7,562 research outputs found
ABC: A Simple Explicit Congestion Controller for Wireless Networks
We propose Accel-Brake Control (ABC), a simple and deployable explicit
congestion control protocol for network paths with time-varying wireless links.
ABC routers mark each packet with an "accelerate" or "brake", which causes
senders to slightly increase or decrease their congestion windows. Routers use
this feedback to quickly guide senders towards a desired target rate. ABC
requires no changes to header formats or user devices, but achieves better
performance than XCP. ABC is also incrementally deployable; it operates
correctly when the bottleneck is a non-ABC router, and can coexist with non-ABC
traffic sharing the same bottleneck link. We evaluate ABC using a Wi-Fi
implementation and trace-driven emulation of cellular links. ABC achieves
30-40% higher throughput than Cubic+Codel for similar delays, and 2.2X lower
delays than BBR on a Wi-Fi path. On cellular network paths, ABC achieves 50%
higher throughput than Cubic+Codel
A Fair and Efficient Packet Scheduling Scheme for IEEE 802.16 Broadband Wireless Access Systems
This paper proposes a fair and efficient QoS scheduling scheme for IEEE
802.16 BWA systems that satisfies both throughput and delay guarantee to
various real and non-real time applications. The proposed QoS scheduling scheme
is compared with an existing QoS scheduling scheme proposed in literature in
recent past. Simulation results show that the proposed scheduling scheme can
provide a tight QoS guarantee in terms of delay, delay violation rate and
throughput for all types of traffic as defined in the WiMAX standard, thereby
maintaining the fairness and helps to eliminate starvation of lower priority
class services. Bandwidth utilization of the system and fairness index of the
resources are also encountered to validate the QoS provided by our proposed
scheduling scheme
Scheduling for Multi-Camera Surveillance in LTE Networks
Wireless surveillance in cellular networks has become increasingly important,
while commercial LTE surveillance cameras are also available nowadays.
Nevertheless, most scheduling algorithms in the literature are throughput,
fairness, or profit-based approaches, which are not suitable for wireless
surveillance. In this paper, therefore, we explore the resource allocation
problem for a multi-camera surveillance system in 3GPP Long Term Evolution
(LTE) uplink (UL) networks. We minimize the number of allocated resource blocks
(RBs) while guaranteeing the coverage requirement for surveillance systems in
LTE UL networks. Specifically, we formulate the Camera Set Resource Allocation
Problem (CSRAP) and prove that the problem is NP-Hard. We then propose an
Integer Linear Programming formulation for general cases to find the optimal
solution. Moreover, we present a baseline algorithm and devise an approximation
algorithm to solve the problem. Simulation results based on a real surveillance
map and synthetic datasets manifest that the number of allocated RBs can be
effectively reduced compared to the existing approach for LTE networks.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figure
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