Abstract

This paper presents the concept of virtual dynamic bandwidth allocation (DBA), a method we propose to virtualize upstream capacity scheduling in passive optical networks (PONs), which provides multiple independent virtual network operators with the ability to precisely schedule their upstream traffic allocation. After a brief introduction on the evolution of access network sharing, we present our virtual DBA architecture, detailing its main components. We then provide a summary of the work done in this area from both theoretical and practical implementation perspectives. In this paper, we propose a novel stateless algorithm for merging multiple independent virtual bandwidth maps based on priority classes and analyze its performance in terms of efficiency of capacity allocation and latency. Through our results, we discuss the existence of a trade-off between traffic load and grant size distribution versus efficiency and latency. We find that, different from a residential single-tenant application, when PONs are used for low-latency and multi-tenant applications, the system has better overall performance if grants are allocated in small size. In addition, our analysis shows that for high-priority, strict latency services, our proposed merging algorithm presents delay performance that is independent of the traffic distribution considered.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call