Publication | Closed Access
The Case for Non-Cooperative Multihoming of Users to Access Points in IEEE 802.11 WLANs
86
Citations
27
References
2006
Year
Unknown Venue
Wireless LanGame TheoryAccess PointsMarket DesignPricingSeveral Ieee 802.11Mechanism DesignMulti-access NetworkNon-cooperative MultihomingCost Price MechanismMobile Data OffloadingFair Resource AllocationCooperative Wireless CommunicationMobile ComputingIeee 802.11Wireless AccessMobile UserCooperative GameWireless Cooperative NetworkBusiness
In many cases, a mobile user has the option of connecting to one of several IEEE 802.11 access points (APs),each using an independent channel. User throughput in each AP is determined by the number of other users as well as the frame size and physical rate being used. We consider the scenario where users could multihome, i.e., split their traffic amongst all the available APs, based on the throughput they obtain and the price charged. Thus, they are involved in a non-cooperative game with each other. We convert the problem into a fluid model and show that under a pricing scheme, which we call the cost price mechanism, the total system throughput is maximized,i.e., the system suffers no loss of efficiency due to selfish dynamics. We also study the case where the Internet Service Provider (ISP) could charge prices greater than that of the cost price mechanism. We show that even in this case multihoming outperforms unihoming, both in terms of throughput as well as profit to the ISP.
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