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Energy‐minimized design of IP over flexible optical networks
Author(s) -
Gkamas Vasileios,
Christodoulopoulos Konstantinos,
Vergados Dimitrios J.,
Varvarigos Emmanouel
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
international journal of communication systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.344
H-Index - 49
eISSN - 1099-1131
pISSN - 1074-5351
DOI - 10.1002/dac.3032
Subject(s) - computer science , energy consumption , computer network , multiprotocol label switching , optical ip switching , multiplexing , network topology , router , efficient energy use , internet traffic , energy (signal processing) , transmission (telecommunications) , topology (electrical circuits) , distributed computing , the internet , internet protocol , quality of service , telecommunications , electrical engineering , engineering , world wide web , statistics , mathematics
Summary Energy efficiency is an important desirable property for optical networks and a key parameter for the sustainability of the future Internet. In this work, we consider the energy‐minimized design problem for IP over flexible optical networks. We provide an energy‐aware multilayer network‐planning algorithm, which takes as input the network topology, the IP end‐to‐end traffic matrix, the modular model of the IP/MPLS routers, and the feasible configurations of the flexible optical transponders. The algorithm serves the demands for their requested rates by placing router modules, selecting the paths in the IP topology, and the corresponding paths and spectrum slots in the underlying optical topology, together with the flexible optical transponders' transmission configurations. The algorithm's objective is to minimize the network's energy consumption, jointly accounting for the energy consumption of the routers' modules installed, the transponders used, and their configurations. Using realistic energy consumption and network traffic models, we evaluate the energy savings obtained when the proposed algorithm is applied to a flexible network, as opposed to a mixed‐line‐rate wavelength division multiplexing optical network. Moreover, we consider two optimization scenarios, comparing the joint energy consumption optimization of IP and optical layers to a sequential optimization of the energy consumed at these two layers. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.