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QOS in Passive Optical Networks Ali Razmkhah Akbar Ghaffarpour Rahbar Computer Networks Research Lab, Sahand University of Technology Dec. 2010. Agenda. Introduction QOS methods Other issues Simulation Conclusion. Introduction. Ethernet PONs provide high bandwidth Ethernet.
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QOS in Passive Optical Networks Ali Razmkhah Akbar GhaffarpourRahbar Computer Networks Research Lab, Sahand University of Technology Dec. 2010
Agenda • Introduction • QOS methods • Other issues • Simulation • Conclusion
Introduction • Ethernet PONs provide high bandwidth Ethernet. • As a full service access network, the PON should support communications with diverse QOS requirements, i.e., VBR and CBR traffic, gaming, video conferencing, etc. • QOS is provided by the way of bandwidth allocation • The length of cycle • The size of transmission window • The order of scheduling
QOS methods – Priority Queues • Priority Queues • A useful and relatively simple method for supporting differentiated service classes • Network traffic is classified into a set of classes with diverse QOS requirements • Each ONU can maintain up to 8 queues for different classes of QOS • Typical priority classes: • Best effort(EF), lowest priority • Assured forwarding(AF), medium priority, bursty • Guaranteed forwarding(GF), highest priority, CBR traffic
QOS methods – Priority Queues • Strict priority scheduling • lower-priority queue is scheduled only if all queues with higher priority are empty • Non-strict priority scheduling • packets that were reported are transmitted first as long as they can be transmitted within the allocated time slot
QOS methods – Assi • Assi method • In Assi method, each ONU assigned a weight w based on SLA agreement. ∑ w = 1 • Minimum bandwidth for each ONU at peak times is computed by Eq.1 (( (1) • Then excess bandwidth calculated by Eq.2 (2)
QOS methods – Assi • Excessive bandwidth can be distributed among the heavyloaded ONUs
QOS methods – IPACT-GE • Report message used by an ONU to demand bandwidth • OLT grants each ONU by Gate message • IPACT-GE estimates the amount of new packets arriving between two consecutive pollings, and grants to the ONU the additional estimated size besides the ONU’s requested size in the previous cycle • Arrival rate can be obtained for the n-th cycle by
QOS methods – IPACT-GE • The ONU reports estimated amount E(n+1) to the OLT, together with the instant buffer length at the n-th cycle R(n) • The OLT decides the grant size for the (n+1)-th cycle
Other Issues – ONU assignment • Multiple granting schemes were studied and designed • Fixed granting, fixed size window without considering what size requested by the ONU • Gate assignment, the ONU granted whatever it has requested • limited granting, each ONU is granted minimum of the requested size and Wmax • Simulation results shows that limited scheme has the best performance! • Example • ONU buffer contains 5 packets: (1000, 1500, 800, 700, 1500) totally 5500 bytes • Wmax = 5000 bytes
Other Issues – ONU assignment • The ONU demands 5500 bytes and the OLT grants 5000 • The ONU can not transmit the last packet and transmits only 4000 bytes • 1000 bytes of the allocated window waste! • Solution • First, the OLT announces Wmaxto all ONUs • Each ONU computes what size it can upload by tacking Wmaxinto account, then reports computed size • In the previous example, the ONU reports 4000 instead of 5500 and now there is no bandwidth wasting
Other Issues – Multiple Wmax • Also limited granting scheme has the best performance, but Wmax is equal for all ONUs • Assi method is suitable for offline scheduling at peak times • Solution • Assign a weight to each ONU based on some parameters, i.e., number of LANs connected to that ONU, time of day and other statistics gathered in advance by the OLT • Instead of assigning a minimum bandwidth for each ONU at peak time, assign a different Wmaxfor each ONU
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