NETWORKS
US Patent #7,986,713 Issued for Realtime Adaptive Bandwidth Network Physical Layer Connectivity
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- Category: NETWORKS
Optimum Communications Services has gained a patent enabling bandwidth of physical layer connections of communications networks to be continuously optimized according to realtime data traffic load variations.
Need for innovation such as this US Patent #7,986,713 is broadly recognized in the industry. Standard developments including Hitless Adjustment of ODUflex (G.HAO) and Link Capacity Adjustment Scheme (LCAS) underscore market demand for resizable network physical layer connectivity, particularly for variable bit rate packet services. These network physical layer techniques are promising for high-performance, secure packet based communications services, since they avoid the costs, complexities, security concerns and performance drawbacks (e.g. unpredictable latencies) that arise when switching traffic at packet layers. A critical remaining challenge for the physical layer optimization techniques is to reach the statistical multiplexing bandwidth efficiency of packet switching.
However, the conventional techniques for adjustable bandwidth network physical layer connectivity fail in this critical aspect: conventional systems for adjusting the bandwidth rates operate at orders of magnitude slower pace than what is required in order to deliver the business value of rightsized network connections. To see why, it needs to be realized that network data bursts arrive in sizes of individual data packets, ranging typically from 64 bytes through thousands of bytes, and lasting for as short time as less than a microsecond. To keep the physical layer connection capacities optimized according to these packet data bursts, the control loop for adjusting the connection bandwidths needs to operate at the same time and bandwidth granularity as is the case with these data bursts to be accommodated. The conventional techniques however operate at completely different granularity, e.g. allocating full 1/10Gbps links for periods measured unavoidably in several seconds due to the delays of traditional, server software based, control systems. As such, though the bandwidth should be adjusted at microsecond timescale in minimum packet size units such as 100 bytes or less, conventional systems are limited to allocating bandwidth in amounts measured in several Gbits -- at millions of times too coarse granularity.
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