Abstract
In this paper, optical pulse encoding and decoding technology is proposed
to enable real-time signaling in a passive optical network (PON) setting.
Unique optical codes are assigned to selected optical network units (ONUs)
equipped with the corresponding encoders. An out-of-band pulse train is
broadcast from the optical line terminal (OLT) and is modulated by ONU-based
switches. The encoded reflections of pulses are thus used to update the
status of the OC-enabled queues at the OLT in real time. We explore the
enhanced PON architecture and define its major design parameters. Through
extensive simulations, we investigate the design principles and limits of
our system parameters. Through a performance comparison of native
interleaved polling with adaptive cycle time with its OC-enhanced
counterpart, we show that our OC enhancement breaks the fundamental delay
lower bound associated to the polling cycle. We propose and investigate new
dynamic bandwidth allocation (DBA) algorithms that exploit real-time queue
updates enabled through OC-enhanced polling. We also explore the
pay-as-you-grow implementation of OC-enhanced polling to realize
quality-of-service (QoS) differentiation, elaborate on possible migration
paths from conventional PONs, and investigate absolute QoS performance
guarantee improvements achieved through OC-enabled real-time DBA
algorithms.
© 2009 IEEE
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