|
|
Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
Optical network design and modelling is an essential issue for
planning and operating networks for the next century. The main
issues in optical networking are being widely investigated not only
for WDM networks but also for optical TDM and optical packet
switching. This book aims to contribute to further progress in
optical network architectures, design, operation and management and
covers the following topics in detail: OAM functions and layered
design of photonic networks; network planning and design; network
modelling; analysis and protocols of optical LANs; network
availability and performance modelling. This book contains the
selected proceedings of the International Working Conference on
Optical Network Design and Modelling, sponsored by the
International Federation for Information Processing (IFIP) and was
held in February 1997, in Vienna, Austria. The valuable book will
be essential rading for personnel in computer/communication
industries, and academic and research staff in computer science and
electrical engineering.
In these exciting times of quotidianly progressing developments in
communication techniques, where more than ever in the history of a
technological progress, society's reliance on communication
networks for medicine, education, data transfer, commerce, and many
other endeavours dominates the human's everyday life, the optical
networks are certainly one of the most promising and challenging
networking options. Since their commercial arrival in the nineties,
they have fundamentally changed the way of dealing with traffic
engineering by removing bandwidth bottlenecks and eliminating
delays. Today, after the revolutionary bandwidth expansion, the
networking functionality migrates more and more to the optical
layer, and the need to establish fast wavelength circuits and
capacity-on-demand for the higher-layer networks, in particular
data networks based on Internet Protocol (IP), has become one of
the central networking issues for the new century. The unifying
trends toward configurable all-optical network infrastructure open
up a wide range of new network engineering and design choices
dealing with networks' interoperability and common platforms for
control and management. The Fifth Working Conference on Optical
Network Design and Modelling, held in the Austrian capital Vienna,
February 5-7, 2001, aims at presenting the most recent progress in
optical communication techniques, new technologies, standardisation
process, emerging markets and carriers. A short look at the Table
of Contents of this book tells us, in fact, that this year's
conference program reflects the current state of the art precisely.
This book focuses on methods for service-differentiated and constraint-based wavelength routing and resource allocation for multi-service WDM networks, tailored at needs of specific network users and adaptable to services yet to emerge. A number of unique routing solutions are proposed, and an extensive analysis of dynamically re-configurable multi-service WDM networks impart the major contribution to the current efforts in standardisation and network operation, and give an inimitable motivation for further study and research.
The need to establish wavelength-routed connections in a
service-differentiated fash ion is becoming increasingly important
due to a variety of candidate client networks (e. g. IP, SDH/SONET,
ATM) and the requirements for Quality-of-Service (QoS) de livery
within transport layers. Up until now, the criteria for optical
network design and operation have usually been considered
independently of the higher-layer client signals (users), i. e.
without taking into account particular requirements or constraints
originating from the users' differentiation. Wavelength routing for
multi-service net works with performance guarantees, however, will
have to do with much more than finding a path and allocating
wavelengths. The optimisation of wavelength-routed paths will have
to take into account a number of user requirements and network con
straints, while keeping the resource utilisation and blocking
probability as low as pos sible. In a networking scenario where a
multi-service operation in WDM networks is assumed, while dealing
with heterogeneous architectures (e. g. technology-driven, as
transparent, or regenerative), efficient algorithms and protocols
for QoS-differentiated and dynamic allocation of physical resources
will playa key role. This work examines the development of
multi-criteria wavelength routing for WDM networks where a set of
performances is guaranteed to each client network, taking into
account network properties and physical constraints."
Optical network design and modelling is an essential issue for
planning and operating networks for the next century. The main
issues in optical networking are being widely investigated not only
for WDM networks but also for optical TDM and optical packet
switching. This book aims to contribute to further progress in
optical network architectures, design, operation and management and
covers the following topics in detail: * OAM functions and layered
design of photonic networks; * network planning and design; *
network modelling; * analysis and protocols of optical LANs; *
network availability and performance modelling. This book contains
the selected proceedings of the International Working Conference on
Optical Network Design and Modelling, sponsored by the
International Federation for Information Processing (IFIP) and was
held in February 1997, in Vienna, Austria. The valuable book will
be essential rading for personnel in computer/communication
industries, and academic and research staff in computer science and
electrical engineering.
In these exciting times of quotidianly progressing developments in
communication techniques, where more than ever in the history of a
technological progress, society's reliance on communication
networks for medicine, education, data transfer, commerce, and many
other endeavours dominates the human's everyday life, the optical
networks are certainly one of the most promising and challenging
networking options. Since their commercial arrival in the nineties,
they have fundamentally changed the way of dealing with traffic
engineering by removing bandwidth bottlenecks and eliminating
delays. Today, after the revolutionary bandwidth expansion, the
networking functionality migrates more and more to the optical
layer, and the need to establish fast wavelength circuits and
capacity-on-demand for the higher-layer networks, in particular
data networks based on Internet Protocol (IP), has become one of
the central networking issues for the new century. The unifying
trends toward configurable all-optical network infrastructure open
up a wide range of new network engineering and design choices
dealing with networks' interoperability and common platforms for
control and management. The Fifth Working Conference on Optical
Network Design and Modelling, held in the Austrian capital Vienna,
February 5-7, 2001, aims at presenting the most recent progress in
optical communication techniques, new technologies, standardisation
process, emerging markets and carriers. A short look at the Table
of Contents of this book tells us, in fact, that this year's
conference program reflects the current state of the art precisely.
|
|