Title: Throughput-Range Tradeoff of Wireless Mesh Backhaul
1Throughput-Range Tradeoff of Wireless Mesh
Backhaul
- IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications,
2006
Presented by Hermes Y. H. Liu Institute of IM, NTU
2Authors
- Harish Viswanathan
- EE Ph.D. from Cornell University
- Bell Lab. Lucent Technologies
- Sayandev Mukherjee
- EE Ph.D. from Cornell University
- Bell Lab. Lucent Technologies
3Outlines
- Introduction
- Wireless Network Flow Problem
- Throughput Range Tradeoff in Regular Network
- Load Balancing Through Mesh Backhaul
- Summary
4Outlines
- Introduction
- Wireless Network Flow Problem
- Throughput Range Tradeoff in Regular Network
- Load Balancing Through Mesh Backhaul
- Summary
5Introduction
- Wide-area wireless broadband access becomes
ubiquitous with the technologies of WiFi
(802.11), WiMAX (802.16) and 3G cellular system - Considering data rate and base station (BS) range
which imposed by transmit power result in large
number of BSs to cover a given area - Wireless backhaul (e.g., 802.11s and 802.16d) is
proper for the network
6Introduction
- Mesh networking has advantages over single-hop
networking in spatial reuse for increased
capacity, coverage enhancement, and load
balancing (LB) through route diversity, and
extended to wireless ad hoc networks - Examine wireless mesh networking from providing
wired network connection to wireless BSs - Routing problem how different flows are routed
from the wired BS - Scheduling problem duration for each
transmission scenario (a given set of
transmitter-receiver pairs) should be active
7Outlines
- Introduction
- Wireless Network Flow Problem
- Throughput Range Tradeoff in Regular Network
- Load Balancing Through Mesh Backhaul
- Summary
8Wireless Network Flow Problem
- A. System Model
- 1.Locations of Node network with multiple
nodes (BS serving end users) - a. Access Points (APs) have wired connection to
the backhaul network - b. Extension Points (BPs) extend the range of
the wired BSs (APs) - All APs and EPs are assumed identical
- 2.Channel Model
- a. Receg-Greenstein model (pass loss)
- b. No fast fading since all nodes are all
stationary - ?So the maximum rate is related to
- transmit power, distance, shadow fading,
interference - ?Set transmit power to be equal at all APs
and EPs, but different between. The shadow
fading is the customary log-normal model
9Path Loss
10Path Loss
11Path Loss
12Path Loss
13Path Loss
14Wireless Network Flow Problem
- 3.Traffic Model
- The aggregate traffic demand per cell which
presents the traffic for all
subscribers served by that EP is constant over
time -
- B. Statement of the Wireless Network Flow Problem
- The bits intended for the destination EP reside
in buffers at the intermediate EPs between AP and
destination EP, and these buffers are assumed to
be infinite - Flow on i the portion of the total bits travels
through a given link i - Commodity traffic intended for each EP which
indexed by the label of EP - Throughput to each destination EP total bits
received/ transmit time allocated for these bits
at AP and intermediate EPs
15Wireless Network Flow Problem
- The network has n EPs, each EP d having the same
demand f - Link denotes a wireless link between
node i and j - is the portion of the total number of bits
between AP and EP d through the edge - Each link has a finite capacity
represents the maximum rate (bit/s) of
transmission on that link - However, the capacity on each link depends upon
the set of other simultaneously transmitting
links due to interference - Transmission scenario the subset of
simultaneously active links
16Wireless Network Flow Problem
- Transmission scenario the subset of
simultaneously active links
17Wireless Network Flow Problem
- N possible transmission scenarios
- represents the flow through the link
to destination d in transmission scenario t - Total transmission time over all N transmission
scenarios is - where is the transmission time allocated to
the links on transmission scenario t
18Wireless Network Flow Problem
(1-a)
- Objective function
- Subject to
-
(1-b)
and
(1-c)
Where is the link capacity
19Wireless Network Flow Problem
Where P is the transmit power is the
distance is the shadow fading between node
