6,478 research outputs found
Erasure Correction for Noisy Radio Networks
The radio network model is a well-studied model of wireless, multi-hop networks. However, radio networks make the strong assumption that messages are delivered deterministically. The recently introduced noisy radio network model relaxes this assumption by dropping messages independently at random.
In this work we quantify the relative computational power of noisy radio networks and classic radio networks. In particular, given a non-adaptive protocol for a fixed radio network we show how to reliably simulate this protocol if noise is introduced with a multiplicative cost of poly(log Delta, log log n) rounds where n is the number nodes in the network and Delta is the max degree. Moreover, we demonstrate that, even if the simulated protocol is not non-adaptive, it can be simulated with a multiplicative O(Delta log ^2 Delta) cost in the number of rounds. Lastly, we argue that simulations with a multiplicative overhead of o(log Delta) are unlikely to exist by proving that an Omega(log Delta) multiplicative round overhead is necessary under certain natural assumptions
Fault-Tolerant Consensus with an Abstract MAC Layer
In this paper, we study fault-tolerant distributed consensus in wireless systems. In more detail, we produce two new randomized algorithms that solve this problem in the abstract MAC layer model, which captures the basic interface and communication guarantees provided by most wireless MAC layers. Our algorithms work for any number of failures, require no advance knowledge of the network participants or network size, and guarantee termination with high probability after a number of broadcasts that are polynomial in the network size. Our first algorithm satisfies the standard agreement property, while our second trades a faster termination guarantee in exchange for a looser agreement property in which most nodes agree on the same value. These are the first known fault-tolerant consensus algorithms for this model. In addition to our main upper bound results, we explore the gap between the abstract MAC layer and the standard asynchronous message passing model by proving fault-tolerant consensus is impossible in the latter in the absence of information regarding the network participants, even if we assume no faults, allow randomized solutions, and provide the algorithm a constant-factor approximation of the network size
Fault-Tolerant Aggregation: Flow-Updating Meets Mass-Distribution
Flow-Updating (FU) is a fault-tolerant technique that has proved to be
efficient in practice for the distributed computation of aggregate functions in
communication networks where individual processors do not have access to global
information. Previous distributed aggregation protocols, based on repeated
sharing of input values (or mass) among processors, sometimes called
Mass-Distribution (MD) protocols, are not resilient to communication failures
(or message loss) because such failures yield a loss of mass. In this paper, we
present a protocol which we call Mass-Distribution with Flow-Updating (MDFU).
We obtain MDFU by applying FU techniques to classic MD. We analyze the
convergence time of MDFU showing that stochastic message loss produces low
overhead. This is the first convergence proof of an FU-based algorithm. We
evaluate MDFU experimentally, comparing it with previous MD and FU protocols,
and verifying the behavior predicted by the analysis. Finally, given that MDFU
incurs a fixed deviation proportional to the message-loss rate, we adjust the
accuracy of MDFU heuristically in a new protocol called MDFU with Linear
Prediction (MDFU-LP). The evaluation shows that both MDFU and MDFU-LP behave
very well in practice, even under high rates of message loss and even changing
the input values dynamically.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures, To appear in OPODIS 201
Adoption of vehicular ad hoc networking protocols by networked robots
This paper focuses on the utilization of wireless networking in the robotics domain. Many researchers have already equipped their robots with wireless communication capabilities, stimulated by the observation that multi-robot systems tend to have several advantages over their single-robot counterparts. Typically, this integration of wireless communication is tackled in a quite pragmatic manner, only a few authors presented novel Robotic Ad Hoc Network (RANET) protocols that were designed specifically with robotic use cases in mind. This is in sharp contrast with the domain of vehicular ad hoc networks (VANET). This observation is the starting point of this paper. If the results of previous efforts focusing on VANET protocols could be reused in the RANET domain, this could lead to rapid progress in the field of networked robots. To investigate this possibility, this paper provides a thorough overview of the related work in the domain of robotic and vehicular ad hoc networks. Based on this information, an exhaustive list of requirements is defined for both types. It is concluded that the most significant difference lies in the fact that VANET protocols are oriented towards low throughput messaging, while RANET protocols have to support high throughput media streaming as well. Although not always with equal importance, all other defined requirements are valid for both protocols. This leads to the conclusion that cross-fertilization between them is an appealing approach for future RANET research. To support such developments, this paper concludes with the definition of an appropriate working plan
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