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DARPA Information Survivability Conference and Exposition - Volume I
Efficient Alarm Management in Optical Networks
Washington, DC
April 22-April 24
ISBN: 0-7695-1897-4
Sava Stanic, George Washington University
Suresh Subramaniam, George Washington University
Hongsik Choi, George Washington University
Gokhan Sahin, George Washington University
Hyeong-Ah Choi, George Washington University
As the capacity of optical transport networks increases, rapid fault identification and localization become increasingly important. These problems are more challenging than in traditional electronic networks because of optical transparency. In a transparent optical network which does not regenerate optical signals, a fault may propagate to various parts of the network from the origin, and multiple alarms can be generated for a single failure. Efficient alarm management and filtering requires a careful selection and placement of network monitoring equipment. In this paper, we survey the capabilities of current optical monitoring equipment and formulate a problem of selecting monitors to be placed throughout the network. Simulation results suggest that the number of monitors and generated alarms can be significantly reduced if monitor locations are selected judiciously.
Citation:
Sava Stanic, Suresh Subramaniam, Hongsik Choi, Gokhan Sahin, Hyeong-Ah Choi, "Efficient Alarm Management in Optical Networks," discex, vol. 1, pp.252, DARPA Information Survivability Conference and Exposition - Volume I, 2003
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