• DocumentCode
    253127
  • Title

    Scheduling in densified networks: Algorithms and performance

  • Author

    Moharir, S. ; Krishnasamy, S. ; Shakkottai, S.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    Sept. 30 2014-Oct. 3 2014
  • Firstpage
    683
  • Lastpage
    690
  • Abstract
    With increasing data demand, wireless networks are evolving to a hierarchical architecture where coverage is provided by both wide-area base-stations (BS) and dense deployments of short-range access nodes (AN) (e.g., small cells). The dense scale and mobility of users provide new challenges for scheduling: (i) High flux in mobile-to-AN associations, where mobile nodes quickly change associations with access nodes (time-scale of seconds) due to their small footprint, and (ii) multi-point connectivity, where mobile nodes are simultaneously connected to several access nodes at any time. We study such a densified scenario with multi-channel wireless links (e.g., multi-channel OFDM) between nodes (BS/AN/mobile). We first show that traditional algorithms that forward each packet at most once, either to a single access node or a mobile user, do not have good delay performance. We argue that the fast association dynamics between access nodes and mobile users necessitate a multi-point relaying strategy, where multiple access nodes have duplicate copies of the data, and coordinate to deliver data to the mobile user. Surprisingly, despite data replication and no coordination between ANs, we show that our algorithm (a distributed scheduler - DIST) can approximately stabilize the system in large-scale instantiations of this setting, and further, performs well from a queue-length/delay perspective (shown via large deviation bounds).
  • Keywords
    mobility management (mobile radio); radio links; scheduling; wireless channels; BS node; DIST; association dynamics; data replication; delay performance; delay perspective; dense scale; densified network scheduling; deviation bounds; distributed scheduler; hierarchical architecture; large-scale instantiations; mobile nodes; mobile user; mobile-to-AN associations; multichannel OFDM; multichannel wireless links; multipoint connectivity; multipoint relaying strategy; packet forwarding; queue-length; short-range AN node; short-range access nodes; small-cells; user mobility; wide-area BS; wide-area base-stations; wireless networks; Delays; Interference; Mobile computing; Mobile nodes; Wireless networks; Dense Networks; Multipoint Connectivity; Wireless Scheduling;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Communication, Control, and Computing (Allerton), 2014 52nd Annual Allerton Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Monticello, IL
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ALLERTON.2014.7028521
  • Filename
    7028521