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Featured researches published by Reza Nejabati.


IEEE Communications Magazine | 2006

A view on enabling-consumer oriented grids through optical burst switching

M. De Leenheer; Pieter Thysebaert; Bruno Volckaert; F. De Turck; Bart Dhoedt; Piet Demeester; Dimitra Simeonidou; Reza Nejabati; Georgios Zervas; D. Klonidis; Mike O'Mahony

As grid computing continues to gain popularity in the research community, it also attracts more attention from the enterprise and consumer levels. Applications in these domains generate large amounts of jobs, with individual jobs having only modest resource requirements. In this article, a novel architecture to realize a highly scalable and flexible platform for consumer-oriented grids is proposed. The architecture is based on an optical burst switched network, complemented with an advanced control and signaling plane. The architecture, functionality, and interfaces of all the relevant entities are presented and issues, current initiatives, and future directions for the control and management of these grid networks are discussed.


IEEE\/OSA Journal of Optical Communications and Networking | 2009

Multi-Granular Optical Cross-Connect: Design, Analysis, and Demonstration

Georgios Zervas; M. De Leenheer; Lida Sadeghioon; D. Klonidis; Yixuan Qin; Reza Nejabati; Dimitra Simeonidou; Chris Develder; Bart Dhoedt; Piet Demeester

A fundamental issue in all-optical switching is to offer efficient and cost-effective transport services for a wide range of bandwidth granularities. This paper presents multi-granular optical cross-connect (MG-OXC) architectures that combine slow (ms regime) and fast (ns regime) switch elements, in order to support optical circuit switching (OCS), optical burst switching (OBS), and even optical packet switching (OPS). The MG-OXC architectures are designed to provide a cost-effective approach, while offering the flexibility and reconfigurability to deal with dynamic requirements of different applications. All proposed MG-OXC designs are analyzed and compared in terms of dimensionality, flexibility/reconfigurability, and scalability. Furthermore, node level simulations are conducted to evaluate the performance of MG-OXCs under different traffic regimes. Finally, the feasibility of the proposed architectures is demonstrated on an application-aware, multi-bit-rate (10 and 40 Gbps), end-to-end OBS testbed.


conference on computer communications workshops | 2011

Energy Efficiency in integrated IT and optical network infrastructures: The GEYSERS approach

Anna Tzanakaki; Markos P. Anastasopoulos; Konstantinos Georgakilas; Jens Buysse; Marc De Leenheer; Chris Develder; Shuping Peng; Reza Nejabati; Eduard Escalona; Dimitra Simeonidou; Nicola Ciulli; Giada Landi; Marc Brogle; Alessandro Manfredi; Ester López; Jordi Ferrer Riera; Joan A. Garcia-Espin; Pasquale Donadio; Giorgio Parladori; Javier Jiménez

In this paper we propose energy efficient design and operation of infrastructures incorporating integrated optical network and IT resources. For the first time we quantify significant energy savings of a complete solution jointly optimizing the allocation and provisioning of both network and IT resources. Our approach involves virtualization of the infrastructure resources and it is proposed and developed in the framework of the European project GEYSERS - Generalised Architecture for Dynamic Infrastructure Services.


IEEE Communications Magazine | 2009

A dynamic impairment-aware networking solution for transparent mesh optical networks

Siamak Azodolmolky; D. Klonidis; Ioannis Tomkos; Yabin Ye; Chava Vijaya Saradhi; Elio Salvadori; Matthias Gunkel; D. Telekom; Konstantinos Manousakis; Kyriakos Vlachos; Emmanouel A. Varvarigos; Reza Nejabati; Dimitra Simeonidou; Michael Eiselt; Jaume Comellas; Josep Solé-Pareta; C. Simonneau; D. Bayart; Dimitri Staessens; Didier Colle; Mario Pickavet

Core networks of the future will have a translucent and eventually transparent optical structure. Ultra-high-speed end-to-end connectivity with high quality of service and high reliability will be realized through the exploitation of optimized protocols and lightpath routing algorithms. These algorithms will complement a flexible control and management plane integrated in the proposed solution. Physical layer impairments and optical performance are monitored and incorporated in impairment-aware lightpath routing algorithms. These algorithms will be integrated into a novel dynamic network planning tool that will consider dynamic traffic characteristics, a reconfigurable optical layer, and varying physical impairment and component characteristics. The network planning tool along with extended control planes will make it possible to realize the vision of optical transparency. This article presents a novel framework that addresses dynamic cross-layer network planning and optimization while considering the development of a future transport network infrastructure.


