Output-queued switch emulation by fabrics with limited memory

The output-queued (OQ) switch is often considered an ideal packet switching architecture for providing quality-of-service guarantees. Unfortunately, the high-speed memory requirements of the OQ switch prevent its use for large-scale devices. A previous result indicates that a crossbar switch fabric...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE journal on selected areas in communications 2003-05, Vol.21 (4), p.606-615
Hauptverfasser: Magill, R.B., Rohrs, C.E., Stevenson, R.L.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The output-queued (OQ) switch is often considered an ideal packet switching architecture for providing quality-of-service guarantees. Unfortunately, the high-speed memory requirements of the OQ switch prevent its use for large-scale devices. A previous result indicates that a crossbar switch fabric combined with lower speed input and output memory and two times speedup can exactly emulate an OQ switch; however, the complexity of the proposed centralized scheduling algorithms prevents scalability. This paper examines switch fabrics with limited memory and their ability to exactly emulate an OQ switch. The switch architecture of interest contains input queueing, fabric queueing, flow-control between the limited fabric buffers and the inputs, and output queueing. We present sufficient conditions that enable this combined input/fabric/output-queued switch with two times speedup to emulate a broad class of scheduling algorithms operating an OQ switch. Novel scheduling algorithms are then presented for the scalable buffered crossbar fabric. It is demonstrated that the addition of a small amount of memory at the crosspoints allows for distributed scheduling and significantly reduces scheduling complexity when compared with the memoryless crossbar fabric. We argue that a buffered crossbar system performing OQ switch emulation is feasible for OQ switch schedulers such as first-in-first-out, strict priority and earliest deadline first, and provides an attractive alternative to both crossbar switch fabrics and to the OQ switch architecture.
ISSN:0733-8716
1558-0008
DOI:10.1109/JSAC.2003.810532