Title :
Fair Scheduling in Networks Through Packet Election
Author :
Jagabathula, Srikanth ; Shah, Devavrat
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA, USA
fDate :
3/1/2011 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
We consider the problem of designing a fair scheduling algorithm for discrete-time constrained queuing networks. Each queue has dedicated exogenous packet arrivals. There are constraints on which queues can be served simultaneously. This model effectively describes important special instances like network switches, interference in wireless networks, bandwidth sharing for congestion control and traffic scheduling in road roundabouts. Fair scheduling is required because it provides isolation to different traffic flows; isolation makes the system more robust and enables providing quality of service. Existing work on fairness for constrained networks concentrates on flow based fairness. As a main result, we describe a notion of packet based fairness by establishing an analogy with the ranked election problem: packets are voters, schedules are candidates, and each packet ranks the schedules based on its priorities. We then obtain a scheduling algorithm that achieves the described notion of fairness by drawing upon the seminal work of Goodman and Markowitz (1952). This yields the familiar Maximum Weight (MW) style algorithm. As another important result, we prove that the algorithm obtained is throughput optimal. There is no reason a priori why this should be true, and the proof requires nontraditional methods.
Keywords :
quality of service; queueing theory; radio networks; scheduling; telecommunication traffic; bandwidth sharing; congestion control; discrete-time constrained queuing networks; exogenous packet arrivals; fair scheduling algorithm; flow based fairness; maximum weight style algorithm; network switches; packet based fairness; packet election; quality of service; ranked election problem; road roundabouts; traffic flows; traffic scheduling; wireless networks; Algorithm design and analysis; Nominations and elections; Queueing analysis; Schedules; Scheduling; Scheduling algorithm; Throughput; Fair scheduling; packet-based fairness; ranked election; throughput optimality;
Journal_Title :
Information Theory, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TIT.2010.2103851