A Constant Approximation Algorithm for Scheduling Packets on Line Networks
Guy Even, Moti Medina, Adi Ros\'en

TL;DR
This paper presents a randomized constant approximation algorithm for scheduling packets on line networks with bounded buffers, significantly improving previous logarithmic bounds and introducing a new combinatorial lemma relevant to routing.
Contribution
The authors develop a novel randomized algorithm with a constant approximation ratio for packet scheduling on line networks where buffer size and link capacity are proportional, improving prior results.
Findings
Achieved a constant approximation ratio for the problem.
Introduced a new combinatorial lemma related to buffer holding times.
Improved the approximation ratio from $O(\log^* n)$ to a constant factor.
Abstract
In this paper we improve the approximation ratio for the problem of scheduling packets on line networks with bounded buffers, where the aim is that of maximizing the throughput. Each node in the network has a local buffer of bounded size , and each edge (or link) can transmit a limited number, , of packets in every time unit. The input to the problem consists of a set of packet requests, each defined by a source node, a destination node, and a release time. We denote by the size of the network. A solution for this problem is a schedule that delivers (some of the) packets to their destinations without violating the capacity constraints of the network (buffers or edges). Our goal is to design an efficient algorithm that computes a schedule that maximizes the number of packets that arrive to their respective destinations. We give a randomized approximation algorithm with…
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