48 research outputs found
A control theoretic approach to achieve proportional fairness in 802.11e EDCA WLANs
This paper considers proportional fairness amongst ACs in an EDCA WLAN for
provision of distinct QoS requirements and priority parameters. A detailed
theoretical analysis is provided to derive the optimal station attempt
probability which leads to a proportional fair allocation of station
throughputs. The desirable fairness can be achieved using a centralised
adaptive control approach. This approach is based on multivariable statespace
control theory and uses the Linear Quadratic Integral (LQI) controller to
periodically update CWmin till the optimal fair point of operation. Performance
evaluation demonstrates that the control approach has high accuracy performance
and fast convergence speed for general network scenarios. To our knowledge this
might be the first time that a closed-loop control system is designed for EDCA
WLANs to achieve proportional fairness
A control theoretic approach to achieve proportional fairness in 802.11e EDCA WLANs
This paper considers proportional fairness amongst ACs in an EDCA WLAN redfor provision of distinct QoS requirements and priority parameters. A detailed theoretical analysis is provided to derive the optimal station attempt probability which leads to a proportional fair allocation of station throughputs. The desirable fairness can be achieved using a centralised adaptive
control approach. This approach is based on multivariable statespace control theory and uses the Linear Quadratic Integral
(LQI) controller to periodically update CWmin till the optimal fair point of operation. Performance evaluation demonstrates that the control approach has high accuracy performance and fast convergence speed for general network scenarios. To our knowledge this might be the first time that a closed-loop control
system is designed for EDCA WLANs to achieve proportional fairness
A Controlled Matching Game for WLANs
International audienceIn multi-rate IEEE 802.11 WLANs, the traditional user association based on the strongest received signal and the well known anomaly of the MAC protocol can lead to overloaded Access Points (APs), and poor or heterogeneous performance. Our goal is to propose an alternative game-theoretic approach for association. We model the joint resource allocation and user association as a matching game with complementarities and peer effects consisting of selfish players solely interested in their individual throughputs. Using recent game-theoretic results we first show that various resource sharing protocols actually fall in the scope of the set of stability-inducing resource allocation schemes. The game makes an extensive use of the Nash bargaining and some of its related properties that allow to control the incentives of the players. We show that the proposed mechanism can greatly improve the efficiency of 802.11 with heterogeneous nodes and reduce the negative impact of peer effects such as its MAC anomaly. The mechanism can be implemented as a virtual connectivity management layer to achieve efficient APs-user associations without modification of the MAC layer