SSTED THE SEGMENTATION AND REASSEMBLY SSCS FOR AAL 2
318 BIBLIOGRAPHY
PNNI, respectively. The last two topics are not covered in this book, but they can be found in my above-mentioned book on ATM networks.
7. B-ISDN General Network Aspects, ITU-T Recommendation I.311, March 1993. 8. B-ISDN ATM Layer Specification, ITU-T Recommendation I.361, February 1999.
9. Broadband ISDN – ATM Adaptation Layer for Constant Bit Rate Services Function- ality and Specification
, ANSI, T1S1 92–605, November 1992. 10. B-ISDN ATM Adaptation Layer Type 2 Specification, ITU-T Recommendation I.362.2,
November 1996. 11. B-ISDN ATM Adaptation Layer AAL Specification, ITU-T Recommendation I.363,
March 1993. 12. Classical IP and ARP Over ATM , IETF RFC 2225, April 1998.
13. Support for Multicast Over UNI 3.03.1 Based ATM Networks, IETF, RFC 2022. 14. Multicast Server Architectures for MARS-Based ATM Multicasting, IETF, RFC 2149.
15. Traffic Management Specification Version 4.1 , ATM Forum, March 1999. 16. Addendum to Traffic Management V4.1 for an Optional Minimum Desired Cell Rate
Indication for UBR , ATM Forum, July 2000.
17. ATM User-Network Interface UNI Signalling Specification, Version 4.0 , ATM Forum, July 1996.
18. Broadband Integrated Services Digital Network B-ISDN – Digital Subscriber Sig- nalling System No 2 DSS 2 – User-Network Interface UNI Layer 3 Specification
for Basic CallConnection Control , ITU-T Recommendation Q.2931, 1995.
19. Broadband Integrated Services Digital Network B-ISDN – Digital Subscriber Sig- nalling System No 2 DSS 2 – User-Network Interface UNI Layer 3 Specification
for Point-to-Multipoint CallConnection Control , ITU-T Recommendation Q.2971,
October 1995. 20. Private Network-Network Interface Specification Version 1.0 PNNI 1.0, ATM Forum,
March 1996
MULTI-PROTOCOL LABEL SWITCHING CHAPTERS 6 AND 7
The specifications of the MPLS architecture can be found in References 21 to 25. Ref- erences 26 to 28 give the specifications for LDP and CR-LDP, and References 29 to
31 give the specifications of RSVP and RSVP-TE. Several other MPLS-related Internet Drafts and RFCs are available in the MPLS Working group of IETF.
21. Requirements for Traffic Engineering over MPLS , IETF RFC 2702. 22. Multiprotocol Label Switching Architecture, IETF, RFC 3031.
23. VCID Notification over ATM Link for LDP , IETF RFC 3038. 24. Use of Label Switching on Frame Relay Networks, IETF RFC 3034.
25. MPLS Support of Differentiated Services, IETF RFC 3270. 26. LDP Specification, IETF, IETF RFC 3036.
27. Applicability Statement for CR-LDP , IETF RFC 3213. 28. Constraint-Based LSP Setup Using LDP , IETF RFC 3212.
29. Resource ReSerVation Protocol RSVP, IETF RFC 2205. 30. Applicability Statement for Extensions to RSVP for LSP-Tunnels, IETF RFC 3210.
31. RSVP-TE: Extensions to RSVP for LSP Tunnels, IETF RFC 3209.
BIBLIOGRAPHY 319
WAVELENGTH ROUTING OPTICAL NETWORKS CHAPTERS 8 AND 9
The two books given in References 32 and 33 contain many good articles on optical fibers and components. Reference 34 describes ITU-T’s optical transport network, and Refer-
ence 35 describe the G.709 transport standard. Reference 36 describes several different control plane architectures for transporting IP traffic over a wavelength routing network,
and References 37 to 39 describe the GMPLS architecture. References 40 and 41 describe the CR-LDP and RSVP-TE extensions, respectively. Reference 42 describes the OIF UNI
specification. Several other MPLS related Internet Drafts and RFCs can be found in the IETF MPLS and CCAMP Working groups.
32. Optical Fiber Telecommunications IVA: Systems and Impairments, Kaminow and Li Editors, Academic Press 2002.
33. Optical Fiber Telecommunications IVB: Components, Kaminow and Li Editors, Aca- demic Press 2002.
34. Architecture of the Optical Transport Network , ITU-T G.872. 35. Network Node Interfaces for the Optical Transport Network OTN, ITU-T G.709.
36. IP over Optical Networks: A Framework , IETF RFC 3717. 37. Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching GMPLS Architecture, draft-ietf-ccamp-
gmpls-architecture-07.txt 38. GMPL Extensions for SONET and SDH Control , draft-ietf-ccamp-gmpls-sonet-sdh-
08.txt 39. Generalized MPLS-Signaling Functional Description, IETF RFC 3471.
40. Generalized MPLS-Signaling – CR-LDP Extensions, IETF RFC 3472. 41. Generalized MPLS-Signaling – RSVP-TE Extensions, IETF RFC 3473.
42. User Network Interface UNI 1.0 Signaling Specification, Optical Internetworking
Forum.
OPTICAL BURST SWITCHING CHAPTER 10
Reference 43 gives a review of the optical packet switching technique and describes different switch architectures. Reference 44 summarizes the main features of OBS, and
References 45 and 46 describe parts of the JumpStart project. OBS is an evolving tech- nology; it is important to keep current with the literature.
43. A Survey of Optical Packet Switching and Optical Burst Switching Techniques, L. Xu et al
., IEEE Magazine on Communications, Jan 2001, pp 136–142. 44. An Introduction to Optical Burst Switching, T. Battistilli and H. Perros, IEEE Optical
Communications part of the IEEE Communications Magazine, August 2003, pp S10–S15.
45. JumpStart: A Just-in-Time Signaling Architecture for WDM Burst-Switched Networks, I. Baldine et al., IEEE Magazine on Communications, Feb 2002. pp 82–89.
46. Signalling Support for Multicast and QoS Within the JumpStart WDM Burst Switching Architecture
, I. Baldine et al., Optical Networks Magazine, Vol 4, 2003, pp 68–80.
ACCESS NETWORKS CHAPTER 11
References 47 to 51 give the ITU-T specifications of ADSL, ADSL2, and ADSL2+. The DSL Forum documents listed in References 52 to 54 are also interesting to read, as well