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Future Generation Computer Systems
Volume 22, Issue 6, May 2006, Pages 688-698
 
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doi:10.1016/j.future.2005.11.003    How to Cite or Link Using DOI (Opens New Window)
Copyright © 2005 Elsevier Ltd All rights reserved.

GMPLS-based service differentiation for scalable QoS support in all-optical Grid applications

Francesco PalmieriCorresponding Author Contact Information, E-mail The Corresponding Author

Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II., Via Cinthia 45, Complesso Universitario Monte S. Angelo, Napoli, 80126, Italy

Received 6 September 2005; 
revised 19 November 2005; 
accepted 21 November 2005. 
Available online 9 January 2006.

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Abstract

In the forthcoming new era of truly distributed computing, industry, businesses, and home users are placing complex and challenging demands on the transport network, now powered by the emerging photonic technologies, about Quality-of-Service (QoS) assurances that are required for new real-time computing and storage service applications geographically distributed worldwide according to the Grid model. There is the need to devise mechanisms for QoS provisioning in IP over WDM networks that must consider the physical characteristics and limitations of the optical domain to ensure the proper treatment of service classes when passing from the electrical switching to the optical domain and back. In addition, these mechanisms should be directly accessible to Grid applications to make them able to request and release network resources as they need. A (G)MPLS-based control plane combined with a wavelength-routed optical network is seen as a very promising approach for the realization of transport infrastructures for the future “photonic empowered” Grid computing paradigm, since it allows native user-controlled bandwidth resources and class-of-service provisioning, that is one of the strongest requirements for truly distributed computing. Considering this, we propose a general framework for providing differentiated services QoS to Grid applications in wavelength-routed photonic networks, built on the strengths of GMPLS for dynamic path selection and wavelength assignment. This framework makes it technically and economically viable to think of a set of computing, storage or combined computing storage nodes coupled through a high-performance optical network as one large computational and storage device.

Keywords: Grid computing; GMPLS; QoS; DiffServ; Optical transport networks; WDM

Article Outline

1. Introduction
2. Basic concepts
2.1. High-performance Grids
2.2. The evolution of transport networks suitable for Grids
3. Optical transport infrastructures for Grids
3.1. The GUNI architecture
3.1.1. The network service interface
3.1.2. The communication paradigm
4. QoS support in WDM-enabled Grid networks
4.1. QoS-driven lightpath allocation
4.2. GMPLS Label/lambda inferred DiffServ QoS
4.3. The QoS-aware routing and path selection paradigm
4.4. GMPLS signalling-driven wavelength assignment
5. Performance evaluation and results analysis
6. Related works
7. Conclusions
References
Vitae






 
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