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Can Theory Meet Practice: The Case of Multi-Channel Wireless Networks Nitin Vaidya Electrical and Computer Engineering University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Sept. 19. 2008 1 Multi-Channel Wireless Networks Acknowledgements Ph.D M.S. Jungmin So (2006) Priya Ravichandran (2003) Pradeep Kyasanur (2006) Chandrakanth Chereddi (2006) Vartika Bhandari (2008) Rishi Bhardwaj (2007) Thomas Shen (2008) Vijay Raman Post-docs Wonyong Yoon Cheolgi Kim Funded in part by: NSF, ARO, Motorola, Boeing 2 Preliminaries … 3 Wireless Networks Wireless paradigms: Single hop versus Multi-hop Multi-hop networks: Mesh networks, ad hoc networks, sensor networks 4 What Makes Wireless Networks Interesting? Significant path loss - Signal deteriorates over space + Spatial re-use feasible B A power S distance 5 5 What Makes Wireless Networks Interesting? Interference management non-trivial B A power I C D S distance 6 What Makes Wireless Networks Interesting? Many forms of diversity • Time • Route • Antenna • Path • Channel 7 What Makes Wireless Networks Interesting? Time diversity C D gain Time 8 What Makes Wireless Networks Interesting? Route diversity infrastructure AP1 Access point AP2 B F A X C D E Z 9 What Makes Wireless Networks Interesting? Antenna diversity D C A B 10 Sidelobes not shown What Makes Wireless Networks Interesting? Path diversity 11 What Makes Wireless Networks Interesting? Channel diversity High interference Low gain B A B A High gain B A B A D C D C Low interference 12 Wireless Capacity Wireless capacity limited In dense environments, performance suffers How to improve performance ? 13 Improving Wireless Capacity Exploit physical resources, diversity Exploiting diversity requires appropriate protocols 14 State of Multi-Hop Wireless Very large volume of activity Beautiful theory Asymptotic Capacity Throughput-optimal scheduling Network utility optimization Network coding Cooperative relaying 15 State of Multi-Hop Wireless Very large volume of activity Practical protocols & deployments Many wireless standards And many more MAC & routing protocols Many experimental deployments Mesh devices Sensor devices Start-ups 16 State of Multi-Hop Wireless Despite the volume of activity Theoretical developments haven’t been translated to practice Theory often ignores realities of wireless networks Greater success in cellular environments 17 What is Lacking ? Meaningful contact between Practice Networking Theory Comm 18 Picture from Wikipedia This Talk Utilizing multiple channels in multi-hop wireless 19 Multi-Channel Environments Available spectrum Spectrum divided into channels 1 2 3 4 … c 20 Multiple Channels 3 channels 8 channels 4 channels 26 MHz 100 MHz 200 MHz 150 MHz 915 MHz 2.45 GHz 5.25 GHz 5.8 GHz IEEE 802.11 in ISM Band 21 Outline capacity D Theory to Practice Net-X testbed E Fixed F B A Switchable C Capacity bounds channels Insights on protocol design OS improvements Software architecture User Applications Multi-channel protocol IP Stack ARP Channel Abstraction Module Linux box CSL Interface Interface Device Driver Device Driver 22 Interfaces & Channels An interface can only use one channel at a time Channel 1 W cW Channel c Switching between channels may incur delay 23 Multiple Interfaces Reducing hardware cost allows for multiple interfaces m interfaces per node 1 m 24 Practical Scenario m<c A host can only be on subset of channels 1 1 m m m+1 c c–m unused channels at each node 25 Multi-Channel Mesh How to best utilize multiple channels in a mesh network with limited hardware ? ? 26 Need for New Protocols m<c c = 4 channels m = 2 interfaces 1,2 1,2 A B D 1,2 Some channels not used 1,2 C 1,3 1,2 3,4 A B C D 2,4 Network poorly connected 27 Multi-Channel Networks Many Inter-Dependent Issues How to choose a channel for a transmission? B A How to schedule transmissions? How to measure “channel quality” C - gain, load How to select routes ? 28 Outline capacity D Theory to Practice Net-X testbed E Fixed F B A Switchable C Capacity bounds channels Insights on protocol design OS improvements Software architecture User Applications Multi-channel protocol IP Stack ARP Channel Abstraction Module Linux box CSL Interface Interface Device Driver Device Driver 29 Capacity Analysis How does capacity improve with more channels ? How many interfaces necessary to efficiently utilize c channels ? 30 Network Model 31 Network Model [Gupta-Kumar] Random source-destination pairs among randomly positioned n node in unit area, with n ∞ 32 Capacity = ? l = minimum flow throughput Capacity = n l 33 Capacity [Gupta-Kumar] c=m capacity a 1 1 m=c c=m Capacity scales linearly with channels IF # interfaces also scaled 34 Capacity What if fewer interfaces ? 1 1 m m m+1 c 35 Mutlti-Channel Capacity Order O(.) Channels (c/m) 36 Capacity with n ∞ Are these results relevant ? Yield insights on design of good routing and scheduling protocols 37 Outline capacity D Theory to Practice Net-X testbed E Fixed F B A Switchable C Capacity bounds channels Insights on protocol design OS improvements Software architecture User Applications Multi-channel protocol IP Stack ARP Channel Abstraction Module Linux box CSL Interface Interface Device Driver Device Driver 38 Insights from Analysis (1) Channel Usage Need to balance load on channels Local channel assignment schemes helpful in some large scale scenarios Local mechanisms with some hints from nearby nodes 39 Insights from Analysis (2) Static channel allocation not optimal performance in general Must dynamically switch channels Channel 1 B A 2 C D 40 Insights from Analysis (3) Small number of switchable interfaces suffice How to use a larger number of interfaces ? 