Dimensioning Models of Shared Resources in Optical Packet Switching Architectures
QoS-IP 2003 Proceedings of the Second International Workshop on Quality of Service in Multiservice IP Networks
Survivability in IP-over-WDM networks
IP Over WDM
TCP and UDP performance for internet over optical packet-switched networks
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking
A High Speed Network Interface Card for Optical Burst Switched Networks
BROADNETS '04 Proceedings of the First International Conference on Broadband Networks
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking
Distribution-based bandwidth access scheme in slotted all-optical packet-switched networks
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking
Towards Digital Optical Networks
Scheduling algorithms in optical packet switches with input wavelength conversion
Computer Communications
A flexible contention resolution scheme for QoS provisioning in optical burst switching networks
Computer Communications
2×2 Bismuth-oxide-fiber based crossbar switch for all-optical switching architectures
ONDM'07 Proceedings of the 11th international IFIP TC6 conference on Optical network design and modeling
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking
Optical metropolitan networks: packet format, MAC protocols and quality of service
Network performance engineering
A novel scheme to reduce burst-loss and provide qos in optical burst switching networks
HiPC'04 Proceedings of the 11th international conference on High Performance Computing
Optical Switching and Networking
A performance comparison of OPS with variable-size packets and OBS
Optical Switching and Networking
Wavelength-reuse in optical time-slotted networks
Optical Switching and Networking
Towards optical packet switched MANs: Design issues and tradeoffs
Optical Switching and Networking
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The fast evolution of networks has been continuously driven by new advances in enabling technologies, as well as the growth of Internet traffic. All-optical packet switching provides high throughput, rich routing functionalities, and excellent flexibility. These characteristics make it an excellent candidate for next-generation metropolitan area networks, which will be much more dynamic and demanding than today's networks. In this article we not only discuss some of the architectural challenges involved in the design of all-optical packet switched networks, but also present the reader a high-level picture of how such future networks could be integrated with other network segments, to provide users end-to-end connectivity with performance and simplicity