i and j is the path loss exponent
represents any implementation margin relative to
the rate given by the Shannon Formula (2)
20Wireless Network Flow Problem
- 1. The interference due to far-away transmitters
is not exactly zero - 2. The Shannon Formula (2) is an upper limit on
the rate achievable for a given SINR - So the throughput to each EP solved by
(1-a)- (1-c)is an upper limit - The solution to the LP problem (1-a)-(1-c) may be
impossible over all transmission scenarios n EPs
and 1 AP? L links and N
transmission scenarios - The LP problem must be solved over a reduced set
of transmission scenarios and is only a lower
bound on the maximum throughput attainable
21Wireless Network Flow Problem
- C. Greedy Algorithm for Selection of Transmission
Scenarios - All transmissions are point-to-point and no
transmitting node can receive simultaneously - A good transmission scenario should consist as
many simultaneous transmissions as possible,
while keeping the loss in SINR due to
interference small - Denote
- Source and destination of link is
- the total transmission rate in the transmission
scenario t is -
22Wireless Network Flow Problem
- C. Greedy Algorithm for Selection of Transmission
Scenarios
23Priority Issue
S
D2
D1
24Wireless Network Flow Problem
25Outlines
- Introduction
- Wireless Network Flow Problem
- Throughput Range Tradeoff in Regular Network
- Load Balancing Through Mesh Backhaul
- Summary
26Throughput Range Tradeoff in Regular Network
- A. Network Model for Evaluation
- To save the infrastructure expenses of laying
cable or fiber to each BS, extend the range of a
given BA (AP) wired by using several other BSs
(EP) unwired to the backhaul - Multi-hop routing versus single-hop routing (no
EP transmits to any other EP) - In Fig. 5, the throughput per EP only
- depends on the distance from the AP
-
27Throughput Range Tradeoff in Regular Network
- B. Enumerating the Scenarios for the Multi-hop
Optimization - Every transmitter-receiver pair must have either
- (1) the AP as the transmitter, and an EP in the
first ring as the receiver or - (2) the transmitter EP and receiver EP located
in adjacent rings, receiver in the outer ring
and adjacent to the cell with the transmitter EP - Maximal transmission scenarios subsets of
simultaneously active links that no new links can
be added - Previous greedy algorithm can enumerate the
scenarios but did not use the spatial symmetry
property of this network
28Throughput Range Tradeoff in Regular Network
- Two extreme cases in antennas
- Narrow-Beam Antennas The interference is assumed
negligible. Only one restriction
The maximal transmission scenarios are
symmetric fro the given geometry - Omnidirectional Antennas
- No neighbor of a transmitter can be a receiver
and no neighbor of a receiver can be a
transmitter - The interference due to transmitting is not felt
more than one cell away - Maximal transmission scenarios are symmetric for
the given geometry
-
29Throughput Range Tradeoff in Regular Network
- C. Results Comparing Multi-hop With Single-Hop
- Solve the problem in (1-a)-(1-c) for the network
in Fig. 5 - The distance of the farthest EP yields the range
of the region served by the AP with multi-hop
network - (1) Solution to the Single-Hop Network Flow
Problem There is exactly one active link in each
scenario (AP as transmitter and one EP as
receiver). The number of transmission scenarios
are as many as EPs (Nn) - The time EP i to receive its demanded bits f is
, where is the rate from AP
s to the EP i - The total time required for all EPs to receive
their demand is - The throughput is
-
30Throughput Range Tradeoff in Regular Network
- (2) Description of the Numerical Parameters Used
in the Problem - There are two possible combinations of antenna
heights and transmit powers for AP and EPs -
AP height AP power EP height EP power
Situation 1 Single-hop 20m 43dBm 10m 30dBm
Situation 1 Multi-hop 10m 30dBm 10m 30dBm
Situation 2 Single-hop and Multi-hop 30dBm 10m 30dBm
31Throughput Range Tradeoff in Regular Network
- (3) Multi-hop With Omnidirectional Antennas
Versus Single-Hop
Multi gt Single With interference
Single gt Multi Increase with the cell size
Situation 1
Situation 2
