Measuring and Improving Network Robustness: A Chilean Case Study
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2019Metadata
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Morales, Fernando
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Measuring and Improving Network Robustness: A Chilean Case Study
Abstract
Robustness is a desired feature for any backbone
network. As a minimum requirement to be considered robust,
a network must remain connected after any single node or link
failure, so that each node is able to communicate with all
other nodes. It turns out that some national optical backbones
do not satisfy this condition, the Chilean Internet backbone
being an example. To solve this problem, it is needed the
addition of link(s) to the network, which can usually be done
in different ways, leaving room to do that while minimizing
other metrics of interest. This letter discusses metrics to evaluate
the robustness of such networks (specifically, edge betweenness
centrality, the number of link cutsets, and node Wiener impact)
and proposes a variable neighborhood search heuristic to improve
it by adding a few well-placed links. As a case of study, results are
presented for the Chilean Internet backbone, considering three
and four extra links.
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Artículo de publicación SCOPUS
Identifier
URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/169668
DOI: 10.1109/LCOMM.2018.2879641
ISSN: 15582558
10897798
Quote Item
IEEE Communications Letters, Volumen 23, Issue 1, 2019, Pages 44-47
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