Optical Switching

Chapter 4 - Generalized Multiprotocol Label Switching

4.1   INTRODUCTION

The increase in the volume of Internet traffic is a result of the increase in the
number of communicating users and the introduction of new broadband services
such as video distribution. The growth in traffic, which is expected to continue
well into the future, emphasizes the need for new networking solutions that
utilize a larger portion of the optical fiber bandwidth in a cost-effective and flexible
way. As the Internet Protocol (IP) is undoubtedly the dominant protocol for data
services, the optimum solution would be to integrate the functionality of IP with
the underlying optical transport network, which is referred to as IP over WDM
integration.

In practice, the development and adoption of new networking solutions is driven
by economic and market constraints. Therefore, solutions that are based on widely
deployed protocols and architectures and prolong the usage of existing equipment
are more likely to be adopted sooner and on a wider scale. Furthermore, one
cannot expect that a single approach for IP over WDM integration will prevail
over all others or that the entire network will evolve concurrently and in a
uniform fashion.

Existing network architectures are composed of a number of layers: IP for
carrying applications and services, Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) for
traffic engineering, SONET/SDH for transport, and Dense Wavelength Division
Multiplexing (DWDM) for capacity. Because there are two distinct architectures
(IP and ATM), separate topologies, address spaces, routing and signaling protocols,
as well as resource allocation schemes have to be defined [1].

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