Wavelength rerouting in survivable WDM networks

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Abstract

One limitation of all-optical WDM networks is the wavelength continuity constraint imposed by all-optical cross-connect switches that requires the same wavelength be used on all the links along a path. With random arrivals and departures of connection requests, it happens quite often that a new request has to be blocked due to the fact that there are not enough available resources (e.g. wavelength) to accommodate the request. Wavelength rerouting, a viable and cost-effective method, which rearranges the wavelengths on certain existing routes to free a wavelength continuous route for the new request, has been proposed to improve the blocking probability. In this paper, we study a wavelength rerouting problem in survivable WDM networks as follows. Given a connection request, the problem is to find two link-disjoint paths from the source node to the destination node with an objective to minimize the number of existing routes that have to be wavelength-rerouted. We show that the problem is NP-hard if different wavelengths are assigned to the link-disjoint paths. Otherwise, a polynomial time algorithm is proposed. © IFIP International Federation for Information Processing 2005.

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APA

Wan, Y., & Liang, W. (2005). Wavelength rerouting in survivable WDM networks. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (Vol. 3462, pp. 431–442). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/11422778_35

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