1,183 research outputs found
PACE: Simple Multi-hop Scheduling for Single-radio 802.11-based Stub Wireless Mesh Networks
IEEE 802.11-based Stub Wireless Mesh Networks (WMNs) are a cost-effective and flexible solution to extend wired network infrastructures. Yet, they suffer from two major problems: inefficiency and unfairness. A number of approaches have been proposed to tackle these problems, but they are too restrictive, highly complex, or require time synchronization and modifications to the IEEE 802.11 MAC.
PACE is a simple multi-hop scheduling mechanism for Stub WMNs overlaid on the IEEE 802.11 MAC that jointly addresses the inefficiency and unfairness problems. It limits transmissions to a single mesh node at each time and ensures that each node has the opportunity to transmit a packet in each network-wide transmission round. Simulation results demonstrate that PACE can achieve optimal network capacity utilization and greatly outperforms state of the art CSMA/CA-based solutions as far as goodput, delay, and fairness are concerned
Max-min Fairness in 802.11 Mesh Networks
In this paper we build upon the recent observation that the 802.11 rate
region is log-convex and, for the first time, characterise max-min fair rate
allocations for a large class of 802.11 wireless mesh networks. By exploiting
features of the 802.11e/n MAC, in particular TXOP packet bursting, we are able
to use this characterisation to establish a straightforward, practically
implementable approach for achieving max-min throughput fairness. We
demonstrate that this approach can be readily extended to encompass time-based
fairness in multi-rate 802.11 mesh networks
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
TCP-Aware Backpressure Routing and Scheduling
In this work, we explore the performance of backpressure routing and
scheduling for TCP flows over wireless networks. TCP and backpressure are not
compatible due to a mismatch between the congestion control mechanism of TCP
and the queue size based routing and scheduling of the backpressure framework.
We propose a TCP-aware backpressure routing and scheduling that takes into
account the behavior of TCP flows. TCP-aware backpressure (i) provides
throughput optimality guarantees in the Lyapunov optimization framework, (ii)
gracefully combines TCP and backpressure without making any changes to the TCP
protocol, (iii) improves the throughput of TCP flows significantly, and (iv)
provides fairness across competing TCP flows
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