Multicasting under multi-domain and hierarchical constraints
We consider the multicast routing problem under operational communication constraints, such as in practical deployment scenarios, e.g., multi-domain ad hoc networks where two or more teams form a coalition, or in tactical networks where information flows need to adhere to specified policies regardle...
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          | Published in | WiOpt : 2013 11th International Symposium and Workshops on Modeling and Optimization in Mobile, Ad Hoc and Wireless Networks : May 13-17, 2013 in Tsukuba Science City, Japan pp. 524 - 531 | 
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| Main Authors | , , , , | 
| Format | Conference Proceeding | 
| Language | English | 
| Published | 
            IEEE
    
        01.05.2013
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| Subjects | |
| Online Access | Get full text | 
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| Summary: | We consider the multicast routing problem under operational communication constraints, such as in practical deployment scenarios, e.g., multi-domain ad hoc networks where two or more teams form a coalition, or in tactical networks where information flows need to adhere to specified policies regardless of the physical connectivity of nodes. First, we consider the problem of minimum-cost multicast routing on a multi-domain network by constructing a node-weighted Steiner tree (for mesh networks) and a Steiner connected dominating set (for wireless broadcast networks) that is subject to a non-additive cost constraint. This is because the multi-domain multicast cost is not just the sum of node costs of a Steiner tree, but it instead depends on the domains of the connected neighbors. We give an efficient algorithm that provides an O(log k) approximation guarantee, where k is the number of terminal (or sink) nodes in the network. Taking multi-domain cost constraints into account can help reduce the cost of a multicast tree by up to 40%. We also consider a constraint imposed due to hierarchy compliance. We show that the overall multicast can be decomposed into several smaller multicasts, each of which might be efficiently solvable. We find that necessary hierarchical constraints could cause a significant increase in the total cost of multicast - up to 25%, as per our simulations based on a realistic deployment scenario. | 
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