Abstract
In this work, the region of achievable quality-of-service (QoS) is precisely described for a system of real-time heterogeneous variable bit rate (VBR) sources competing for slots (packet transmission times) of a time division multiple access (TDMA) frame. The QoS for each application is defined in terms of a maximum tolerable packet-dropping probability. Packets may be dropped due to delay violations and channel induced errors. The region of achievable QoS is precisely described for an interference/resource limited network by considering the underlying TDMA-multiple access control (TDMA-MAC) structure and the physical channel. A simple QoS-sensitive error-control protocol that combats the effects of the wireless channel while satisfying the real-time requirements is proposed and its impact on the region of achievable QoS is evaluated. The results presented here clearly illustrate the negative impact of a poor channel and the positive impact of the employed error-control protocol on the achievable QoS. The region of achievable QoS vectors is central to the call admission problem, and in this work, it is used to identify a class of scheduling policies capable of delivering any achievable performance.
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