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Link protection

Computer networking concept

Link protection

Summary

Computer networking concept

Link protection is designed to safeguard networks from failure. Failures in high-speed networks have always been a concern of utmost importance. A single fiber cut can lead to heavy losses of traffic and protection-switching techniques have been used as the key source to ensure survivability in networks. Survivability can be addressed in many layers in a network and protection can be performed at the physical layer (SONET/SDH, Optical Transport Network), Layer 2 (Ethernet, MPLS) and Layer 3 (IP).

Protection architectures like Path protection and Link protection safeguard the above-mentioned networks from different kinds of failures. In path protection, a backup path is used from the source to its destination to bypass the failure. In Link protection, the end nodes of the failed link initiate the protection. These nodes detect the fault responsible to initiate the protection mechanisms in order to detour the affected traffic from the failed link onto predetermined reserved paths. Other types of protection are channel-, segment- and p-cycle protection.

References

References

  1. (2005-02-02). "SONET/SDH Automatic Protection Switching".
  2. "Link Aggregation - LAG".
  3. (2002). "Optical Network Survivability: Protection Techniques in the WDM Layer". Photonic Network Communications.
  4. (2007). "Path Routing in Mesh Optical Networks". John Wiley and Sons, Ltd.
  5. (2010). "Optical Networks, A practical perspective". Morgan Kaufmann.
  6. (2001). "Protection and Restoration in MPLS Networks". Metaswitch Networks.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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