4.5 Article

Enumerating Maximal Shared Risk Link Groups of Circular Disk Failures Hitting k Nodes

Journal

IEEE-ACM TRANSACTIONS ON NETWORKING
Volume 29, Issue 4, Pages 1648-1661

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TNET.2021.3070100

Keywords

Shared Risk Link Groups (SRLGs); SRLG enumeration; disaster resilience; survivable networks; limited geometric information model; Voronoi diagrams

Funding

  1. Resilient communication services protecting end-user applications from disaster-based failures-RECODIS through the COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology) [CA15127]
  2. BME Artificial Intelligence TKP2020 IE grant of NKFIH Hungary [BME IE-MI-SC TKP2020]
  3. National Research, Development and Innovation Office [NKFI-115288]
  4. National Research, Development and Innovation Fund of Hungary [124171, 128062, 134604, 135606]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The paper proposed a limited geographic information failure model, which allows for the design of an algorithm that can efficiently compute the set of links that are expected to be close in a network. Under realistic assumptions, the obtained list of SRLGs is short, with approximately 1.2n and 2.2n elements for k = 0 and k = 1, respectively.
Many recent studies shed light on the vulnerability of networks against large-scale natural disasters. The corresponding network failures, called regional failures, are manifested at failing multiple network elements that are physically close to each other. The recovery mechanisms of current backbone networks protect failures listed as Shared Risk Link Groups (SRLGs). We aim to design an algorithm for the routing engines, which can generate a reasonable list of SRLGs based on the limited geometric information available. As a first step towards this direction, in this paper, we propose a limited geographic information failure model for the network topology that enables efficient algorithms to compute the set of links that are expected to be close to each other. More precisely, we work with (1) relative node positions without knowing the real distances, (2) an area in the map defines the route of each physical cable, and (3) a regional failure is a circular disk with k = 0, 1,... nodes in its interior. We describe an efficient algorithm for listing SRLGs based on our limited geographic information failure model and show that under realistic assumptions, the obtained list of SRLGs is short, having approximately 1.2 n and 2.2n elements for k = 0 and k = 1, respectively, where n is the number of nodes of the network.

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