Papers
Policy-Based Resource Management and Service Provisioning in GMPLS Networks
Xi Yang, Tom Lehman, Chris Tracy, Jerry Sobieski, Payam Torab, Shujia Gong, Bijan Jabbari
IEEE INFOCOM 2006
First IEEE Workshop on "Adaptive Policy-based Management in Network Management and Control"
Policy-Based Resource Management and Service Provisioning in GMPLS Networks
Session 3: A-PBM for GMPLS Unified Control Plane (Multi-Layer Networks)
Barcelona, Spain
http://www.ieee-infocom.org/a-pbm-v2.htm
April 2006
12 pages

Full text:
PDF
Abstract
Emerging network applications tend to be
built over heterogeneous network resources spanning
multiple management domains. Many such applications
have dynamic demands for dedicated, deterministic, high-
bandwidth connections. The Generalized Multi-Protocol
Label Switching (GMPLS) networks under development
can address these kinds of demands by using policy-based
resource management and service provisioning
technologies. In this paper, we present the architecture
and implementation for policy-based resource
management and service provisioning as part of the work
on the NSF funded Dynamic Resource Allocation via
GMPLS Optical Networks (DRAGON) Project. This work
captures several critical features of service-oriented
GMPLS networks, including a) collaborative interdomain
resource management; b) interdomain end-to-end path
computation; c) advance scheduled provisioning; and d)
Authentication, Authorization and Accounting (AAA).
These features rely on the capability of exchanging and
coordinating resource and policy information among
multiple participating domains. In pursuit of this
capability, we propose a three-dimensional (3D) Resource
Computation Model (RCM). The three broad dimensions
of this model are Traffic Engineering (TE) constraints,
time schedule constraints, and AAA policy constraints.
The 3D RCM facilitates policy based resource allocation
based on many specific constraints within these three
broad categories. Based on this model we describe our
approach to GMPLS interdomain end-to-end path
computation, advance scheduled provisioning, and AAA
policy based provisioning, respectively. Our current
DRAGON implementation status is also reported in this
paper.
See Also