Achieving Optimal Throughput and Near-Optimal Asymptotic Delay Performance in Multi-Channel Wireless Networks with Low Complexity: A Practical Greedy Scheduling Policy
Bo Ji, Gagan R. Gupta, Manu Sharma, Xiaojun Lin, Ness B. Shroff

TL;DR
This paper introduces a low-complexity greedy scheduling policy, D-SSG, for multi-channel wireless networks that achieves throughput optimality and near-optimal delay performance, validated through theoretical analysis and simulations.
Contribution
The paper proposes D-SSG, a simple greedy policy with significantly reduced complexity that maintains near-optimal delay and throughput performance in multi-channel wireless networks.
Findings
D-SSG achieves throughput optimality.
D-SSG guarantees near-optimal delay performance.
Simulation results confirm theoretical advantages.
Abstract
In this paper, we focus on the scheduling problem in multi-channel wireless networks, e.g., the downlink of a single cell in fourth generation (4G) OFDM-based cellular networks. Our goal is to design practical scheduling policies that can achieve provably good performance in terms of both throughput and delay, at a low complexity. While a class of -complexity hybrid scheduling policies are recently developed to guarantee both rate-function delay optimality (in the many-channel many-user asymptotic regime) and throughput optimality (in the general non-asymptotic setting), their practical complexity is typically high. To address this issue, we develop a simple greedy policy called Delay-based Server-Side-Greedy (D-SSG) with a \lower complexity , and rigorously prove that D-SSG not only achieves throughput optimality, but also guarantees near-optimal asymptotic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Wireless Network Optimization · Advanced MIMO Systems Optimization · Cooperative Communication and Network Coding
