13,122 research outputs found
Spectrum Trading: An Abstracted Bibliography
This document contains a bibliographic list of major papers on spectrum
trading and their abstracts. The aim of the list is to offer researchers
entering this field a fast panorama of the current literature. The list is
continually updated on the webpage
\url{http://www.disp.uniroma2.it/users/naldi/Ricspt.html}. Omissions and papers
suggested for inclusion may be pointed out to the authors through e-mail
(\textit{[email protected]})
Statistical Multiplexing and Traffic Shaping Games for Network Slicing
Next generation wireless architectures are expected to enable slices of
shared wireless infrastructure which are customized to specific mobile
operators/services. Given infrastructure costs and the stochastic nature of
mobile services' spatial loads, it is highly desirable to achieve efficient
statistical multiplexing amongst such slices. We study a simple dynamic
resource sharing policy which allocates a 'share' of a pool of (distributed)
resources to each slice-Share Constrained Proportionally Fair (SCPF). We give a
characterization of SCPF's performance gains over static slicing and general
processor sharing. We show that higher gains are obtained when a slice's
spatial load is more 'imbalanced' than, and/or 'orthogonal' to, the aggregate
network load, and that the overall gain across slices is positive. We then
address the associated dimensioning problem. Under SCPF, traditional network
dimensioning translates to a coupled share dimensioning problem, which
characterizes the existence of a feasible share allocation given slices'
expected loads and performance requirements. We provide a solution to robust
share dimensioning for SCPF-based network slicing. Slices may wish to
unilaterally manage their users' performance via admission control which
maximizes their carried loads subject to performance requirements. We show this
can be modeled as a 'traffic shaping' game with an achievable Nash equilibrium.
Under high loads, the equilibrium is explicitly characterized, as are the gains
in the carried load under SCPF vs. static slicing. Detailed simulations of a
wireless infrastructure supporting multiple slices with heterogeneous mobile
loads show the fidelity of our models and range of validity of our high load
equilibrium analysis
Elastic Multi-resource Network Slicing: Can Protection Lead to Improved Performance?
In order to meet the performance/privacy requirements of future
data-intensive mobile applications, e.g., self-driving cars, mobile data
analytics, and AR/VR, service providers are expected to draw on shared
storage/computation/connectivity resources at the network "edge". To be
cost-effective, a key functional requirement for such infrastructure is
enabling the sharing of heterogeneous resources amongst tenants/service
providers supporting spatially varying and dynamic user demands. This paper
proposes a resource allocation criterion, namely, Share Constrained Slicing
(SCS), for slices allocated predefined shares of the network's resources, which
extends the traditional alpha-fairness criterion, by striking a balance among
inter- and intra-slice fairness vs. overall efficiency. We show that SCS has
several desirable properties including slice-level protection, envyfreeness,
and load driven elasticity. In practice, mobile users' dynamics could make the
cost of implementing SCS high, so we discuss the feasibility of using a simpler
(dynamically) weighted max-min as a surrogate resource allocation scheme. For a
setting with stochastic loads and elastic user requirements, we establish a
sufficient condition for the stability of the associated coupled network
system. Finally, and perhaps surprisingly, we show via extensive simulations
that while SCS (and/or the surrogate weighted max-min allocation) provides
inter-slice protection, they can achieve improved job delay and/or perceived
throughput, as compared to other weighted max-min based allocation schemes
whose intra-slice weight allocation is not share-constrained, e.g., traditional
max-min or discriminatory processor sharing
A Utility-based QoS Model for Emerging Multimedia Applications
Existing network QoS models do not sufficiently reflect the challenges faced by high-throughput, always-on, inelastic multimedia applications. In this paper, a utility-based QoS model is proposed as a user layer extension to existing communication QoS models to better assess the requirements of multimedia applications and manage the QoS provisioning of multimedia flows. Network impairment utility functions are derived from user experiments and combined to application utility functions to evaluate the application quality. Simulation is used to demonstrate the validity of the proposed QoS model
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