Global routing revisited
Michael D. Moffitt
ICCAD 2009
We study the problem of throughput maximization in multihop wireless networks with end-to-end delay constraints for each session. This problem has received much attention starting with the work of Grossglauser and Tse (2002), and it has been shown that there is a significant tradeoff between the end-to-end delays and the total achievable rate. We develop algorithms to compute such tradeoffs with provable performance guarantees for arbitrary instances, with general interference models. Given a target delay-bound Δ(c) for each session c, our algorithm gives a stable flow vector with a total throughput within a factor of O(\log\Delta-{m}/\log\log\Δ{m}) of the maximum, so that the per-session (end-to-end) delay is O(((Δ{m}/Δ- {m})Δ(c))^{2}) , where Δ{m}=\max-{c}{Δ(c)} ; note that these bounds depend only on the delays, and not on the network size, and this is the first such result, to our knowledge. © 2013 IEEE.
Michael D. Moffitt
ICCAD 2009
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ACM Transactions on Information Systems (TOIS)
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DAC 1976
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