Thomas R. Puzak, A. Hartstein, et al.
CF 2007
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.
Thomas R. Puzak, A. Hartstein, et al.
CF 2007
B.K. Boguraev, Mary S. Neff
HICSS 2000
Frank R. Libsch, S.C. Lien
IBM J. Res. Dev
Yao Qi, Raja Das, et al.
ISSTA 2009