Future Internet | 2011

Bringing optical networks to the cloud: an architecture for a sustainable future internet

Pascale Vicat-Blanc; Sergi Figuerola; Xiaomin Chen; Giada Landi; Eduard Escalona; Chris Develder; Anna Tzanakaki; Yuri Demchenko; Joan Antoni Garcia Espin; Jordi Ferrer; Ester López; Sébastien Soudan; Jens Buysse; Admela Jukan; Nicola Ciulli; Marc Brogle; Luuk van Laarhoven; Bartosz Belter; Fabienne Anhalt; Reza Nejabati; Dimitra Simeonidou; Canh Ngo; Cees de Laat; Matteo Biancani; Michael Roth; Pasquale Donadio; Javier Jiménez; Monika Antoniak-Lewandowska; Ashwin Gumaste

Over the years, the Internet has become a central tool for society. The extent of its growth and usage raises critical issues associated with its design principles that need to be addressed before it reaches its limits. Many emerging applications have increasing requirements in terms of bandwidth, QoS and manageability. Moreover, applications such as Cloud computing and 3D-video streaming require optimization and combined provisioning of different infrastructure resources and services that include both network and IT resources. Demands become more and more sporadic and variable, making dynamic provisioning highly needed. As a huge energy consumer, the Internet also needs to be energyconscious. Applications critical for society and business (e.g., health, finance) or for real-time communication demand a highly reliable, robust and secure Internet. Finally, the future Internet needs to support sustainable business models, in order to drive innovation, competition, and research. Combining optical network technology with Cloud technology is key to addressing the future Internet/Cloud challenges. In this context, we propose an integrated approach: realizing the convergence of the IT- and optical-network-provisioning models will help bring revenues to all the actors involved in the value chain. Premium advanced network and IT managed services integrated with the vanilla Internet will ensure a sustainable future Internet/Cloud enabling demanding and ubiquitous applications to coexist.


broadband communications, networks and systems | 2009

Programmable multi-granular optical networks: requirements and architecture

Georgios Zervas; Reza Nejabati; Dimitra Simeonidou; Carla Raffaelli; Michele Savi; Chris Develder; Marc De Leenheer; Didier Colle; Nicola Ciulli; Gino Carrozzo; Marco Schiano

This paper presents a programmable multi-granular optical cross connect (MG-OXC) and network architecture deployable in multi-service and multi-provider networks. The concept of programmable MG-OXC is introduced to provide a way of utilizing multiple switching/transport granularities to efficiently support the emerging traffic demands in both core and metro networks. For this reason, the supported bandwidth granularities include full lambdas, sub- and super-lambdas and multiple transport formats such as bursts, flows and packets. The programmability is envisaged by a software/hardware platform that simplifies network control, re-planning at the logical level and end-to-end service transparency, by translating the technology-specific information to technology independent services in an abstracted and logical manner.


In: Enabling Optical Internet with Advanced Network Technologies. (pp. 87-130). Springer London (2009) | 2009

Optical Burst Switching

José Alberto Hernández; Victor Lopez; José Luis García Dorado; Reza Nejabati; Harald Øverby; Ahmad Rostami; Kyriakos Vlachos; Georgios Zervas

An all-OPS network architecture displays a very attractive prospect for the future highly flexible optical transport networks. However, due to a variety of technical challenges, there is still a long way to go to accomplish a mature realization of an OPS network that is ready for practical deployments. Optoelectronic packet switching alleviates the implementation difficult to some degree, but a series of technical innovations is still needed in optical signal processing concerning timing and synchronization. In general, OPS is regarded as the long-term solution for high speed optical networks but, in the meanwhile, more feasible network architectures are desired for the efficient transport of highly dynamic and bursty data traffic. This is the case of optical burst switching (OBS).