41 Channel Management Hybrid channel assignment: Static + Dynamic Fixed (ch 1) Fixed (ch 2) Fixed (ch 3) A B C Switchable 2 1 Switchable 3 2 Switchable 42 Insights from Analysis (4) Interface bottleneck can constrain performance Interfaces as a resource in addition to spectrum, time and space 43 Alleviating Interface Bottleneck Routes must be distributed within a neighborhood D D F A B E F B A E C C m=1 c=1,2 44 Insights from Analysis (5) Channel switching delay potentially detrimental But may be hidden with careful scheduling – create idle time on interfaces between channel switches additional interfaces 45 Insights from Analysis (6) Optimal transmission range function of number of channels Intuition: # of interfering nodes ≈ # of channels 46 Protocol Design: Timescale Separation Upper layers Routing: Longer timescales (Optional) Multi-channel aware route selection Interface management: Shorter timescales Dynamic channel assignment Interface switching Transport Network 802.11 Link Physical Layer 47 CBR – Random topology (50 nodes, 50 flows, 500m x 500m area) CBR flows Normalized throughput 16 (m,c) (2,2) (2,5) (5,5) (2,12) (12,12) 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Topology number 8 9 10 48 Outline capacity D Theory to Practice Net-X testbed E Fixed F B A Switchable C Capacity bounds channels Insights on protocol design OS improvements Software architecture User Applications Multi-channel protocol IP Stack ARP Channel Abstraction Module Linux box CSL Interface Interface Device Driver Device Driver 49 Net-X Testbed Soekris 4521 Linux 2.4 Two 802.11a radios per mesh node (m = 2) Legacy clients with 1 radio c = 5 channels Net-X source available 50 Phy-Aware Support Additional mechanisms needed to choose channels based on destination Ch. 2 B A Ch. 1 C Next hop not equivalent to a wireless interface id Phy-aware forwarding not supported traditionally In general, need a “constraint” specification for desired channel(s), antenna beamform, power/rate, … to be used for the next hop 51 Phy-Aware Support Multi-channel (phy-aware) broadcast Ch. 2 D Channel switching from user space has high latency: frequent switching from user space undesirable Ch. 3 A B Ch. 1 C 52 New Kernel Support Interface management needs to be hidden from “data path” – Buffering packets for different channels – Scheduling interface switching Ch. 2 Ch. 1 Packet to B buffer packet Interface switches to channel 1 Packet to C Packet to C arrives 53 Asymmetry Fixed (ch 1) Fixed (ch 2) Fixed (ch 3) A B C Switchable 2 1 Switchable 3 2 Switchable 54 Shortcomings 55 Shortcomings Scheduling using legacy protocol (802.11), ignorant of multi-channel nature of the system Ignores interface heterogeneity Does not explicitly handle channel heterogeneity • All nodes assumed to switch to all available channel • 802.11 / abg versus 802.11/bg • Channel gains and external interference vary 56 capacity D E Fixed F B A Switchable C Capacity bounds Net-X testbed channels Insights on protocol design OS improvements Software architecture User Applications Multi-channel protocol IP Stack ARP Channel Abstraction Module Linux box CSL Interface Interface Device Driver Device Driver 57 Modeling Interface Heterogeneity Each radio can operate only on a subset of channels 58 Adjacent (c, f) Assignment Each node assigned a contiguous block of f channels This model also subsumes untuned radios [Petrovic et al] as special cases Example: f=2, c=8 59 Random (c, f) Assignment Each node is assigned a random f-subset of channels More freedom in choices; no adjacency constraint Example: f=2, c=8 60 Impact of Constrained Channel Switching Connectivity (4, 5) (2, 3) A node cannot communicate will all “in range” nodes (5, 6) (1, 2) (1, 3) (6, 7) (7, 8) (3, 6) (2, 5) Bottleneck Formation Some channels may be scarce in certain network regions, leading to overload on some channels/nodes 61 Channel Heterogeneity Not all channels are made equal Distributed scheduling with heterogeneous channels 62 Status G Channelbinding Interface -binding IF #1 Capacity + Scheduling Protocol stack IF #2 Neighbor Queues Channel Queues IF #m Interface Queues 63 capacity D E Fixed F B A Switchable C Capacity bounds channels Insights on protocol design Wrap-up Net-X testbed OS improvements Software architecture User Applications Multi-channel protocol IP Stack ARP Channel Abstraction Module Linux box CSL Interface Interface Device Driver Device Driver 64 Summary Significant performance benefits using many channels despite limited hardware Insights from analysis useful in protocol design Conversely, implementation experience helps formulate new to theoretical problems Important to complete the loop from theory to practice 65 Research Opportunities Significant effort in protocol design needed to exploit available physical resources Examples: • MIMO (multi-antenna) • Cooperative relaying • Dense wireless infrastructure 66 Thanks! www.crhc.uiuc.edu/wireless 67