9,646 research outputs found
Distributed Deterministic Broadcasting in Uniform-Power Ad Hoc Wireless Networks
Development of many futuristic technologies, such as MANET, VANET, iThings,
nano-devices, depend on efficient distributed communication protocols in
multi-hop ad hoc networks. A vast majority of research in this area focus on
design heuristic protocols, and analyze their performance by simulations on
networks generated randomly or obtained in practical measurements of some
(usually small-size) wireless networks. %some library. Moreover, they often
assume access to truly random sources, which is often not reasonable in case of
wireless devices. In this work we use a formal framework to study the problem
of broadcasting and its time complexity in any two dimensional Euclidean
wireless network with uniform transmission powers. For the analysis, we
consider two popular models of ad hoc networks based on the
Signal-to-Interference-and-Noise Ratio (SINR): one with opportunistic links,
and the other with randomly disturbed SINR. In the former model, we show that
one of our algorithms accomplishes broadcasting in rounds, where
is the number of nodes and is the diameter of the network. If nodes
know a priori the granularity of the network, i.e., the inverse of the
maximum transmission range over the minimum distance between any two stations,
a modification of this algorithm accomplishes broadcasting in
rounds.
Finally, we modify both algorithms to make them efficient in the latter model
with randomly disturbed SINR, with only logarithmic growth of performance.
Ours are the first provably efficient and well-scalable, under the two
models, distributed deterministic solutions for the broadcast task.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1207.673
Leader Election for Anonymous Asynchronous Agents in Arbitrary Networks
We study the problem of leader election among mobile agents operating in an
arbitrary network modeled as an undirected graph. Nodes of the network are
unlabeled and all agents are identical. Hence the only way to elect a leader
among agents is by exploiting asymmetries in their initial positions in the
graph. Agents do not know the graph or their positions in it, hence they must
gain this knowledge by navigating in the graph and share it with other agents
to accomplish leader election. This can be done using meetings of agents, which
is difficult because of their asynchronous nature: an adversary has total
control over the speed of agents. When can a leader be elected in this
adversarial scenario and how to do it? We give a complete answer to this
question by characterizing all initial configurations for which leader election
is possible and by constructing an algorithm that accomplishes leader election
for all configurations for which this can be done
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