Enabling optical internet with advanced network technologies | 2009

Advanced Optical Burst Switched Network Concepts

Reza Nejabati; Javier Aracil; Piero Castoldi; Marc De Leenheer; Dimitra Simeonidou; Luca Valcarenghi; Georgios Zervas; Jian Wu

In recent years, as the bandwidth and the speed of networks have increased significantly, a new generation of network-based applications using the concept of distributed computing and collaborative services is emerging (e.g., Grid computing applications). The use of the available fiber and DWDM infrastructure for these applications is a logical choice offering huge amounts of cheap bandwidth and ensuring global reach of computing resources [230]. Currently, there is a great deal of interest in deploying optical circuit (wavelength) switched network infrastructure for distributed computing applications that require long-lived wavelength paths and address the specific needs of a small number of well-known users. Typical users are particle physicists who, due to their international collaborations and experiments, generate enormous amounts of data (Petabytes per year). These users require a network infrastructures that can support processing and analysis of large datasets through globally distributed computing resources [230]. However, providing wavelength granularity bandwidth services is not an efficient and scalable solution for applications and services that address a wider base of user communities with different traffic profiles and connectivity requirements. Examples of such applications may be: scientific collaboration in smaller scale (e.g., bioinformatics, environmental research), distributed virtual laboratories (e.g., remote instrumentation), e-health, national security and defense, personalized learning environments and digital libraries, evolving broadband user services (i.e., high resolution home video editing, real-time rendering, high definition interactive TV). As a specific example, in e-health services and in particular mammography applications due to the size and quantity of images produced by remote mammography, stringent network requirements are necessary. Initial calculations have shown that for 100 patients to be screened remotely, the network would have to securely transport 1.2 GB of data every 30 s [230]. According to the above explanation it is clear that these types of applications need a new network infrastructure and transport technology that makes large amounts of bandwidth at subwavelength granularity, storage, computation, and visualization resources potentially available to a wide user base for specified time durations. As these types of collaborative and network-based applications evolve addressing a wide range and large number of users, it is infeasible to build dedicated networks for each application type or category. Consequently, there should be an adaptive network infrastructure able to support all application types, each with their own access, network, and resource usage patterns. This infrastructure should offer flexible and intelligent network elements and control mechanism able to deploy new applications quickly and efficiently.


future network & mobile summit | 2011

GEYSERS: A novel architecture for virtualization and co-provisioning of dynamic optical networks and IT services

Eduard Escalona; Shuping Peng; Reza Nejabati; Dimitra Simeonidou; Joan A. Garcia-Espin; Jordi Ferrer; Sergi Figuerola; Giada Landi; Nicola Ciulli; Javier Jiménez; Bartosz Belter; Yuri Demechenko; Cees de Laat; Xiaomin Chen; Admela Yukan; Sébastien Soudan; Pascale Vicat-Blanc; Jens Buysse; Marc De Leenheer; Chris Develder; Anna Tzanakaki; Philip Robinson; Marc Brogle; T. Michael Bohnert


Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering | 2011

Euro-FOS : towards a pan-european laboratory for lightwave communications

Christos Kouloumentas; Dimitrios Klonidis; Colja Schubert; Reza Nejabati; Jose A. Lazaro; Didier Erasme; Marco Forzati; Eduward Tangdiongga; Per Olof Hedekvist; Juerg Leuthold; Andrea Carena; Bob Manning; Claudio Porzi; Pere Perez Millan; Xing-Zhi Qiu; A. Teixeira; Jorge Seoane; Hercules Avramopoulos

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Georgios Zervas

University College London

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