7,693 research outputs found

    Towards a System Theoretic Approach to Wireless Network Capacity in Finite Time and Space

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    In asymptotic regimes, both in time and space (network size), the derivation of network capacity results is grossly simplified by brushing aside queueing behavior in non-Jackson networks. This simplifying double-limit model, however, lends itself to conservative numerical results in finite regimes. To properly account for queueing behavior beyond a simple calculus based on average rates, we advocate a system theoretic methodology for the capacity problem in finite time and space regimes. This methodology also accounts for spatial correlations arising in networks with CSMA/CA scheduling and it delivers rigorous closed-form capacity results in terms of probability distributions. Unlike numerous existing asymptotic results, subject to anecdotal practical concerns, our transient one can be used in practical settings: for example, to compute the time scales at which multi-hop routing is more advantageous than single-hop routing

    Computation of Buffer Capacities for Throughput Constrained and Data Dependent Inter-Task Communication

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    Streaming applications are often implemented as task graphs. Currently, techniques exist to derive buffer capacities that guarantee satisfaction of a throughput constraint for task graphs in which the inter-task communication is data-independent, i.e. the amount of data produced and consumed is independent of the data values in the processed stream. This paper presents a technique to compute buffer capacities that satisfy a throughput constraint for task graphs with data dependent inter-task communication, given that the task graph is a chain. We demonstrate the applicability of the approach by computing buffer capacities for an MP3 playback application, of which the MP3 decoder has a variable consumption rate. We are not aware of alternative approaches to compute buffer capacities that guarantee satisfaction of the throughput constraint for this application

    Network Coding in a Multicast Switch

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    We consider the problem of serving multicast flows in a crossbar switch. We show that linear network coding across packets of a flow can sustain traffic patterns that cannot be served if network coding were not allowed. Thus, network coding leads to a larger rate region in a multicast crossbar switch. We demonstrate a traffic pattern which requires a switch speedup if coding is not allowed, whereas, with coding the speedup requirement is eliminated completely. In addition to throughput benefits, coding simplifies the characterization of the rate region. We give a graph-theoretic characterization of the rate region with fanout splitting and intra-flow coding, in terms of the stable set polytope of the 'enhanced conflict graph' of the traffic pattern. Such a formulation is not known in the case of fanout splitting without coding. We show that computing the offline schedule (i.e. using prior knowledge of the flow arrival rates) can be reduced to certain graph coloring problems. Finally, we propose online algorithms (i.e. using only the current queue occupancy information) for multicast scheduling based on our graph-theoretic formulation. In particular, we show that a maximum weighted stable set algorithm stabilizes the queues for all rates within the rate region.Comment: 9 pages, submitted to IEEE INFOCOM 200

    Theory of constraints (TOC) production and manufacturing performance

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    This paper is based on an empirical study of the relationship between Theory of Constraints (TOC) production and operational performance in manufacturing plants. The study uses a survey questionnaire to collect data from a sample of 61 European firms which have implemented the TOC approach. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) technique and regression models have been employed to test the research hypotheses. The results detect many differences and similarities in adoption of TOC practices across the countries and suggest that manufacturing managers should consider adopting some TOC practices instead of others. In particular the Drum-buffer-rope methodology, the development of a Master Production Schedule based on constraints and the use of Non-constraint resources with excess capacity are among the most important practices to enhance competitive performance of manufacturing plants

    T-WAS and T-XAS algorithms for fiber-loop optical buffers

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    In optical packet/burst switched networks fiber loops provide a viable and compact means of contention resolution. For fixed size packets it is known that a basic void-avoiding schedule (VAS) can vastly outperform a more classical pre-reservation algorithm as FCFS. For the setting of a uniform distributed packet size and a restricted buffer size we proposed two novel forward-looking algorithms, WAS and XAS, that, in specific settings, outperform VAS up to 20% in terms of packet loss. This contribution extends the usage and improves the performance of the WAS and XAS algorithms by introducing an additional threshold variable. By optimizing this threshold, the process of selectively delaying packet longer than strictly necessary can be made more or less strict and as such be fitted to each setting. By Monte Carlo simulation it is shown that the resulting T-WAS and T-XAS algorithms are most effective for those instances where the algorithms without threshold can offer no or only limited performance improvement
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