812 research outputs found
Modeling Multi-mode D2D Communications in LTE
In this work we propose a roadmap towards the analytical understanding of
Device-to-Device (D2D) communications in LTE-A networks. Various D2D solutions
have been proposed, which include inband and outband D2D transmission modes,
each of which exhibits different pros and cons in terms of complexity,
interference, and spectral efficiency achieved. We go beyond traditional mode
optimization and mode-selection schemes. Specifically, we formulate a general
problem for the joint per-user mode selection, connection activation and
resource scheduling of connections.Comment: A shorter version of this manuscript is accepted for publication in
MAMA workshop collocated with Sigmetrics'1
Optimal performance of parallel-server systems with job size prediction errors
[EN] Modern communication networks integrate distributed computing architectures, in which customers are processed in parallel. We show how to minimize the waiting time of customer’s jobs by leveraging a simple threshold-based job dispatching policy. The optimal policy leverages the SITA routing, which assigns jobs to servers according to the size of the job. Moreover, the optimal policy permits to optimize system performance even when the job size is not known a priori and is estimated by means of error-prone predictors.The work of Josu Doncel has been supported by the Department of Education of the Basque Government through the Consolidated Research Group MATHMODE (IT1294-19), by the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No 777778 and by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation with reference PID2019-108111RB-I00 (FEDER/AEI). The work of Vincenzo Mancuso has been supported by the Ramon y Cajal grant RYC-2014-16285 from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness, and by the Region of Madrid through the TAPIR-CM program (S2018/TCS-4496)
Modeling D2D communications with LTE and WiFi
In this work we propose a roadmap towards the analytical understanding of Device-to-Device (D2D) communications in LTE-A networks. Various D2D solutions have been proposed, which include inband and outband D2D transmission modes, each of which exhibits different pros and cons in terms of complexity, interference, and spectral efficiency achieved. We go beyond traditional mode optimization and mode-selection schemes. Specifically, we formulate a general problem for the joint per-user mode selection, connection activation and resource scheduling of connections using both LTE and WiFi resources
Floating band D2D:exploring and exploiting the potentials of adaptive D2D-enabled networks
In this paper, we propose Floating Band D2D, an adaptive framework to exploit the full potential of Device-to-Device (D2D) transmission modes. We show that inband and outband D2D modes exhibit different pros and cons in terms of complexity, interference, and spectral efficiency. Moreover, none of these modes is suitable as a one-size-fits-all solution for today's cellular networks, due to diverse network requirements and variable users' behavior. Therefore, we unveil the need for going beyond traditional single-band mode-selection schemes. Specifically, we model and formulate a general and adaptive multi-band mode selection problem, namely Floating Band D2D. The problem is NP-hard, so we propose simple yet effective heuristics. Our results show the superiority of the Floating Band D2D framework, which dramatically increases network utility and achieves near complete fairness
Coverage Optimization with a Dynamic Network of Drone Relays
The integration of aerial base stations carried by drones in cellular networks offers promising opportunities to enhance the connectivity enjoyed by ground users. In this paper, we propose an optimization framework for the 3-D placement and repositioning of a fleet of drones with a realistic inter-drone interference model and drone connectivity constraints. We show how to maximize network coverage by means of an extremal-optimization algorithm. The design of our algorithm is based on a mixed-integer non-convex program formulation for a coverage problem that is NP-Complete, as we prove in the paper. We not only optimize drone positions in a 3-D space in polynomial time, but also assign flight routes solving an assignment problem and using a strong geometrical tool, namely Bézier curves, which are extremely useful for non-uniform and realistic topologies. Specifically, we propose to fly drones following Bézier curves to seek the chance of approaching to clusters of ground users. This enhances coverage over time while users and drones move. We assess the performance of our proposal for synthetic scenarios as well as realistic maps extracted from the topology of a capital city. We demonstrate that our framework is near-optimal and using Bézier curves increases coverage up to 47 percent while drones move
Fair Cellular Throughput Optimization with the Aid of Coordinated Drones
Comunicación presentada en IEEE INFOCOM 2019 - IEEE Conference on Computer Communications Workshops (INFOCOM WKSHPS) (Paris, 29 April-2 May 2019)The interest on flexible air-to-ground channels from aerial base stations to enhance users access by seeking good line-of-sight connectivity from the air has increased in the past years. In this paper, we propose a deployable analytical framework for the 3-D placement of a fleet of coordinated drone relay stations to optimize network capacity according to α-fairness metrics. We formulate a mixed-integer non-convex program, which results to be intractable. Therefore, we design a near-optimal heuristic that can solve the problem in real-time applications. We assess the performance of our proposal by simulation, using a realistic urban topology, and study pros and cons of using drone relay stations in both static and dynamic scenarios, when popular events gather masses of users in limited areas
Exact Resource Allocation for Fair Wireless Relay
In relay-enabled cellular networks, the intertwined nature of network agents
calls for complex schemes to allocate wireless resources. Resources need to be
distributed among mobile users while considering how relay resources are
allocated, and constrained by the traffic rate achievable by base stations and
over backhaul links. In this work, we derive a resource allocation scheme that
achieves max-min fairness across mobile users. Furthermore, the optimal
allocation is found with linear complexity with respect to the number of mobile
users and relays
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