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Survivable Optical WDM Networks / by Canhui Sam Ou, Biswanath Mukherjee.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries Optical NetworksEditor: Boston, MA : Springer US, 2005Descripción: XXVI, 182 páginas, recurso en líneaTipo de contenido:
  • texto
Tipo de medio:
  • computadora
Tipo de portador:
  • recurso en línea
ISBN:
  • 9780387244990
Formatos físicos adicionales: Edición impresa:: Sin títuloClasificación LoC:
  • TK1-9971
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
Shared-Path Protection for Resource Efficiency -- Sub-Path Protection for Scalability and Fast Recovery -- Segment Protection for Bandwidth Efficiency and Differentiated Quality of Protection -- Survivable Traffic Grooming-Dedicated Protection -- Survivable Traffic Grooming-Shared Protection -- Survivable Virtual Concatenation for Data Over Sonet/Sdh.
Resumen: Survivable Optical WDM Networks investigates different approaches for designing and operating an optical network with the objectives that (1) more connections can be carried by a given network, leading to more revenue, and (2) connections can recover faster in case of failures, leading to better services. Different networks -- wavelength-routed WDM networks, wavelength-routed WDM networks with sub-wavelength granularity grooming, and data over next-generation SONET/SDH over WDM networks -- are covered. Different approaches are proposed to explore every aspect of a protection scheme such as: (1) Protection granularity a. At wavelength granularity b. At sub-wavelength granularity (2) Protection entity a. Path protection b. Sub-path protection c. Segment protection (3) Routing a. Single-path routing b. Multi-path routing Tradeoffs between different objectives, e.g., resource efficiency vs. recovery time, are explored and practical approaches are proposed and analyzed. ---------------------------------------------------------- Canhui (Sam) Ou received a Ph.D. degree from the University of California, Davis, in 2004. His technical interests include WDM networks, MPLS, optical Ethernet, and FTTx. He is a Principal Member of Technical Staff at SBC Communications, Inc. He worked at Sprint Advanced Technology Laboratories and Fujitsu Laboratories of America as an intern. Biswanath Mukherjee received a Ph.D. degree from University of Washington, Seattle, in 1987. In 1987, he joined the University of California, Davis, where he has been Professor of computer science since 1995, and served as Chairman of computer science during 1997-2000. He is author of Optical Communication Networks book. He is a Member of the Board of Directors of IPLocks, a Silicon Valley startup company. He has consulted for and served on the Technical Advisory Board of a number of startup companies in optical networking. His research interests include lightwave networks, network security, and wireless networks. Dr. Mukherjee is winner of the 2004 Distinguished Graduate Mentoring Award from UC Davis. He serves or has served on the Editorial Boards of the IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking, IEEE Network, ACM/Baltzer Wireless Networks (WINET), Photonic Network Communications, and others. He also served as Editor-at-Large for optical networking and communications for the IEEE Communications Society. He served as the Technical Program Chair of the IEEE INFOCOM’96 Conference.
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Springer eBooks

Shared-Path Protection for Resource Efficiency -- Sub-Path Protection for Scalability and Fast Recovery -- Segment Protection for Bandwidth Efficiency and Differentiated Quality of Protection -- Survivable Traffic Grooming-Dedicated Protection -- Survivable Traffic Grooming-Shared Protection -- Survivable Virtual Concatenation for Data Over Sonet/Sdh.

Survivable Optical WDM Networks investigates different approaches for designing and operating an optical network with the objectives that (1) more connections can be carried by a given network, leading to more revenue, and (2) connections can recover faster in case of failures, leading to better services. Different networks -- wavelength-routed WDM networks, wavelength-routed WDM networks with sub-wavelength granularity grooming, and data over next-generation SONET/SDH over WDM networks -- are covered. Different approaches are proposed to explore every aspect of a protection scheme such as: (1) Protection granularity a. At wavelength granularity b. At sub-wavelength granularity (2) Protection entity a. Path protection b. Sub-path protection c. Segment protection (3) Routing a. Single-path routing b. Multi-path routing Tradeoffs between different objectives, e.g., resource efficiency vs. recovery time, are explored and practical approaches are proposed and analyzed. ---------------------------------------------------------- Canhui (Sam) Ou received a Ph.D. degree from the University of California, Davis, in 2004. His technical interests include WDM networks, MPLS, optical Ethernet, and FTTx. He is a Principal Member of Technical Staff at SBC Communications, Inc. He worked at Sprint Advanced Technology Laboratories and Fujitsu Laboratories of America as an intern. Biswanath Mukherjee received a Ph.D. degree from University of Washington, Seattle, in 1987. In 1987, he joined the University of California, Davis, where he has been Professor of computer science since 1995, and served as Chairman of computer science during 1997-2000. He is author of Optical Communication Networks book. He is a Member of the Board of Directors of IPLocks, a Silicon Valley startup company. He has consulted for and served on the Technical Advisory Board of a number of startup companies in optical networking. His research interests include lightwave networks, network security, and wireless networks. Dr. Mukherjee is winner of the 2004 Distinguished Graduate Mentoring Award from UC Davis. He serves or has served on the Editorial Boards of the IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking, IEEE Network, ACM/Baltzer Wireless Networks (WINET), Photonic Network Communications, and others. He also served as Editor-at-Large for optical networking and communications for the IEEE Communications Society. He served as the Technical Program Chair of the IEEE INFOCOM’96 Conference.

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