4.7 Article

Monitoring and Data Analytics for Optical Networking: Benefits, Architectures, and Use Cases

Journal

IEEE NETWORK
Volume 33, Issue 6, Pages 100-108

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/MNET.2019.1800341

Keywords

Optical fiber networks; Monitoring; Adaptive optics; Optical signal processing; Optical fibers; Optical sensors; Data models

Funding

  1. European Community through the METRO-HAUL project [761727]
  2. TWINS project [TEC2017-90097]
  3. Catalan Institution for Research and Advanced Studies (ICREA)
  4. CELTIC project SENDATE-FICUS - German BMBF [16KIS0487K]

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Operators' network management continuously measures network health by collecting data from the deployed network devices; data is used mainly for performance reporting and diagnosing network problems after failures, as well as by human capacity planners to predict future traffic growth. Typically, these network management tools are generally reactive and require significant human effort and skills to operate effectively. As optical networks evolve to fulfil highly flexible connectivity and dynamicity requirements, and supporting ultra-low latency services, they must also provide reliable connectivity and increased network resource efficiency. Therefore, reactive human-based network measurement and management will be a limiting factor in the size and scale of these new networks. Future optical networks must support fully automated management, providing dynamic resource re-optimization to rapidly adapt network resources based on predicted conditions and events; identify service degradation conditions that will eventually impact connectivity and highlight critical devices and links for further inspection; and augment rapid protection schemes if a failure is predicted or detected, and facilitate resource optimization after restoration events. Applying automation techniques to network management requires both the collection of data from a variety of sources at various time frequencies, but it must also support the capability to extract knowledge and derive insight for performance monitoring, troubleshooting, and maintain network service continuity. Innovative analytics algorithms must be developed to derive meaningful input to the entities that orchestrate and control network resources; these control elements must also be capable of proactively programming the underlying optical infrastructure. In this article, we review the emerging requirements for optical network management automation, the capabilities of current optical systems, and the development and standardization status of data models and protocols to facilitate automated network monitoring. Finally, we propose an architecture to provide Monitoring and Data Analytics (MDA) capabilities, we present illustrative control loops for advanced network monitoring use cases, and the findings that validate the usefulness of MDA to provide automated optical network management.

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