Abstract
Network slicing is a very common practice in modern computer networks. It can serve as an efficient way to distribute network resources to physical groups of users, and allows the network to provide performance guarantees in terms of the Quality of Service. Physical links are divided logically and are assigned on a per-service basis to accomplish this. Traditionally, network slicing has been done mostly in wired networks, and bringing these practices to wireless networks has only been done recently. The main contribution of this thesis is network slicing applied to wireless environments where multiple adjacent networks are forced to share the same spectrum, namely in LTE and 5G. Spectrum in the sub-6GHz range is crowded by a wide range of services, and managing interference between networks is often challenging. A modified graph coloring technique is used both as a means to identify areas of interference and overlap between two networks, as well as assign spectrum resources to each node in an efficient manner. A central entity, known as the ”Overseer”, was developed as a bridge to pass interference-related information between the two coexisting networks. Performance baselines were first gathered for network slicing in a single-network scenario, followed by the introduction of a second network and the evaluation of the efficacy of the graph coloring approach. In the cases of highest interference from the secondary network, the modified graph coloring approach provided more than 22.3% reduction in median user delay, and more than 36.0% increase in median single-user and slice-aggregate throughput across all three network slices compared to the non-graph coloring scenario.
Library of Congress Subject Headings
Wireless communication systems; Computer networks--Management; Mobile communication systems; Global system for mobile communications; Graph coloring
Publication Date
12-2020
Document Type
Thesis
Student Type
Graduate
Degree Name
Computer Engineering (MS)
Department, Program, or Center
Computer Engineering (KGCOE)
Advisor
Andres Kwasinski
Advisor/Committee Member
Amlan Ganguly
Advisor/Committee Member
Muhieddin Amer
Recommended Citation
Jenco, John, "Network Slicing for Wireless Networks Operating in a Shared Spectrum Environment" (2020). Thesis. Rochester Institute of Technology. Accessed from
https://repository.rit.edu/theses/10642
Campus
RIT – Main Campus
Plan Codes
CMPE-MS