Synopses & Reviews
Optical Networks - Architecture and Survivability, is a state-of-the-art work on survivable and cost-effective design of control and management for networks with IP directly over Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) technology (or called Optical Internet). The authors address issues of signaling mechanisms, resource reservation, and survivable routing and wavelength assignment. Special emphasis has been given to the design of meshed, middle-sized, and wavelength-routed networks with dynamic traffic in the optical domain, such as the next-generation Metropolitan Area Network. Research and development engineers, graduate students studying wavelength-routed WDM networks, and senior undergraduate students with a background in algorithms and networking will find this book interesting and useful. This work may also be used as supplemental readings for graduate courses on internetworking, routing, survivability, and network planning algorithms.
Table of Contents
Preface. 1. Introduction. 2. Control and Management Architecture. 3. Routing and Wavelength Assignment (RWA): Overview. 4. Algorithms for Dynamic Routing and Wavelength Assignment. 5. Routing and Wavelength Assignment With Multi-Granularity OXCS. 6. Protection and Restoration. 7. Spare Capacity Allocation. 8. Survivable Routing With Dynamic Traffic. 9. Optical Burst Switching. Appendix A: Loop-Less K-Shortest Paths Algorithm in Directed Graphs. Appendix B: Maximum-Flow Algorithm. Acronyms. Symbols. Glossary. Index.