Statistical Age-of-Information Bounds for Parallel Systems: When Do Independent Channels Make a Difference?
Fecha
2023-03-24Resumen
This paper contributes tail bounds of the age-of-information of a general class of parallel systems
and explores their potential. Parallel systems arise in relevant cases, such as in multi-band mobile
networks, multi-technology wireless access, or multi-path protocols, just to name a few. Typically,
control over each communication channel is limited and random service outages and congestion cause
buffering that impairs the age-of-information. The parallel use of independent channels promises a
remedy, since outages on one channel may be compensated for by another. Surprisingly, for the wellknown
case of M|M|1 queues we find the opposite: pooling capacity in one channel performs better
than a parallel system with the same total capacity. A generalization is not possible since there are
no solutions for other types of parallel queues at hand. In this work, we prove a dual representation
of age-of-information in min-plus algebra that connects to queueing models known from the theory of
effective bandwidth/capacity and the stochastic network calculus. Exploiting these methods, we derive
tail bounds of the age-of-information of parallel G|G|1 queues. In addition to parallel classical queues,
we investigate Markov channels where, depending on the memory of the channel, we show the true
advantage of parallel systems. We continue to investigate this new finding and provide insight into
when capacity should be pooled in one channel or when independent parallel channels perform better.
We complement our analysis with simulation results and evaluate different update policies, scheduling
policies, and the use of heterogeneous channels that is most relevant for latest multi-band networks.