Side_1_360

(Dana P.) #1
LSPs that will be established is given in Figure
14 a). Increasing the k-factor is the same as
increasing the influence from control and
switching on network costs. An increase in the
costs related to control and switching will make
the establishment/cross-connection of LSPs
profitable.

The costs related to control, switching and trans-
mission, as well as the total network cost as
functions of number of LSPs are given in Figure
14 b). Establishing or cross-connecting LSPs
means a splitting of one LSP into two where one
of them is cross-connected through the switch.
The resulting sum of transmission bandwidth
required for these two LSPs will always be
greater than or equal to the bandwidth of the
LSP that is split. Cross-connecting an LSP
implies that less traffic is switched and less con-
trol activities would be involved. This leads to
lower switching and control cost when the num-
ber of LSPs is increased. The minimum total
cost for the reference case with the weight factor
set to 1.0 is obtained when there are 406 LSPs
established. The cost contributions from trans-
mission, switching and control are given, and
they seem to counterbalance each other for an
increasing number of LSPs in such a way that
the total cost is hardly influenced by the number
of LSPs established.

A set of curves for the relative total cost for a
selected number of control/switching weight fac-
tors are depicted in Figure 14 c). The relative
costs are found by dividing the total cost ob-
tained by the minimum total cost for the relevant
weight factor value k. As seen from the curves,

a larger number of LSPs are found as the better
solutions (minimum relative cost) when greater
weight is placed on control/switching cost. The
shapes of the curves are explained by this effect.
In one respect, these curves show the “good-
ness” of the solution found compared to alterna-
tive solutions. For instance, in case k= 1.0, hav-
ing only 50 LSPs gives a total cost that is
approximately 15.5 % greater than the better
solution having 406 LSPs.

During the calculations, the bigger LSPs will be
cross-connected first. This is clearly shown by
the results in Figure 14 d). One rationale for this
is that splitting an LSP into two LSPs might lead
to less additional need for bandwidth when
larger LSPs are considered, as the amount of
traffic load (number of micro flows and their
characteristics) influences the needed bandwidth.
This is recognised as the scale effect observed
through the effective bandwidth measure.

7.2 Case Variations

Some variations of the reference case have been
examined:


  • Single class of service (all traffic flow types
    are assigned to the same CoS value);

  • Higher demand (double demand of reference
    case);

  • Lower demand (one tenth demand of refer-
    ence case).


Similar results as depicted in Figure 14 can be
obtained for these as well, allowing us to iden-
tify the LSP network solution with the lowest
cost together with some sensitivity results. Fig-
ure 15 contains some observations from these
case variations.

As seen from Figure 15 a), reducing demands
to one tenth, the number of LSPs for the corre-
sponding weight factors is reduced. The flows
with reduced demands are smaller than for the
reference case, and when splitting the LSPs the
relative required capacity for the replacing LSPs
is increased, because of the effective bandwidth
and call blocking probability.

The total costs of the better network solutions
for the four cases are given in Figure 15 b). As
expected, increasing the demands leads to higher
cost, while reducing the demands leads to lower
cost. For the other cases, minor changes to the
total cost are found. Related to the costs in Fig-
ure 15 b), the relative cost when a minimum
number of LSPs and a maximum number of
LSPs are established are given in Figure 15 c).
To a certain extent, these values indicate the
potential savings in finding the appropriate LSPs

Figure 14 Results for
reference case: a) Number of
LSPs; b) Network cost;
c) Total cost relative to mini-
mum total cost; d) Average
LSP capacity as a function
of number of LSPs


1.4
1.3
1.2
1.1
1.0
50 250 450
Number of LSPs

c)

Relative cost
4.6
3.0
1.9
0
50 250 450
Number of LSPs

d)

Average VP capacity

(^30)
Mvit/s
160
120
80
40
0
50 250 450
Number of LSPs


b)

Cost

Million

450
350
250
150
50
0.01 1 10 1000
Weight factor, k

a)

Number of LSPs
total

control

switching

transmission

k=10

k=1.0
k=0.5 kk=0=0.1
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