32Throughput Range Tradeoff in Regular Network
- (3) Multi-hop With Omnidirectional Antennas
Versus Single-Hop - Situation 1, If the power available to a wired BS
is large enough to cover a given area, there is
no advantage to introduce EPs for more throughput - Situation 2, multi-hop routing is superior to
single-hop routing, though the advantage is not
overwhelming due to the interference
33Throughput Range Tradeoff in Regular Network
- (4) Multi-hop With Narrow-Beam antennas Versus
Single-Hop
Single gt Multi Increase with the cell size
Multi gt Single Without interference
Situation 1
Situation 2
34Outlines
- Introduction
- Wireless Network Flow Problem
- Throughput Range Tradeoff in Regular Network
- Load Balancing Through Mesh Backhaul
- Summary
35Load Balancing Through Mesh Backhaul
- A. Introduction
- The difference traffic generated in different BSs
provides an opportunity to route traffic from
heavily loaded BSs to the wired network through
lightly loaded BSs - The wireless mesh backhaul allows reconfiguration
of routes and traffic flow to maximize the
traffic carried into the wireless network - Objective determining optimum routing and
scheduling of flows also taking into account the
traffic generation rate and the maximum wired
backhaul transmission rate
36Load Balancing Through Mesh Backhaul
- B. Linear Programming Formulation
- under only one transmission scenario
(4)
Where is the link rate on the wireless
links (i,j) is the flow on the
wired link between node i and the wired network
is the common transmission rate
of the wired links (i, w) T is
some fixed duration of time such as the slot time
(5) analogous to (1-b)
is the access
traffic generation rate at node j This is not an
equality constraint because in general the access
traffic generation rate can be larger than the
rate traffic can be transmitted over wireless or
wired links Objective
(LP problem)
(6)
37Load Balancing Through Mesh Backhaul
- Extend the formula to all transmission scenarios
with respect to interference and variable-rate
transmissions -
(7-a)
Subject to
(7-b)
(7-c)
(7-d)
Where is the time portion of transmission
scenario i The total throughput is given by
, without loss of
generality, T can be Set to 1
38Each of the BS-EPs is also connected to The
wired network through a wired backhaul
Connection with maximum transmission rate Our
goal is to determine the MAX access traffic that
can be carried into the wired network using the
available backhaul links through the best
utilization of the wireless mesh
backhaul capabilities
39Load Balancing Through Mesh Backhaul
- C. Evaluation of the Benefit of LB
- Access traffic generation rate decrease linearly
from the center outward
40Load Balancing Through Mesh Backhaul
- The total access traffic generated from all BSs
is set equal to the total backhaul bandwidth rate
to the wired network to evaluate the benefit of LB
LB shows a significant improvement and the Larger
the benefit the more unbalanced the Traffic
pattern
41Load Balancing Through Mesh Backhaul
42Load Balancing Through Mesh Backhaul
43Outlines
- Introduction
- Wireless Network Flow Problem
- Throughput Range Tradeoff in Regular Network
- Load Balancing Through Mesh Backhaul
- Summary
44Summary
- Proposed a LP model for optimum routing and
scheduling of flow in a wireless mesh network
include the effect of interference and
variable-rate transmissions - Required the enumeration of reduced transmission
scenarios and associated transmission rates due
to the complexity (large number of N) - In given hexagonal network, the throughput is
determined by the transmission power, antenna
height, and cell radius - The multiple-hop outperforms the single-hop when
the antenna height and transmit power are the
same - The total traffic to the wired network is
maximized by routing traffic to underutilized
backhaul links (Load Balance)
45Future Work
- Sequence of the transmission scenarios
(scheduling at source node) while transmitting
data in a wireless mesh backhaul network - Finite buffer limitation
- Load balancing in mesh backhaul network where
only the source node is connected to the wired
network through a wired backhaul link
46- The End
- Thanks for Your Listening!!