Multihop Wireless Networks: A Unified Approach to Relaying and Interference Management

Ilan Shomorony, A. Avestimehr
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Abstract

Multi-hop communication paradigms are expected to play a central role in future wireless networks by enabling a higher spatial reuse of the spectrum. A major challenge in multi-hop multi-user or multi-flow wireless networks is that "interference management" and "relaying" are coupled with each other. In other words, wireless relay nodes must play a dual role: they serve as intermediate steps for multi-hop communication and as part of the mechanism that allows interference management schemes. Nonetheless, in the communications, networking and information theory literature, these two tasks have traditionally been addressed separately, and the fundamental principles of the "wireless networks of the future" are currently not well understood. In this monograph, we take a unified approach to relaying and interference management, and seek to develop tools to study the fundamentals of multi-hop multi-flowwireless networks. We first consider multi-hop two-flow - or two-unicast - wireless networks. In order to handle networks with an arbitrary number of hops and arbitrary interference patterns, we introduce the idea of network condensation, by which a network with an arbitrary number of layers is effectively reduced to a network with at most four layers. This is done by identifying key layers and letting the nodes in all other layers apply random linear coding to relay the messages. Only the nodes in the remaining key layers need to be "smart" and perform coupled relaying and interference management operations. In addition, we introduce the new notion of paths with manageable interference, which represents a first attempt at finding flow-like structures in multi-user wireless networks, and develop novel outer bounds that capture the interference structure of a given topology. These techniques yield a complete characterization of the degrees of freedom of two-unicast layered networks as a function of the network graph. Extending these results for general K-unicast networks is quite challenging. To make progress on this front, we focus on the K x K x K wireless network, a two-hop network consisting of K sources, K relays, and K destinations. This network represents a canonical example of a multi-hop multi-flow wireless network for which previously there was a large gap between known inner and outer bounds, even from a degrees-of-freedom perspective. We introduce a coding scheme called Aligned Network Diagonalization AND that couples relaying and interference management in a way that all interference experienced by the destinations is simultaneously neutralized. This proves that K x K x K wireless networks have K sum degrees of freedom and demonstrates the significant gains that can be obtained with a unified approach to relaying and interference management. Moreover, this automotically yields the optimal scheme and degrees-of-freedom characterization for layered K unicast networks with fully connected hops. We then describe ideas and preliminary results for K-unicast networks with general topologies. Besides discussing how the tools developed for two-unicast networks and for K x K x K networks can be extended to this general setting, we present a novel outer-bounding technique, which improves over the cut-set bound and can capture limitations imposed by the interference between different users. The new bound can be understood as computing the flow across multiple "nested cuts", as opposed to a single cut, as is the case in the classical cut-set bound. This technique allows us to establish a graph-theoretic notion of manageable interference in K x K x K wireless networks with arbitrary connectivity. Throughout the monograph, many extensions and future directions are addressed. At the end of each chapter, related work is also described and several open problems are presented. Important research directions such as accounting for the lack of global channel state information in large networks and reducing the complexity of relaying operations are discussed, and recent results along these lines are described.
多跳无线网络:中继和干扰管理的统一方法
通过实现更高的频谱空间复用,多跳通信范式有望在未来的无线网络中发挥核心作用。多跳多用户或多流无线网络的一个主要挑战是“干扰管理”和“中继”相互耦合。换句话说,无线中继节点必须扮演双重角色:它们作为多跳通信的中间步骤,并作为允许干扰管理方案的机制的一部分。尽管如此,在通信、网络和信息理论文献中,这两项任务传统上是分开处理的,而且“未来无线网络”的基本原理目前还没有得到很好的理解。在本专著中,我们采用统一的方法来中继和干扰管理,并寻求开发工具来研究多跳多流无线网络的基础。我们首先考虑多跳双流或双单播无线网络。为了处理具有任意跳数和任意干扰模式的网络,我们引入了网络凝聚的思想,通过该思想,具有任意层数的网络可以有效地简化为最多四层的网络。这是通过识别关键层并让所有其他层中的节点应用随机线性编码来中继消息来实现的。只有其余关键层中的节点需要“智能”并执行耦合中继和干扰管理操作。此外,我们引入了具有可管理干扰的路径的新概念,这代表了在多用户无线网络中寻找流状结构的首次尝试,并开发了捕获给定拓扑的干扰结构的新外部边界。这些技术产生了作为网络图函数的双单播分层网络的自由度的完整表征。将这些结果扩展到一般的k -单播网络是相当具有挑战性的。为了在这方面取得进展,我们将重点放在K x K x K无线网络上,这是一个由K个源、K个中继和K个目的地组成的两跳网络。该网络代表了一个多跳多流无线网络的典型例子,即使从自由度的角度来看,以前已知的内外边界之间也存在很大的差距。我们引入了一种称为对齐网络对角化AND的编码方案,该方案将中继和干扰管理结合在一起,使目的地所经历的所有干扰同时被中和。这证明了K × K × K无线网络具有K和自由度,并证明了采用统一的中继和干扰管理方法可以获得显著的收益。此外,这自动产生具有完全连接跳数的分层K单播网络的最优方案和自由度表征。然后,我们描述了具有一般拓扑结构的k -单播网络的想法和初步结果。除了讨论为双单播网络和K × K × K网络开发的工具如何扩展到这种一般设置之外,我们还提出了一种新的外边界技术,该技术改进了切集边界,并且可以捕获由不同用户之间的干扰所施加的限制。新边界可以理解为计算跨多个“嵌套切割”的流,而不是像经典切割集边界那样计算单个切割。该技术允许我们在任意连接的kxkxk无线网络中建立可管理干扰的图论概念。在整个专著中,讨论了许多扩展和未来的方向。在每章的最后,还描述了相关的工作,并提出了几个悬而未决的问题。讨论了大型网络中缺乏全局信道状态信息和降低中继操作复杂性等重要研究方向,并描述了这些方面的最新成果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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