Temporal Starvation in CSMA Wireless Networks
Cai Hong Kai, Soung Chang Liew

TL;DR
This paper introduces a trap theory to analyze and characterize temporal starvation in CSMA wireless networks, revealing transient throughput issues that occur despite good equilibrium performance.
Contribution
The paper develops a novel trap theory for analyzing temporal starvation, providing new mathematical insights and tools for network design and mitigation strategies.
Findings
Trap durations are insensitive to backoff and transmission time distributions.
The theory enables computation of starvation likelihood and severity.
It helps identify links prone to temporal starvation.
Abstract
It is well known that links in CSMA wireless networks are prone to starvation. Prior works focused almost exclusively on equilibrium starvation. In this paper, we show that links in CSMA wireless networks are also susceptible to temporal starvation. Specifically, although some links have good equilibrium throughputs and do not suffer from equilibrium starvation, they can still have no throughput for extended periods from time to time. Given its impact on quality of service, it is important to understand and characterize temporal starvation. To this end, we develop a "trap theory" to analyze temporal throughput fluctuation. The trap theory serves two functions. First, it allows us to derive new mathematical results that shed light on the transient behavior of CSMA networks. For example, we show that the duration of a trap, during which some links receive no throughput, is insensitive to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWireless Networks and Protocols · Network Traffic and Congestion Control · Mobile Ad Hoc Networks
