Streamlining your network with GMPLS - Part 2
The Bleeding Edge
By
Daniel Briere
and
Claudia Bacco
,
The Edge
, 01/07/2003
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Returning to profitability and increasing shareholder value will no doubt be huge themes for service providers in 2003. We
want to continue our discussion from the November column regarding Generalized Multi-protocol Label Switching (GMPLS) and
service provider expectations. Part 1 can be found here.
Service providers need to implement new techniques if they are going to be successful in the future. GMPLS has the potential
to save operators significant operating expenses. Our interviews revealed a variety of cost savings expectations that can
be categorized in three main areas: cross-layer traffic engineering; integrated protection/restoration; and rapid service
provisioning.
Cross-layer Traffic Engineering:
IP routers forward traffic based on the shortest path available through the network. Shortest path routing can result in underutilized
links and highly congested links. To accommodate for this situation, service providers provision excess capacity on specific
links, increasing network costs. GMPLS solves this problem through the automatic reconfiguration and optimization of the logical
optical paths between routers based on the actual traffic patterns and volumes. Service providers can reduce network costs
in the following areas:
• Traffic engineering manpower - decreased need for manual network design and configuration results in decreased manpower.
• Bandwidth - there is no longer a need to over-provision capacity on the network, which reduces overall bandwidth needs.
• Router ports - GMPLS drives efficiency in the network reducing the size of routers or delaying router upgrades, both leading
to a lower number of router ports.
Integrated Protection/Restoration:
Service providers implement network recovery techniques at both the data and the transport layers to achieve an acceptable
level of network availability and satisfy service-level agreements (SLA). GMPLS enables a dynamic multi-layer restoration
technique by also helping with recoveries from router failures. The optical network reconfigures and even reoptimizes the
logical IP topology during a router failure. This saves service providers costs in the following areas:
• Restoration plan/design management - GMPLS automates many of the restoration functions, decreasing the amount of time and
personnel needed.
• Capacity - the ability of the optical network to reconfigure the logical IP topology during failures reduces the need for
spare capacity.
• Router ports - capacity savings results in a lower number of necessary router ports.
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