Optical Switching

Chapter 3.6.3 - Discussion

3.6.3   Discussion

The design of a contention resolution scheme for an optical packet switch involves
both the selection of the method(s) that will be applied as well as their particular
configurations. This process typically requires the dimensioning of system
parameters (e.g., number and range of wavelength converters and sharing policy,
number and lengths of delay lines), which is based on studies regarding the
desired switch performance (in terms of packet loss rate and throughput) and the
associated cost. The resulting control complexity is another decisive factor that
needs to be considered.

All three contention resolution alternatives feature advantages and disadvantages
that were discussed in the relevant sections. Both wavelength conversion and optical
buffering require extra hardware (wavelength converters, fibers, and additional
switch gates) and control software. However, deflection routing can be implemented
with extra control software only [5].

In practice, the contention resolution scheme of an optical packet switched network
will often employ a combination of time, space, and wavelength domain approaches
in order to maximize the system throughput and minimize the packet loss rate.
Possible combinations may include two techniques or all three. Design issues in combinatorial
schemes include the order of application and the settings used for each
method in conjunction with the two others. Naturally, when contention resolution
fails in all dimensions, the packet will be dropped [2]. Studies on combinatorial
schemes for mesh and metro networks [5] indicate that the optimal order of actions
is as follows. A packet that loses a contention will first seek a vacant wavelength
on the preferred output port. If no such wavelength exists, it will seek a vacant
delay line. If no delay line is available, it will seek a vacant wavelength on the
deflection output port. When all of the above options fail, the packet will be
dropped. This order of application of contention resolution measures is reported to
provide the best performance in terms of the packet loss rate and the packet delay [5].

UNLIMITED FREE
ACCESS
TO THE WORLD'S BEST IDEAS

SUBMIT
Already a GlobalSpec user? Log in.

This is embarrasing...

An error occurred while processing the form. Please try again in a few minutes.

Customize Your GlobalSpec Experience

Category: Fiber Optic Cables
Finish!
Privacy Policy

This is embarrasing...

An error occurred while processing the form. Please try again in a few minutes.