The Capacity of Smartphone Peer-To-Peer Networks

Authors Michael Dinitz, Magnús M. Halldórsson, Calvin Newport, Alex Weaver



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Author Details

Michael Dinitz
  • Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, United States
Magnús M. Halldórsson
  • Reykjavík University, Iceland
Calvin Newport
  • Georgetown University, Washington, DC, United States
Alex Weaver
  • Georgetown University, Washington, DC, United States

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Michael Dinitz, Magnús M. Halldórsson, Calvin Newport, and Alex Weaver. The Capacity of Smartphone Peer-To-Peer Networks. In 33rd International Symposium on Distributed Computing (DISC 2019). Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics (LIPIcs), Volume 146, pp. 14:1-14:17, Schloss Dagstuhl – Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik (2019) https://doi.org/10.4230/LIPIcs.DISC.2019.14

Abstract

We study three capacity problems in the mobile telephone model, a network abstraction that models the peer-to-peer communication capabilities implemented in most commodity smartphone operating systems. The capacity of a network expresses how much sustained throughput can be maintained for a set of communication demands, and is therefore a fundamental bound on the usefulness of a network. Because of this importance, wireless network capacity has been active area of research for the last two decades. 
The three capacity problems that we study differ in the structure of the communication demands. The first problem is pairwise capacity, where the demands are (source, destination) pairs. Pairwise capacity is one of the most classical definitions, as it was analyzed in the seminal paper of Gupta and Kumar on wireless network capacity. The second problem we study is broadcast capacity, in which a single source must deliver packets to all other nodes in the network. Finally, we turn our attention to all-to-all capacity, in which all nodes must deliver packets to all other nodes. In all three of these problems we characterize the optimal achievable throughput for any given network, and design algorithms which asymptotically match this performance. We also study these problems in networks generated randomly by a process introduced by Gupta and Kumar, and fully characterize their achievable throughput. 
Interestingly, the techniques that we develop for all-to-all capacity also allow us to design a one-shot gossip algorithm that runs within a polylogarithmic factor of optimal in every graph. This largely resolves an open question from previous work on the one-shot gossip problem in this model.

Subject Classification

ACM Subject Classification
  • Computing methodologies → Distributed algorithms
  • Networks → Network algorithms
Keywords
  • Capacity
  • Wireless
  • Mobile Telephone
  • Throughput

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