Title :
Routing games with progressive filling
Author :
Harks, Tobias ; Hoefer, Martin ; Schewior, Kevin ; Skopalik, Alexander
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Quantitative Econ., Maastricht Univ., Maastricht, Netherlands
fDate :
April 27 2014-May 2 2014
Abstract :
Max-min fairness (MMF) is a widely known approach to a fair allocation of bandwidth to each of the users in a network. This allocation can be computed by uniformly raising the bandwidths of all users without violating capacity constraints. We consider an extension of these allocations by raising the bandwidth with arbitrary and not necessarily uniform time-depending velocities (allocation rates). These allocations are used in a game-theoretic context for routing choices, which we formalize in progressive filling games (PFGs). We present a variety of results for equilibria in PFGs. We show that these games possess pure Nash and strong equilibria. While computation in general is NP-hard, there are polynomial-time algorithms for prominent classes of Max-Min-Fair Games (MMFG), including the case when all users have the same source-destination pair. We characterize prices of anarchy and stability for pure Nash and strong equilibria in PFGs and MMFGs when players have different or the same source-destination pairs. In addition, we show that when a designer can adjust allocation rates, it is possible to design games with optimal strong equilibria. Some initial results on polynomial-time algorithms in this direction are also derived.
Keywords :
bandwidth allocation; computational complexity; game theory; minimax techniques; polynomials; telecommunication network routing; MMFG; NP-hard computation; Nash equilibria; PFG; capacity constraint; fair bandwidth allocation; game-theoretic context; max-min-fair game; optimal strong equilibria; polynomial- time algorithm; progressive filling game; routing game; source-destination pair; stability; time-depending velocity; Bandwidth; Games; Polynomials; Protocols; Resource management; Routing; Silicon; complexity and convergence; congestion control; existence of strong and Nash equilibrium; price of anarchy; routing;
Conference_Titel :
INFOCOM, 2014 Proceedings IEEE
Conference_Location :
Toronto, ON
DOI :
10.1109/INFOCOM.2014.6847957