1000 control plane nodes |
Optics Express, Vol. 19, Issue 26, pp. B746-B755 (2011)
http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/OE.19.00B746
Acrobat PDF (2593 KB)
Abstract
A scalable framework named Dual Routing Engine Architecture in Multi-layer, multi-domain and multi-constraints scenarios (DREAM) is proposed for the routing issue in large-scale dynamic optical networks. DREAM-based optical transport network testbed with 1000 control plane nodes and multi-terabit per second ODUk electrical cross-connects is first experimentally demonstrated. Two proposed routing schemes, i.e. DRE Forward Path Computation (DRE-FPC) and Hierarchical DRE Backward Recursive PCE-based Computation (HDRE-BRPC) are deployed and validated on the testbed, compared with traditional hierarchical routing (HR) scheme. Experimental results show the good performance of DREAM.
© 2011 OSA
1. Introduction
2. A scalable framework for triple M routing in dynamic optical networks: DREAM architecture
3. Routing schemes based on DRE: DRE-FPC and HDRE-BRPC
- A. HRIn the hierarchical routing architecture, each domain can be abstracted as a single node in the higher layer. There is one node in each domain selected as the speaker node, which maintains the information of the abstracted inter-domain topology. When the source control node receives a path computation request and if the destination node is not in the local domain, it will resort to the speaker node of the local domain. Then the speaker nodes will cooperate with each other to compute a loose inter-domain path and return it to the source control node. Then, the source node will supplement additional path information if the route within its domain is incomplete. This process will be carried out sequentially using signaling messages to the downstream domains until a complete node list along the path is obtained.
- B. DRE-FPC
- C. HDRE-BRPCSimilar with DRE-FPC, when the destination is in the local domain, path computation is completed by UE. When the destination is not in the local domain, the end-to-end path is gained by GE. Different from DRE-FPC, for HDRE-BRPC a GE sequence is gained first by the parent GE and the path computation is conducted from the last child GE to the first child GE backwardly along the GE sequence. When a path computation request arrives at a GE, the GE will send the request to other GEs after it finds that the destination node is not in the local domain. When the GE in charge of the domain that the destination node belongs to receive the request information, it will launch the path computation along a GE sequence. Then a shortest path tree will be built and the shortest path can be selected from it. The flowchart is shown in Fig. 4 .
4. Experimental results
5. Conclusion
Acknowledgments
References and links
OCIS Codes
(060.4250) Fiber optics and optical communications : Networks
(060.4510) Fiber optics and optical communications : Optical communications
ToC Category:
Backbone and Core Networks
History
Original Manuscript: October 3, 2011
Revised Manuscript: November 25, 2011
Manuscript Accepted: November 26, 2011
Published: December 6, 2011
Virtual Issues
European Conference on Optical Communication 2011 (2011) Optics Express
Citation
Jie Zhang, Yongli Zhao, Xue Chen, Yuefeng Ji, Min Zhang, Hongxiang Wang, Yong Zhao, Yong Tu, Zhenyu Wang, and Han Li, "The first experimental demonstration of a DREAM-based large-scale optical transport network with 1000 control plane nodes," Opt. Express 19, B746-B755 (2011)
http://www.opticsinfobase.org/oe/abstract.cfm?URI=oe-19-26-B746
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