On the Mathematics of Data Centre Network Topologies
Iain A. Stewart

TL;DR
This paper extends combinatorial design-based methods for constructing data centre networks, demonstrating optimal path diversity and flexibility, thereby enhancing the competitiveness of these networks compared to Fat-Tree architectures.
Contribution
It provides new path diversity results for 3-step constructed networks, showing optimal link-disjoint paths and flexibility in network design using combinatorial structures.
Findings
Proves optimal link-disjoint paths in data centre networks
Shows flexibility in choosing bipartite graphs and designs
Strengthens the competitiveness of combinatorial design-based networks
Abstract
The theory of combinatorial designs has recently been used in order to build switch-centric data centre networks incorporating a large number of servers, in comparison with the popular Fat-Tree data centre network. The construction employed, called the 3-step method, revolves around an appropriately chosen (but relatively small) bipartite graph and a transversal design. In this paper, we clarify and extend these recent results. In particular, we prove the following path diversity results: in a one-to-one context, we prove that in these data centre networks there are pairwise link-disjoint paths joining all the servers adjacent to some switch with all the servers adjacent to any other switch so that we retain control of the path lengths (these results are optimal in terms of the numbers of paths constructed and we prove that we have a wide choice of bipartite graph and transversal design…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInterconnection Networks and Systems · Advanced Optical Network Technologies · Software-Defined Networks and 5G
