Networks Europe Nov-Dec 2017 | Page 24

24 AUTOMATION Allocating capacity The only way today’s optical networks can handle unpredictable traffic demands and service level guarantees is through pre-deployment of hardware. As a result, network capacity and other infrastructure is often sitting idle and not generating revenue. With a software-defined optical network equipped with configurable optics, CSPs can dynamically allocate capacity as needed to meet business objectives and changing customer demands using existing deployed assets. In the future, networks will be simpler, with fewer layers and more automated multi-vendor, multi-domain service orchestration. New analytic capabilities will enable prob lems to be detected and addressed before they happen, avoiding service fluctuations and even outages. Additionally, machine learning will enable us to understand what the expected end-of-life wavelength fill will be for specific paths and increase capacity rates of deployed coherent optics so that CSPs can better monetise their assets. Using this new approach, unexpected service demands will be dealt with in minutes without the need for field visits. planners can use network management and planning tools to operate existing network assets more efficiently and avoid premature overbuilds. Another factor restricting agility in optical networks is that, today, these networks are planned using predicted worst-case capacity and end-of-life system scenarios. They are built assuming a static mode of operation where the capacity rate of each wavelength is fixed. If capacity is over-estimated, network providers are left with an inefficient network, paying for equipment that is sitting idle. On the flip side, if new demands arise unexpectedly, they need to go through new lengthy and costly planning and deployment cycles. It is time to challenge these traditional practices.  Why manage optical networks in a static mode when capacity depends on available system margin – a fluid variable over the life of the network? Using configurable variable bit-rate coherent optics combined with real-time link engineering tools, CSPs can safely exploit excess margin to extract more value from existing assets. Benefits include greater capacity without requiring new hardware deployments, as well as enhanced network survivability. Maintaining performance An agile and autonomous approach dramatically simplifies how optical networks are designed, built, and operated. It enables systems that can scale to meet today’s significant bandwidth demands, while being open and programmable to deliver the exact service performance required at any point in time. It looks at the network and available margin, and up-shifts coherent optical capacity that has already been deployed where there is enough margin to do so. This helps reduce the need for CSPs to ‘overbuild’ networks, which will sit idle in anticipation of future or peak demand. Through this approach, CSPs will be able to monitor and mine all available network assets, instantly respond to new bandwidth demands and allocate capacity across any path in real-time. Application programming interfaces (APIs) and standard interfaces support CSPs’ requirements for an accessible, open architecture. Automation is a key element of our increasingly- interconnect world, whether we talk about driverless cars or intelligent networks. What may sound like science fiction will eventually become a reality, and it’s time for CSPs to get their networks ready for the changing demands of the future. n www.networkseuropemagazine.com