As shown in [1], the problem of routing a flow subject to a worst-case end-to-end delay constraint in a packed-based network can be formulated as a Mixed-Integer Second-Order Cone Program, and solved with general-purpose tools in real time on realistic instances. However, that result only holds for one particular class of packet schedulers, Strictly Rate-Proportional ones, and implicitly considering each link to be fully loaded, so that the reserved rate of a flow coincides with its guaranteed rate. These assumptions make latency expressions simpler, and enforce perfect isolation between flews, i.e., admitting a new flow cannot increase the delay of existing ones. Other commonplace schedulers both yield more complex latency formula and do not enforce flow isolation. Furthermore, the delay actually depends on the guaranteed rate of the flow, which can be significantly larger than the reserved rate if the network is unloaded. In this paper we extend the result to other classes of schedulers and to a more accurate representation of the latency, showing that, even when admission control needs to be factored in, the problem is still efficiently solvable for realistic instances, provided that the right modeling choices are made. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Delay-constrained routing problems: Accurate scheduling models and admission control

Frangioni Antonio;
2017

Abstract

As shown in [1], the problem of routing a flow subject to a worst-case end-to-end delay constraint in a packed-based network can be formulated as a Mixed-Integer Second-Order Cone Program, and solved with general-purpose tools in real time on realistic instances. However, that result only holds for one particular class of packet schedulers, Strictly Rate-Proportional ones, and implicitly considering each link to be fully loaded, so that the reserved rate of a flow coincides with its guaranteed rate. These assumptions make latency expressions simpler, and enforce perfect isolation between flews, i.e., admitting a new flow cannot increase the delay of existing ones. Other commonplace schedulers both yield more complex latency formula and do not enforce flow isolation. Furthermore, the delay actually depends on the guaranteed rate of the flow, which can be significantly larger than the reserved rate if the network is unloaded. In this paper we extend the result to other classes of schedulers and to a more accurate representation of the latency, showing that, even when admission control needs to be factored in, the problem is still efficiently solvable for realistic instances, provided that the right modeling choices are made. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
2017
Istituto di Analisi dei Sistemi ed Informatica ''Antonio Ruberti'' - IASI
Routing problems
Maximum delay constraints
Scheduling algorithms
Admission control
Second-order cone programs
Perspective reformulation
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/357981
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