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Traffic Engineering of Management Flows by Link Augmentations on Confluent Trees
Authors:Randeep?Bhatia  Nicole?Immorlica  Tracy?Kimbrel  Vahab?S?Mirrokni  Joseph??Naor  Baruch?Schieber
Affiliation:(1) Bell Labs, Lucent Technologies, 2A-244, 600-700 Mountain Avenue, Murray Hill, NJ 07974, USA;(2) MIT, 232 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA;(3) IBM T.J. Watson Research Center, P.O. Box 218, Yorktown Heights, NY 10598, USA;(4) Computer Science Department, Technion, Haifa, 32000, Israel
Abstract:Service providers rely on the management systems housed in their Network Operations Centers (NOCs) to remotely operate, monitor and provision their data networks. Lately there has been a tremendous increase in management traffic due to the growing complexity and size of the data networks and the services provisioned on them. Traffic engineering for management flows is essential for the smooth functioning of these networks to avoid congestion, which can result in loss of critical data such as billing records, network alarms, etc. As is the case with most intra-domain routing protocols, the management flows in many of these networks are routed on shortest paths connecting the NOC with the service provider’s POPs (points of presence). This collection of paths thus forms a “confluent” tree rooted at the gateway router connected to the NOC. The links close to the gateway router may form a bottleneck in this tree resulting in congestion. Typically this congestion is alleviated by adding layer two tunnels (virtual links) that offload the traffic from some links of this tree by routing it directly to the gateway router. The traffic engineering problem is then to minimize the number of virtual links needed for alleviating congestion. In this paper we formulate a traffic engineering problem motivated by the above mentioned applications. We show that the general versions of this problem are hard to solve. However, for some simpler cases in which the underlying network is a tree, we design efficient algorithms. In particular, we design fully polynomial-time approximate schemes (FPTAS) for different variants of this problem on trees. We use these algorithms as the basis for designing efficient heuristics for alleviating congestion in general (non-tree) service provider network topologies.
Keywords:Combinatorial optimization  Dynamic programming  Traffic engineering  Confluent flows  Network management  Management flows
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