Author :
Sadiq, Bilal ; Baek, Seung Jun ; De Veciana, Gustavo
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Texas, Austin, TX
Abstract :
This paper considers the design of opportunistic packet schedulers for users sharing a time-varying wireless channel from the performance and the robustness points of view. Firstly, for a simplified model falling in the classical Markov decision process framework where arrival and channel statistics are known, we numerically compute and evaluate the characteristics of mean-delay-optimal scheduling policies. The computed policies exhibit radial sum-rate monotonicity (RSM), i.e., when users´ queues grow linearly (i.e. scaled up by a constant), the scheduler allocates service in a manner that de-emphasizes the balancing of unequal queues in favor of maximizing current system throughput (being opportunistic). This is in sharp contrast to previously proposed policies, e.g., MaxWeight and Exp rule. The latter, however, are throughput-optimal, in that without knowledge of arrival/channel statistics they achieve stability if at all feasible. To meet performance and robustness objectives, secondly, we propose a new class of policies, called the Log rule, that are radial sum-rate monotone and provably throughput optimal. Our simulations for realistic wireless channels confirm the superiority of the Log rule which achieves up to 80% reduction in mean packet delays. However, recent asymptotic analysis showed that Exp rule is optimal in terms of minimizing the asymptotic probability of max-queue overflow. In turn, in a companion paper we have shown that an RSM policy minimizes the asymptotic probability of sum-queue overflow. Finally, we use extensive simulations to explore the various possible design objectives for opportunistic schedulers. When users see heterogenous channels, we find that minimizing the worst asymptotic exponent across users may excessively compromise the overall delay. Our simulations show that only if perfectly tuned to the load will the Exp rule achieve low homogenous tails across users. Otherwise the Log rule achieves a 20-75% reduction in the 99th<- /sup> percentile for most, if not all, the users. We conclude that for wireless environments, where precise resource allocation is virtually impossible, the Log rule may be more desirable for its robust and graceful degradation to unpredicted changes.
Keywords :
Markov processes; delays; queueing theory; scheduling; time-varying channels; wireless channels; Markov decision process framework; arrival statistics; channel statistics; delay-optimal opportunistic approximation; delay-optimal opportunistic scheduling; log rule; mean-delay-optimal scheduling policies; opportunistic packet scheduler; radial sum-rate monotonicity; time-varying wireless channel; unequal queue balancing; users sharing; Degradation; Delay; Processor scheduling; Resource management; Robustness; Scheduling algorithm; Stability; Statistics; Tail; Throughput;