Dynamic Packet Scheduling in Wireless Networks
Thomas Kesselheim

TL;DR
This paper introduces advanced dynamic packet scheduling protocols for wireless networks that incorporate network geometry and power control, significantly improving performance across various interference models.
Contribution
It develops distributed stable protocols based on static algorithms, applicable to multiple interference models, with competitive throughput guarantees.
Findings
Achieves throughput comparable to static algorithms.
Protocols are effective across multiple interference models.
Competitive ratios range from constant to O(log^2 m).
Abstract
We consider protocols that serve communication requests arising over time in a wireless network that is subject to interference. Unlike previous approaches, we take the geometry of the network and power control into account, both allowing to increase the network's performance significantly. We introduce a stochastic and an adversarial model to bound the packet injection. Although taken as the primary motivation, this approach is not only suitable for models based on the signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR). It also covers virtually all other common interference models, for example the multiple-access channel, the radio-network model, the protocol model, and distance-2 matching. Packet-routing networks allowing each edge or each node to transmit or receive one packet at a time can be modeled as well. Starting from algorithms for the respective scheduling problem with static…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMobile Ad Hoc Networks · Advanced Wireless Network Optimization · Cooperative Communication and Network Coding
