Paper detail

Birkhoff-von-Neumann Switches with Deflection-Compensated Mechanism

Despite the high throughput and low complexity achieved by input scheduling based on Birkhoff-von-Neumann (BvN) decomposition; the performance of the BvN switch becomes less predictable when the input traffic is bursty. In this paper, we propose a deflection-compensated BvN (D-BvN) switch architecture to enhance the quasi-static scheduling based on BvN decomposition. The D-BvN switches provide capacity guarantee for virtual circuits (VCs) and deflect bursty traffic when overflow occurs. The deflection scheme is devised to offset the excessive buffer requirement of each VC when input traffic is bursty. The design of our conditional deflection mechanism is based on the fact that it is unlikely that the traffic input to VCs is all bursty at the same time; most likely some starving VCs have spare capacities when some other VCs are in the overflow state. The proposed algorithm makes full use of the spare capacities of those starving VCs to deflect the overflow traffic to other inputs and provide bandwidth for the deflected traffic to re-access the desired VC. Our analysis and simulation show that this deflection-compensated mechanism can support BvN switches to achieve close to 100% throughput of offered load even with bursty input traffic, and reduces the average end-to-end delay and delay jitter. Also, our result indicates that the packet out-of-sequence probability due to deflection of overflow traffic is negligible, thus only a small re-sequencing buffer is needed at each output port.

preprint2013arXivOpen access
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