4,703 research outputs found

    Mobile Edge Computing for Future Internet-of-Things

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    University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Engineering and Information Technology.Integrating sensors, the Internet, and wireless systems, Internet-of-Things (IoT) provides a new paradigm of ubiquitous connectivity and pervasive intelligence. The key enabling technology underlying IoT is mobile edge computing (MEC), which is anticipated to realize and reap the promising benefits of IoT applications by placing various cloud resources, such as computing and storage resources closer to smart devices and objects. Challenges of designing efficient and scalable MEC platforms for future IoT arise from the physical limitations of computing and battery resources of IoT devices, heterogeneity of computing and wireless communication capabilities of IoT networks, large volume of data arrivals and massive number connections, and large-scale data storage and delivery across the edge network. To address these challenges, this thesis proposes four efficient and scalable task offloading and cooperative caching approaches are proposed. Firstly, for the multi-user single-cell MEC scenario, the base station (BS) can only have outdated knowledge of IoT device channel conditions due to the time-varying nature of practical wireless channels. To this end, a hybrid learning approach is proposed to optimize the real-time local processing and predictive computation offloading decisions in a distributed manner. Secondly, for the multi-user multi-cell MEC scenario, an energy-efficient resource management approach is developed based on distributed online learning to tackle the heterogeneity of computing and wireless transmission capabilities of edge servers and IoT devices. The proposed approach optimizes the decisions on task offloading, processing, and result delivery between edge servers and IoT devices to minimize the time-average energy consumption of MEC. Thirdly, for the computing resource allocation under large-scale network, a distributed online collaborative computing approach is proposed based on Lyapunov optimization for data analysis in IoT application to minimize the time-average energy consumption of network. Finally, for the storage resource allocation under large-scale network, a distributed IoT data delivery approach based on online learning is proposed for caching application in mobile applications. A new profitable cooperative region is established for every IoT data request admitted at an edge server, to avoid invalid request dispatching

    Joint Computation Offloading and Prioritized Scheduling in Mobile Edge Computing

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    With the rapid development of smart phones, enormous amounts of data are generated and usually require intensive and real-time computation. Nevertheless, quality of service (QoS) is hardly to be met due to the tension between resourcelimited (battery, CPU power) devices and computation-intensive applications. Mobileedge computing (MEC) emerging as a promising technique can be used to copy with stringent requirements from mobile applications. By offloading computationally intensive workloads to edge server and applying efficient task scheduling, energy cost of mobiles could be significantly reduced and therefore greatly improve QoS, e.g., latency. This paper proposes a joint computation offloading and prioritized task scheduling scheme in a multi-user mobile-edge computing system. We investigate an energy minimizing task offloading strategy in mobile devices and develop an effective priority-based task scheduling algorithm with edge server. The execution time, energy consumption, execution cost, and bonus score against both the task data sizes and latency requirement is adopted as the performance metric. Performance evaluation results show that, the proposed algorithm significantly reduce task completion time, edge server VM usage cost, and improve QoS in terms of bonus score. Moreover, dynamic prioritized task scheduling is also discussed herein, results show dynamic thresholds setting realizes the optimal task scheduling. We believe that this work is significant to the emerging mobile-edge computing paradigm, and can be applied to other Internet of Things (IoT)-Edge applications

    Stacked Auto Encoder Based Deep Reinforcement Learning for Online Resource Scheduling in Large-Scale MEC Networks

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    An online resource scheduling framework is proposed for minimizing the sum of weighted task latency for all the Internet-of-Things (IoT) users, by optimizing offloading decision, transmission power, and resource allocation in the large-scale mobile-edge computing (MEC) system. Toward this end, a deep reinforcement learning (DRL)-based solution is proposed, which includes the following components. First, a related and regularized stacked autoencoder (2r-SAE) with unsupervised learning is applied to perform data compression and representation for high-dimensional channel quality information (CQI) data, which can reduce the state space for DRL. Second, we present an adaptive simulated annealing approach (ASA) as the action search method of DRL, in which an adaptive h -mutation is used to guide the search direction and an adaptive iteration is proposed to enhance the search efficiency during the DRL process. Third, a preserved and prioritized experience replay (2p-ER) is introduced to assist the DRL to train the policy network and find the optimal offloading policy. The numerical results are provided to demonstrate that the proposed algorithm can achieve near-optimal performance while significantly decreasing the computational time compared with existing benchmarks
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