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Journal ArticleDOI

Elastic Bandwidth Allocation in Flexible OFDM-Based Optical Networks

TLDR
This work introduces the Routing, Modulation Level and Spectrum Allocation (RMLSA) problem, as opposed to the typical Routing and Wavelength Assignment (RWA) problem of traditional WDM networks, proves that it is also NP-complete and presents various algorithms to solve it.
Abstract
Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) has recently been proposed as a modulation technique for optical networks, because of its good spectral efficiency, flexibility, and tolerance to impairments. We consider the planning problem of an OFDM optical network, where we are given a traffic matrix that includes the requested transmission rates of the connections to be served. Connections are provisioned for their requested rate by elastically allocating spectrum using a variable number of OFDM subcarriers and choosing an appropriate modulation level, taking into account the transmission distance. We introduce the Routing, Modulation Level and Spectrum Allocation (RMLSA) problem, as opposed to the typical Routing and Wavelength Assignment (RWA) problem of traditional WDM networks, prove that is also NP-complete and present various algorithms to solve it. We start by presenting an optimal ILP RMLSA algorithm that minimizes the spectrum used to serve the traffic matrix, and also present a decomposition method that breaks RMLSA into its two substituent subproblems, namely 1) routing and modulation level and 2) spectrum allocation (RML+SA), and solves them sequentially. We also propose a heuristic algorithm that serves connections one-by-one and use it to solve the planning problem by sequentially serving all the connections in the traffic matrix. In the sequential algorithm, we investigate two policies for defining the order in which connections are considered. We also use a simulated annealing meta-heuristic to obtain even better orderings. We examine the performance of the proposed algorithms through simulation experiments and evaluate the spectrum utilization benefits that can be obtained by utilizing OFDM elastic bandwidth allocation, when compared to a traditional WDM network.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamic and Adaptive Bandwidth Defragmentation in Spectrum-Sliced Elastic Optical Networks With Time-Varying Traffic

TL;DR: This paper investigates dynamic and adaptive bandwidth defragmentation in EONs with time-varying traffic using connection reconfigurations and proposes intelligent timing selection and adaptive DF ratio selection methods to tackle the tradeoff between the bandwidth blocking probability (BBP) performance and operational complexity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spectrum management in heterogeneous bandwidth optical networks

TL;DR: A comprehensive metric, Fragmentation Index, is devised to capture the essence of fragmentation and shows that an admission policy that differentiates different bandwidth lightpaths by spectrum partitioning achieves better provisioning efficiency by resolving these two problems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Study and Analysis of Routing and Spectrum Allocation (RSA) and Routing, Modulation and Spectrum Allocation (RMSA) Algorithms in Elastic Optical Networks (EONs)

TL;DR: This study reviews and analyzes one of the most important topics in EON namely Routing and Spectrum Allocation (RSA), and compares them through both quality of performance and computational complexity aspects for the first time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamic Service Provisioning of Advance Reservation Requests in Elastic Optical Networks

TL;DR: This paper proposes several algorithms that combine request scheduling in the time domain with routing, modulation and spectrum assignment (RMSA) in the spectrum domain and proposes a routing path selection policy and request scheduling strategy for provisioning AR requests dynamically in EONs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamic survivable multipath routing and spectrum allocation in OFDM-based flexible optical networks

TL;DR: It is showed that the MPP scheme achieves higher spectral efficiency than the traditional single-path provisioning (SPP) scheme and an integer linear programming (ILP) model as well as a heuristic algorithm for the dynamic SM-RSA problem are developed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Combinatorial optimization: algorithms and complexity

TL;DR: This clearly written, mathematically rigorous text includes a novel algorithmic exposition of the simplex method and also discusses the Soviet ellipsoid algorithm for linear programming; efficient algorithms for network flow, matching, spanning trees, and matroids; the theory of NP-complete problems; approximation algorithms, local search heuristics for NPcomplete problems, more.
Journal ArticleDOI

OFDM for Optical Communications

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors give a tutorial overview of OFDM and highlight the aspects that are likely to be important in optical applications, and discuss the constraints imposed by single mode optical fiber, multimode optical fiber and optical wireless.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spectrum-efficient and scalable elastic optical path network: architecture, benefits, and enabling technologies

TL;DR: This article proposes a novel, spectrum- efficient, and scalable optical transport network architecture called SLICE, which enables sub-wavelength, superwa wavelength, and multiple-rate data traffic accommodation in a highly spectrum-efficient manner, thereby providing a fractional bandwidth service.
Journal ArticleDOI

Distance-adaptive spectrum resource allocation in spectrum-sliced elastic optical path network [Topics in Optical Communications]

TL;DR: A concept of a novel adaptation scheme in SLICE called distance-adaptive spectrum resource allocation, which can save more than 45 percent of required spectrum resources for a 12-node ring network, is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optical burst switching: a new area in optical networking research

TL;DR: This tutorial gives an introduction to optical burst switching and compare it with other existing optical switching paradigms, and describes a prevailing protocol for OBS networks called just-enough-time (JET).
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