Publication Date:
2008
abstract:
Broadcasting is an efficient and scalable way of transmitting data over wireless channels to an unlimited number of clients. In this chapter the problem of allocating data to multiple channels is studied, assuming flat data scheduling per channel and the presence of unrecoverable channel transmission errors. The behavior of wireless channels is described by the Bernoulli model, in which each packet transmission has the same probability to fail and each transmission error is independent from the others. The ob jective is that of minimizing the average expected delay experienced by the clients. Optimal solutions can be found in polynomial time when all data items have unit lengths, while heuristics are presented when data items have non-unit lengths. Extensive simulations, performed on benchmarks whose item popularities follow Zipf distributions, show that good sub-optimal solutions are found.
Iris type:
02.01 Contributo in volume (Capitolo o Saggio)
Keywords:
Broadcast scheduling algorithm; Data allocation algorithm; Average expected delay; Wireless channel; Channel error model; Heuristics; Quality of service
List of contributors:
Pinotti, MARIA CRISTINA; Bertossi, Alan; Barsocchi, Paolo; Potorti', Francesco
Book title:
Handbook of Research on Mobile Multimedia