Network coding based joint signaling and dynamic bandwidth allocation scheme for inter optical network unit communication in passive optical networks

2014 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 280-293 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pei Wei ◽  
Rentao Gu ◽  
Yuefeng Ji
Author(s):  
Jun Zheng ◽  
Hussein T. Mouftah

Bandwidth allocation is one of the critical issues in the design of Ethernet passive optical networks (EPONs). In an EPON system, multiple optical network units (ONUs) share a common upstream transmission channel for data transmission. To efficiently utilize the limited bandwidth of the upstream channel, a system must dynamically allocate the upstream bandwidth among multiple ONUs based on the instantaneous bandwidth demands and quality of service requirements of end users. This chapter gives an introduction of the fundamental concepts on bandwidth allocation in an EPON system, discusses the major challenges in designing a polling protocol for bandwidth allocation, and presents an overview of the state-of-the-art dynamic bandwidth allocation (DBA) algorithms proposed for EPONs.


Author(s):  
Mohammad Zehri ◽  
Adebanjo Haastrup ◽  
David Rincon ◽  
José Ramón Piney ◽  
Sebastià Sallent ◽  
...  

Time- and Wavelength-Division Multiplexing (TWDM) increases the capacity of Passive Optical Networks by up to 40 Gbps by using several wavelengths (typically four). It introduces tunable transceivers into the Optical Network Units (ONUs) for switching from one wavelength to the other, thus addressing the ever-increasing bandwidth demands in residential broadband and mobile fronthaul networks based on Fiber to the Home (FTTH) technology. This adds complexity and sources of inefficiency, such as the laser tuning time (LTT) delay, which is often ignored when evaluating the performance of Dynamic Bandwidth Allocation (DBA) mechanisms. We present a novel DBA algorithm that dynamically handles the allocation of bandwidth and switches the ONUs’ laser from one wavelength to the other while taking LTT into consideration. To optimize the packet delay, we introduce a scheduling mechanism that follows the Longest Processing Time first (LPT) scheduling discipline, which is implemented over the Interleaved Polling with Adaptive Cycle Time (IPACT) DBA. We also provide quality of service (QoS) differentiation by introducing the Max-Min Weighted Fair Share Queuing principle (WFQ) into the algorithm. The performance of our algorithm is evaluated through simulations against the original IPACT algorithm, which we have extended to support multi-wavelengths. We obtain an improved performance of up to 73% and 33% reduction in queue delay in, respectively, IPACT and WFQ.


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