Throughput in Asynchronous Networks
Paul Bunn, Rafail Ostrovsky

TL;DR
This paper introduces a worst-case asynchronous network model to analyze the fundamental limits of end-to-end routing throughput, establishing tight bounds and demonstrating the impact of network assumptions on performance.
Contribution
It defines a comprehensive worst-case asynchronous network model and proves tight bounds on routing throughput, highlighting the fundamental limits without reliability assumptions.
Findings
Optimal competitive ratio is 1/n for any online protocol.
A specific protocol achieves an n-competitive ratio.
The model captures networks with minimal assumptions, providing a baseline for throughput analysis.
Abstract
We introduce a new, "worst-case" model for an asynchronous communication network and investigate the simplest (yet central) task in this model, namely the feasibility of end-to-end routing. Motivated by the question of how successful a protocol can hope to perform in a network whose reliability is guaranteed by as few assumptions as possible, we combine the main "unreliability" features encountered in network models in the literature, allowing our model to exhibit all of these characteristics simultaneously. In particular, our model captures networks that exhibit the following properties: 1) On-line; 2) Dynamic Topology; 3)Distributed/Local Control 4) Asynchronous Communication; 5) (Polynomially) Bounded Memory; 6) No Minimal Connectivity Assumptions. In the confines of this network, we evaluate throughput performance and prove matching upper and lower bounds. In particular, using…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInterconnection Networks and Systems · Advanced Optical Network Technologies · Software-Defined Networks and 5G
