Fundamental Limits of Cloud and Cache-Aided Interference Management with Multi-Antenna Edge Nodes
Jingjing Zhang, Osvaldo Simeone

TL;DR
This paper investigates the fundamental limits of latency in fog-aided cellular systems with multi-antenna edge nodes, considering cache constraints, fronthaul transfer, and linear precoding, providing optimality bounds for different transmission modes.
Contribution
It offers an information-theoretic analysis of latency limits in cache-aided wireless networks with multiple antennas, uncoded caching, and fronthaul constraints, deriving bounds on delivery time.
Findings
Exact characterization of minimum latency for certain parameters.
Bounds within a factor of 3/2 (serial) and 2 (pipelined) of optimal.
Insights into edge-cloud processing trade-offs based on system resources.
Abstract
In fog-aided cellular systems, content delivery latency can be minimized by jointly optimizing edge caching and transmission strategies. In order to account for the cache capacity limitations at the Edge Nodes (ENs), transmission generally involves both fronthaul transfer from a cloud processor with access to the content library to the ENs, as well as wireless delivery from the ENs to the users. In this paper, the resulting problem is studied from an information-theoretic viewpoint by making the following practically relevant assumptions: 1) the ENs have multiple antennas; 2) only uncoded fractional caching is allowed; 3) the fronthaul links are used to send fractions of contents; and 4) the ENs are constrained to use one-shot linear precoding on the wireless channel. Assuming offline proactive caching and focusing on a high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) latency metric, the optimal…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsCaching and Content Delivery · Cooperative Communication and Network Coding · Advanced Wireless Communication Technologies
