Optical Switching

Chapter 3 - Optical Packet Switching

OPTICAL PACKET SWITCHING

3.1   INTRODUCTION


Optical (or photonic) packet switching (OPS) is often viewed as the ultimate goal in
the evolution of optical networks. It is a switching technique that provides bandwidth
efficiency, flexibility, and functionality. These advantages stem from the
fact that the bandwidth allocation unit that is a packet can be almost arbitrarily small.

In wavelength routing, the smallest bandwidth unit that can be allocated is a
wavelength. If data at a fraction of a wavelength is to be transported, waste of
capacity is inevitable. This is resolved in wavelength routing networks by grooming
multiple low-rate data streams to be transported using the same wavelength. This
process, however, requires multiple OEO conversions, which increase the system
cost and impair its transparency.

Optical packet switching alleviates this problem by providing smaller granularity
access to the optical layer (on a packet-by-packet basis); because packets make
on-demand use of the outgoing capacity (i.e., no dedicated circuits are established),
statistical multiplexing is achieved. This allows an optical packet switch to cope
with the bursty nature of traffic, which is a typical characteristic of data-centric networks.
Other advantages of this approach include optimal resource utilization and
the increase in resilience; the latter is due to the fact that it is easier to share resources
in protection schemes when a packet approach is taken compared with circuit
approaches (such as wavelength routing) due to the use of logical paths that can
be created using bandwidth.

Packet switches analyze the information contained in the packet headers and thus
determine where to forward the packets. Optical packet-switching technologies
enable the fast allocation of WDM channels in an on-demand fashion with fine
granularities. An optical packet switch can cheaply support incremental increases of
the transmission bit rate so that frequent upgrades of the transmission layer capacity
can be envisaged to match increasing bandwidth demand with a minor impact on
switching nodes. In addition, optical packet switching offers high-speed, data
rate/format transparency, and configurability, which are some of the important
characteristics needed in future networks supporting different forms of data [1].

The deployment of optical packet switching is hindered by the two fundamental
limitations of optics. The lack of sophisticated bit processing capability in the
optical domain poses significant challenges on the implementation of the switch
control unit. Furthermore, the lack of an equivalent of random access memory for
optical data complicates the switch operation in all cases where packets need to
be stored for finite amounts of time (e.g., while their headers are being processed
or during contentions).

For OPS to be commercially deployed at some time in the future, a number of
developments have to take place. Many of the OPS enabling technologies are
still, more or less, in the stage of research and exploration. The ultimate goal is
not merely to make OPS feasible, but also to make this switching approach practical
and cost-effective to deploy.

This chapter presents an overview of optical packet switching. We begin by
presenting the numerous design alternatives for optical packet switches, which
differentiate switch architectures. We then present the enabling technologies for
optical packet switching, most of which are still under study. A generic OPS architecture
is subsequently described to facilitate further discussion on the importance
of wavelength conversion in optical packet switching (Section 3.5), the applicable
contention resolution techniques (Section 3.6), and quality-of-service support
(Section 3.7). The remaining of the chapter presents indicative optical packet
switch architectures. Section 3.8 describes the architectures of three well-known
switches proposed in the context of research projects for use in wide-area
network nodes. The subject of Section 3.9 is the application of optical packet switching
in metropolitan area networks (MANs), which has received considerable
attention in recent years. Following a general discussion on this issue, three OPS
architectures for MANs that have been implemented in optical testbeds are
presented.

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