Publication | Closed Access
Noncooperative content distribution in mobile infostation networks
29
Citations
9
References
2004
Year
Unknown Venue
Network ScienceEngineeringMobile Infostation NetworksNetwork Communication ProtocolEdge ComputingOpportunistic NetworkCloud ComputingContent DistributionData DisseminationNetwork AnalysisWireless NetworksMobile ComputingExchange FilesInformation-centric NetworkingContent Delivery Network
In wireless networks, it is often assumed that all nodes cooperate to relay packets for each other. Although this is a plausible model for military or mission-based networks, it is unrealistic for commercial networks and future pervasive computing environments. We address the issue of noncooperation between nodes in the context of content distribution in mobile infostation networks. All nodes have common interest in all files cached in the fixed infostations. In addition to downloading files from the fixed infostations, nodes act as mobile infostations and exchange files when they are in proximity. We stipulate a social contract such that an exchange occurs only when each node can obtain something it wants from the exchange. We show by analysis and simulations that network performance depends on node density, mobility and the number of files that are being disseminated. Our results point to the existence of data diversity for mobile infostation networks. As the number of files of interest to all users increases, the achievable throughput increases. Moreover, each user has a fairer share of the total network throughput. In particular, the transmission of each channel is only limited by contention, indicating the noncooperation strategy achieves near optimum resource utilization.
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