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  4. Network-Coded Broadcast: from Canonical Networks to Random Topologies
 
conference paper

Network-Coded Broadcast: from Canonical Networks to Random Topologies

Loyola, L.
•
Souza, D.T.
•
Widmer, J.  
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2008
2008 Fourth Workshop on Network Coding, Theory and Applications
4th IEEE Workshop on Network Coding Theory and Applications (NetCod 2008)

We consider the problem of finding the minimum number of transmissions in an ad-hoc network for all-to-all broadcasting using network coding. This work generalizes previous results for canonical topologies such as the circle and the wrap around grid to the finite-sized line, and non-wrap-around grid. The latter topologies better reflect network coding in random topologies, since the dissemination of information is "directional", in a sense that information usually arrives via the neighbors on the path to its originator instead of from all possible directions. We find that while the line topology requires a higher number of transmissions compared to the circle, this is interestingly not the case for the grid. We further present simulation results on a heuristic that estimates the required minimum number of transmissions in random wireless topologies and compare it to the optimum solution, as well as previously proposed heuristics.

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