Article ID: | iaor1992981 |
Country: | Switzerland |
Volume: | 33 |
Start Page Number: | 17 |
End Page Number: | 71 |
Publication Date: | Mar 1991 |
Journal: | Annals of Operations Research |
Authors: | Gavish Bezalel |
Keywords: | networks: flow |
Computer communication networks and telecommunication systems are growing at an explosive rate. Some of the major factors influencing this phenomenal growth rate have been technology driven, deregulation of the telecommunication industry and the breakup of AT&T, product and service introductions and competition, new application areas, price reductions and improved services. Corporations have discovered how to use telecommunication-based systems and computer networks as a strategic competitive weapon. Modern computer networks consist of backbone networks which serve as major highways to transfer large volumes of communication traffic, and local access networks which feed traffic between the backbone network and end user nodes. The design of the local access network is a complex process which builds on many difficult combinatorial optimization problems. This paper surveys many of the problems, presents the state of the art in solving them, and demonstrates a variety of solution procedures. The paper concludes with a list of open problems and areas open for further investigation.