Optical networks constitute a fundamental building block that has enabled the success of cloud computing. Virtualization, a cornerstone of cloud computing, today is applied in the networking field: physical network infrastructure is logically partitioned into separate virtual networks, thus providing isolation between distinct virtual network operators (VNOs). Hence, the problem of virtual network mapping has arisen: how to decide which physical resources to allocate for a particular virtual network? In a cloud context, not just network connectivity is required, but also data center (DC) resources located at multiple locations, for computation and/or storage. Given the underlying anycast routing principle, the network operator has some freedom to which specific DC to allocate these resources.In this paper, we solve a resilient virtual network mapping problem that optimally decides on the mapping of both network and multi-location data center resources resiliently using anycast routing, considering time-varying traffic conditions. In terms of resilience, we consider the so-called VNO-resilience scheme, where resilience is provided in the virtual network layer. To minimize physical resource capacity requirements, we allow reuse of both network and DC resources. The failures we protect against include both network and DC resource failures: we hence allocate backup DC resources, and also account for synchronization between primary and backup DC. As optimization criteria, we not only consider resource usage minimization, but also aim to limit virtual network reconfigurations from one time period to the next. We propose a scalable column generation approach to solve the dynamic resilient virtual network mapping problem, and demonstrate it in a case study on a nationwide US backbone network.
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