Title :
Flow control for end-to-end delay and power constrained wireless multihop networks
Author :
Fang, Jennifer C. ; Rao, Ramesh R.
Author_Institution :
California Univ., San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA
Abstract :
In this paper, we solve the resource allocation problem of minimizing the total average power consumption for end-to-end delay constrained traffic in a multihop wireless network comprised of links with time-varying (Markov-modeled) wireless channels. We are given a set of source-destination pairs. Each source may use multiple routes to transport traffic to the destination at specified data rates. The traffic transported on each route between each src-dst pair is subject to an end-to-end delay guarantee. We present a 2-tier hierarchical solution to solve the above problem. At the bottom tier, each link transmits packets to minimize its long-term average power subject to long-term average delay constraints (BE Collins and RL Cruz, 1999). Given this packet transmission policy at every link and the associated energy-delay and energy-rate trade-off relations, we perform a network-wide optimization of traffic flows at the top tier. This problem is framed as a non-differentiable convex optimization problem is and solved using an incremental sub-gradient optimization technique. We implement our algorithm over sample network topologies and compare its performance with alternate algorithms, noting significant insight of the flow allocation policy as well as substantial gains in energy efficiency and throughput.
Keywords :
delays; gradient methods; optimisation; radio links; radio networks; resource allocation; telecommunication congestion control; telecommunication network routing; telecommunication traffic; time-varying channels; 2-tier hierarchical solution; end-to-end delay; energy efficiency; flow allocation policy; flow control; incremental subgradient optimization technique; network topologies; network-wide optimization; nondifferentiable convex optimization problem; packet transmission policy; power consumption; resource allocation; source-destination pairs; time-varying wireless channels; traffic flows; wireless multihop networks; Communication system traffic control; Delay; Energy consumption; Energy efficiency; Network topology; Performance gain; Resource management; Spread spectrum communication; Telecommunication traffic; Wireless networks;
Conference_Titel :
Military Communications Conference, 2004. MILCOM 2004. 2004 IEEE
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8847-X
DOI :
10.1109/MILCOM.2004.1493315