Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
452243 Computer Networks 2011 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

We introduce the concept of “On Demand Connectivity Sharing”, which we build on top of User-Provided Networks (UPNs). UPNs were recently proposed as a new connectivity paradigm, according to which home-users share their broadband Internet connection with roaming guests. We enhance this paradigm with incentives, rules and policies, based on which: (i) home-users provide on-demand connectivity only (i.e., they do not explicitly allocate a portion of their bandwidth) and (ii) guest-users utilize resources that remain unexploited from the respective home-users.We realize the “On Demand Connectivity Sharing” concept through (i) a queuing algorithm that classifies traffic according to its source (i.e., home- or guest-traffic) and prioritizes home- against guest-traffic accordingly and (ii) a probabilistic load-balancing algorithm that guarantees smooth cooperation between home- and guest-users. We show both analytically and through extensive performance evaluation that it is indeed possible for a home-user to share his connection with guest-, roaming-users without any practical impact on his own network performance.The concept of “On Demand Connectivity Sharing” through User-Provided Networks is expected to receive a lot of attention in the years to come, since it enables a new notion of autonomous and self-organized mobile computing. For example, we gather information regarding the location and range of real WiFi access points in the city center of London and we show that a walking user can receive acceptable services, when acting as a guest-user and gets resources from near-by home-networks.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Networks and Communications
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