On the effects of energy-aware traffic engineering on routing reliability
conference contribution
posted on 2024-11-14, 11:25authored byGongqi Lin, Sieteng Soh, Mihai Lazarescu, Kwan-Wu ChinKwan-Wu Chin
Current network infrastructures are over-provisioned to increase their resilience against resource failures, e.g., bundled links and nodes, as well as congestion during peak hours. However such strategies waste resources as well as exhibit poor energy efficiency at off-peak periods. To this end, several energy-aware routing algorithms have been proposed to maximally switch off redundant network resource at low traffic load to minimize energy usage. These routing solutions, however, do not consider network reliability as critical back-off links/nodes maybe switched off. Henceforth, we aim to quantify the effects of five recently proposed green routing approaches, namely FGH, GreenTE, MSPF, SSPF, and TLDP, on the following two reliability measures: (i) 2-terminal reliability (ii) path reliability. Experiments using three topologies with real and synthetic traffic demands show that switching off redundant links significantly affects the 2-terminal reliability. Routing traffic through multiple paths has lesser reliability impact while reducing energy, especially when the paths are link disjoint. Interestingly, TDLP and MSPF have better path reliabilities than using shortest path routing.
History
Citation
G. Lin, S. Soh, M. Lazarescu & K. Chin, "On the effects of energy-aware traffic engineering on routing reliability," in 19th Asia-Pacific Conference on Communications (APCC), 2013, pp. 69-74.
Parent title
2013 19th Asia-Pacific Conference on Communications, APCC 2013