8,417 research outputs found
Self-stabilizing TDMA Algorithms for Wireless Ad-hoc Networks without External Reference
Time division multiple access (TDMA) is a method for sharing communication
media. In wireless communications, TDMA algorithms often divide the radio time
into timeslots of uniform size, , and then combine them into frames of
uniform size, . We consider TDMA algorithms that allocate at least one
timeslot in every frame to every node. Given a maximal node degree, ,
and no access to external references for collision detection, time or position,
we consider the problem of collision-free self-stabilizing TDMA algorithms that
use constant frame size.
We demonstrate that this problem has no solution when the frame size is , where is the chromatic number for
distance- vertex coloring. As a complement to this lower bound, we focus on
proving the existence of collision-free self-stabilizing TDMA algorithms that
use constant frame size of . We consider basic settings (no hardware
support for collision detection and no prior clock synchronization), and the
collision of concurrent transmissions from transmitters that are at most two
hops apart. In the context of self-stabilizing systems that have no external
reference, we are the first to study this problem (to the best of our
knowledge), and use simulations to show convergence even with computation time
uncertainties
Replica determinism and flexible scheduling in hard real-time dependable systems
Fault-tolerant real-time systems are typically based on active replication where replicated entities are required to deliver their outputs in an identical order within a given time interval. Distributed scheduling of replicated tasks, however, violates this requirement if on-line scheduling, preemptive scheduling, or scheduling of dissimilar replicated task sets is employed. This problem of inconsistent task outputs has been solved previously by coordinating the decisions of the local schedulers such that replicated tasks are executed in an identical order. Global coordination results either in an extremely high communication effort to agree on each schedule decision or in an overly restrictive execution model where on-line scheduling, arbitrary preemptions, and nonidentically replicated task sets are not allowed. To overcome these restrictions, a new method, called timed messages, is introduced. Timed messages guarantee deterministic operation by presenting consistent message versions to the replicated tasks. This approach is based on simulated common knowledge and a sparse time base. Timed messages are very effective since they neither require communication between the local scheduler nor do they restrict usage of on-line flexible scheduling, preemptions and nonidentically replicated task sets
About time
Time has historically been a measure of progress of recurrent physical processes. Coordination of future actions, prediction of future events, and assigning order to events are three practical reasons for implementing clocks and signalling mechanisms. In large networks of computers, these needs lead to the problem of synchronizing the clocks throughout the network. Recent methods allow this to be done in large networks with precision around 1 millisecond despite mean message exchange times near 5 milliseconds. These methods are discussed
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