1,142 research outputs found
Dynamic algorithms for multicast with intra-session network coding
The problem of multiple multicast sessions with
intra-session network coding in time-varying networks is considered.
The network-layer capacity region of input rates that can be
stably supported is established. Dynamic algorithms for multicast
routing, network coding, power allocation, session scheduling, and
rate allocation across correlated sources, which achieve stability
for rates within the capacity region, are presented. This work
builds on the back-pressure approach introduced by Tassiulas
et al., extending it to network coding and correlated sources. In
the proposed algorithms, decisions on routing, network coding,
and scheduling between different sessions at a node are made
locally at each node based on virtual queues for different sinks.
For correlated sources, the sinks locally determine and control
transmission rates across the sources. The proposed approach
yields a completely distributed algorithm for wired networks.
In the wireless case, power control among different transmitters
is centralized while routing, network coding, and scheduling
between different sessions at a given node are distributed
Effective Scheduling for Coded Distributed Storage in Wireless Sensor Networks
A distributed storage approach is proposed to access data reliably and to cope with node failures in wireless sensor networks. This approach is based on random linear network coding in combination with a scheduling algorithm based on backpressure. Upper bounds are provided on the maximum rate at which data can be reliably stored. Moreover, it is shown that the backpressure algorithm allows to operate the network in a decentralized fashion for any rate below this maximum
Minimum-cost multicast over coded packet networks
We consider the problem of establishing minimum-cost multicast connections over coded packet networks, i.e., packet networks where the contents of outgoing packets are arbitrary, causal functions of the contents of received packets. We consider both wireline and wireless packet networks as well as both static multicast (where membership of the multicast group remains constant for the duration of the connection) and dynamic multicast (where membership of the multicast group changes in time, with nodes joining and leaving the group). For static multicast, we reduce the problem to a polynomial-time solvable optimization problem, and we present decentralized algorithms for solving it. These algorithms, when coupled with existing decentralized schemes for constructing network codes, yield a fully decentralized approach for achieving minimum-cost multicast. By contrast, establishing minimum-cost static multicast connections over routed packet networks is a very difficult problem even using centralized computation, except in the special cases of unicast and broadcast connections. For dynamic multicast, we reduce the problem to a dynamic programming problem and apply the theory of dynamic programming to suggest how it may be solved
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