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Enabling Scalable Routing in Software-Defined Networks With Deep Reinforcement Learning on Critical Nodes

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Traditional routing schemes usually use fixed models for routing policies and thus are not good at handling complicated and dynamic traffic, leading to performance degradation (e.g., poor quality of service).… Click to show full abstract

Traditional routing schemes usually use fixed models for routing policies and thus are not good at handling complicated and dynamic traffic, leading to performance degradation (e.g., poor quality of service). Emerging Deep Reinforcement Learning (DRL) coupled with Software-Defined Networking (SDN) provides new opportunities to improve network performance with automatic traffic analysis and policy generation. However, existing DRL-based routing solutions usually rely on all node information to make routing decisions for the network and hence are both hard to converge in large networks and vulnerable to topology changes. In this paper, we propose ScaleDeep, a scalable DRL-based routing scheme for SDN, which improves the routing performance and is resilient to topology changes. Essentially, ScaleDeep takes advantage of partial control on network nodes and DRL. We select a set of critical nodes from a network as driver nodes, which can simulate the entire network operation, based on the control theory. By observing the traffic variation on the driver nodes, DRL dynamically adjusts some link weights for a weighted shortest path algorithm to change the routing paths and improve the routing performance. Limiting the control on driver nodes improves the convergence ability of DRL and reduces the dependency of the DRL agent on the fixed network topology. To validate the performance of ScaleDeep, we conduct packet-level simulations on different topologies. The results show that ScaleDeep outperforms existing DRL-based schemes by reducing the average flow completion time by up to 36% and exhibiting better robustness against minor topology changes.

Keywords: drl; reinforcement learning; performance; deep reinforcement; topology; network

Journal Title: IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking
Year Published: 2022

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