现代随机接入协议

M. Berioli, G. Cocco, G. Liva, A. Munari
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引用次数: 54

摘要

随机访问可能是在多个用户之间共享通道的最简单的方法,也是最著名的方法之一。自20世纪70年代引入随机接入方案以来,人们对其进行了深入的研究,从那时起,开创性的Aloha协议的小变化已成为许多通信标准的关键组成部分,范围从卫星网络到特设和蜂窝场景。在过去几年中,随着主要基于连续干扰消除原则的新解决方案的发展,这一旧范式向前迈出了根本性的一步,这使得有可能接受包之间的建设性冲突,而不是将其视为浪费资源。这些新的研究路线使得现代随机访问协议的性能与它们的协调对应物具有竞争力,为大量新的应用铺平了道路。这本专著探讨了一些这样的新颖方案背后的主要思想和设计原则,旨在向读者介绍可用于模拟其性能的分析工具。在回顾了随机接入信道的一些相关理论结果之后,该卷侧重于将分集Aloha方法与连续干扰消除相结合的槽解,并基于与图上编码理论的类比讨论了它们的优化。然后进一步探讨了现代随机接入的潜力,考虑了两类方案:前者基于物理层网络编码来解决用户之间的冲突,后者依赖于接收器分集的概念。最后,回顾和讨论了最近设计的异步(即无槽)随机访问解决方案所面临的机遇和挑战。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Modern Random Access Protocols
Random access represents possibly the simplest and yet one of the best known approaches for sharing a channel among several users. Since their introduction in the 1970s, random access schemes have been thoroughly studied and small variations of the pioneering Aloha protocol have since then become a key component of many communications standards, ranging from satellite networks to ad hoc and cellular scenarios. A fundamental step forward for this old paradigm has been witnessed in the past few years, with the development of new solutions, mainly based on the principles of successive interference cancellation, which made it possible to embrace constructively collisions among packets rather than enduring them as a waste of resources. These new lines of research have rendered the performance of modern random access protocols competitive with that of their coordinated counterparts, paving the road for a multitude of new applications. This monograph explores the main ideas and design principles that are behind some of such novel schemes, and aims at offering to the reader an introduction to the analytical tools that can be used to model their performance. After reviewing some relevant thoretical results for the random access channel, the volume focuses on slotted solutions that combine the approach of diversity Aloha with successive interference cancellation, and discusses their optimisation based on an analogy with the theory of codes on graphs. The potential of modern random access is then further explored considering two families of schemes: the former based on physical layer network coding to resolve collisions among users, and the latter leaning on the concept of receiver diversity. Finally, the opportunities and the challenges encountered by random access solutions recently devised to operate in asynchronous, i.e., unslotted, scenarios are reviewed and discussed.
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