9 research outputs found
Completion Time Reduction in Instantly Decodable Network Coding Through Decoding Delay Control
For several years, the completion time and decoding delay problems in
Instantly Decodable Network Coding (IDNC) were considered separately and were
thought to completely act against each other. Recently, some works aimed to
balance the effects of these two important IDNC metrics but none of them
studied a further optimization of one by controlling the other. In this paper,
we study the effect of controlling the decoding delay to reduce the completion
time below its currently best known solution. We first derive the
decoding-delay-dependent expressions of the users' and overall completion
times. Although using such expressions to find the optimal overall completion
time is NP-hard, we design a novel heuristic that minimizes the probability of
increasing the maximum of these decoding-delay-dependent completion time
expressions after each transmission through a layered control of their decoding
delays. Simulation results show that this new algorithm achieves both a lower
mean completion time and mean decoding delay compared to the best known
heuristic for completion time reduction. The gap in performance becomes
significant for harsh erasure scenarios
Rate Aware Instantly Decodable Network Codes
This paper addresses the problem of reducing the delivery time of data
messages to cellular users using instantly decodable network coding (IDNC) with
physical-layer rate awareness. While most of the existing literature on IDNC
does not consider any physical layer complications and abstract the model as
equally slotted time for all users, this paper proposes a cross-layer scheme
that incorporates the different channel rates of the various users in the
decision process of both the transmitted message combinations and the rates
with which they are transmitted. The consideration of asymmetric rates for
receivers reflects more practical application scenarios and introduces a new
trade-off between the choice of coding combinations for various receivers and
the broadcasting rate for achieving shorter completion time. The completion
time minimization problem in such scenario is first shown to be intractable.
The problem is, thus, approximated by reducing, at each transmission, the
increase of an anticipated version of the completion time. The paper solves the
problem by formulating it as a maximum weight clique problem over a newly
designed rate aware IDNC (RA-IDNC) graph. The highest weight clique in the
created graph being potentially not unique, the paper further suggests a
multi-layer version of the proposed solution to improve the obtained results
from the employed completion time approximation. Simulation results indicate
that the cross-layer design largely outperforms the uncoded transmissions
strategies and the classical IDNC scheme
Instantly decodable network coding for real-time device-to-device communications
This paper studies the delay reduction problem for instantly decodable network coding (IDNC)-based device-to-device (D2D) communication-enabled networks. Unlike conventional point-to-multipoint (PMP) systems in which the wireless base station has the sufficient computation abilities, D2D networks rely on battery-powered operations of the devices. Therefore, a particular emphasis on the computation complexity needs to be addressed in the design of delay reduction algorithms for D2D networks. While most of the existing literature on IDNC directly extend the delay reduction PMP schemes, known to be NP-hard, to the D2D setting, this paper proposes to investigate and minimize the complexity of such algorithms for battery-powered devices. With delay minimization problems in IDNC-based systems being equivalent to a maximum weight clique problems in the IDNC graph, the presented algorithms, in this paper, can be applied to different delay aspects. This paper introduces and focuses on the reduction of the maximum value of the decoding delay as it represents the most general solution. The complexity of the solution is reduced by first proposing efficient methods for the construction, the update, and the dimension reduction of the IDNC graph. The paper, further, shows that, under particular scenarios, the problem boils down to a maximum clique problem. Due to the complexity of discovering such maximum clique, the paper presents a fast selection algorithm. Simulation results illustrate the performance of the proposed schemes and suggest that the proposed fast selection algorithm provides appreciable complexity gain as compared to the optimal selection one, with a negligible degradation in performance. In addition, they indicate that the running time of the proposed solution is close to the random selection algorithm
Instantly decodable network codes for cooperative index coding problem over general topologies
We consider a group of n wireless clients and a set of k messages. Each client initially holds a subset of messages and is interested in an arbitrary subset of messages. Each client cooperates with other clients to obtain the set of messages it wants by exchanging instantly decodable network coded (IDNC) packets. This problem setting is known as the cooperative index coding problem. Clients are assumed to be connected through an arbitrary topology. In the absence of any known algorithm to complete the exchange of packets for general network topologies, we propose a greedy algorithm to satisfy the demands of all the clients with the aim of reducing the mean completion time. Our algorithm, in a completely distributed fashion, decides which subset of clients should transmit at each round of transmission and which messages should be coded together by each transmitting client to generate an IDNC packet. The algorithm encourages transmissions which are decodable for a larger number of clients and attempts to avoid collisions. We evaluate the performance of our algorithm via numerical experiments
Instantly Decodable Network Coding: From Centralized to Device-to-Device Communications
From its introduction to its quindecennial, network coding has built a strong reputation for enhancing packet recovery and achieving maximum information flow in both wired and wireless networks. Traditional studies focused on optimizing the throughput of the system by proposing elaborate schemes able to reach the network capacity. With the shift toward distributed computing on mobile devices, performance and complexity become both critical factors that affect the efficiency of a coding strategy. Instantly decodable network coding presents itself as a new paradigm in network coding that trades off these two aspects. This paper review instantly decodable network coding schemes by identifying, categorizing, and evaluating various algorithms proposed in the literature. The first part of the manuscript investigates the conventional centralized systems, in which all decisions are carried out by a central unit, e.g., a base-station. In particular, two successful approaches known as the strict and generalized instantly decodable network are compared in terms of reliability, performance, complexity, and packet selection methodology. The second part considers the use of instantly decodable codes in a device-to-device communication network, in which devices speed up the recovery of the missing packets by exchanging network coded packets. Although the performance improvements are directly proportional to the computational complexity increases, numerous successful schemes from both the performance and complexity viewpoints are identified