24,361 research outputs found
Radio resource allocation for multicarrier-low density spreading multiple access
Multicarrier-low density spreading multiple access (MC-LDSMA) is a promising multiple access technique that enables near optimum multiuser detection. In MC-LDSMA, each user’s symbol spread on a small set of subcarriers, and each subcarrier is shared by multiple users. The unique structure of MC-LDSMA makes the radio resource allocation more challenging comparing to some well-known multiple access techniques. In this paper, we study the radio resource allocation for single-cell MC-LDSMA system. Firstly, we consider the single-user case, and derive the optimal power allocation and subcarriers partitioning schemes. Then, by capitalizing on the optimal power allocation of the Gaussian multiple access channel, we provide an optimal solution for MC-LDSMA that maximizes the users’ weighted sum-rate under relaxed constraints. Due to the prohibitive complexity of the optimal solution, suboptimal algorithms are proposed based on the guidelines inferred by the optimal solution. The performance of the proposed algorithms and the effect of subcarrier loading and spreading are evaluated through Monte Carlo simulations. Numerical results show that the proposed algorithms significantly outperform conventional static resource allocation, and MC-LDSMA can improve the system performance in terms of spectral efficiency and fairness in comparison with OFDMA
GoFFish: A Sub-Graph Centric Framework for Large-Scale Graph Analytics
Large scale graph processing is a major research area for Big Data
exploration. Vertex centric programming models like Pregel are gaining traction
due to their simple abstraction that allows for scalable execution on
distributed systems naturally. However, there are limitations to this approach
which cause vertex centric algorithms to under-perform due to poor compute to
communication overhead ratio and slow convergence of iterative superstep. In
this paper we introduce GoFFish a scalable sub-graph centric framework
co-designed with a distributed persistent graph storage for large scale graph
analytics on commodity clusters. We introduce a sub-graph centric programming
abstraction that combines the scalability of a vertex centric approach with the
flexibility of shared memory sub-graph computation. We map Connected
Components, SSSP and PageRank algorithms to this model to illustrate its
flexibility. Further, we empirically analyze GoFFish using several real world
graphs and demonstrate its significant performance improvement, orders of
magnitude in some cases, compared to Apache Giraph, the leading open source
vertex centric implementation.Comment: Under review by a conference, 201
Partitioning problems in parallel, pipelined and distributed computing
The problem of optimally assigning the modules of a parallel program over the processors of a multiple computer system is addressed. A Sum-Bottleneck path algorithm is developed that permits the efficient solution of many variants of this problem under some constraints on the structure of the partitions. In particular, the following problems are solved optimally for a single-host, multiple satellite system: partitioning multiple chain structured parallel programs, multiple arbitrarily structured serial programs and single tree structured parallel programs. In addition, the problems of partitioning chain structured parallel programs across chain connected systems and across shared memory (or shared bus) systems are also solved under certain constraints. All solutions for parallel programs are equally applicable to pipelined programs. These results extend prior research in this area by explicitly taking concurrency into account and permit the efficient utilization of multiple computer architectures for a wide range of problems of practical interest
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