Deployment and management of SDR cloud computing resources: Problem definition and fundamental limits

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Abstract

Software-defined radio (SDR) describes radio transceivers implemented in software that executes on general-purpose hardware. SDR combined with cloud computing technology will reshape the wireless access infrastructure, enabling computing resource sharing and centralized digital-signal processing (DSP). SDR clouds have different constraints than general-purpose grids or clouds: real-time response to user session requests and real-time execution of the corresponding DSP chains. This article addresses the SDR cloud computing resource management problem. We show that the maximum traffic load that a single resource allocator (RA) can handle is limited. It is a function of the RA complexity and the call setup delay and user blocking probability constraints. We derive the RA capacity analytically and provide numerical examples. The analysis demonstrates the fundamental tradeoffs between short call setup delays (few processors) and low blocking probability (many processors). The simulation results demonstrate the feasibility of a distributed resource management and the necessity of adapting the processor assignment to RAs according to the given traffic load distribution. These results provide new insights and guidelines for designing data centers and distributed resource management methods for SDR clouds. © 2013 Gomez-Miguelez et al.

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Gomez-Miguelez, I., Marojevic, V., & Gelonch, A. (2013). Deployment and management of SDR cloud computing resources: Problem definition and fundamental limits. Eurasip Journal on Wireless Communications and Networking, 2013(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1687-1499-2013-59

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