Optical Switching

Chapter 5 - Optical Burst Switching

Optical Burst Switching (OBS) is an optical switching paradigm that combines the
best elements of optical packet switching and wavelength routing, but avoids their
shortcomings. It provides a mechanism for transporting large quantities of bursty
data across a transparent optical switching network and can serve as a bridging technology
between existing wavelength-routed optical networks and future networks
that use pure optical packet switching.

The concept of burst switching was proposed for voice communications in the
1980s [1, 2], but it has never been a big success in electrical networks. The main
reason is that its complexity and realization requirements were comparable to that
of more flexible electronic packet switching techniques (e.g., ATM) [3]. Optical
burst switching, however, is considered a viable technology for the next-generation
optical Internet. Optical burst switching uses electronics for control and processing,
and preserves transparency by maintaining data entirely in the optical domain [4–6].

Although there is not a universal definition of optical burst switching, there are a
number of characteristics that are inherent to most proposed schemes [3]:

  • Switching granularity. The basic switching unit in an OBS network is a burst
    that has an intermediate granularity compared to optical packet switching and
    wavelength routing where the basic switching units are packets and wavelengths,
    respectively.
  • Separation of control information and data. The arrivals of bursts in core OBS
    nodes are signaled by burst control packets carried in one or more separate
    control channel(s).
  • One-way reservations. No acknowledgements for successful resource reservation
    are required prior to burst transmissions.
  • Offset time. The control packet and its corresponding burst are not only separated
    in space (transmitted using different wavelengths) but also in time.
  • No requirement for buffering. As a result of the use of offset time, core OBS
    nodes are not required to have buffering capability. Fiber delay lines, if
    present, may be used for contention resolution.

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