Abstract

This paper investigates computing task offloading from an Internet-of-Thing (IoT) device with limited transmit power to a mobile-edge computing (MEC) server located beyond the communication range of the IoT device. We propose an opportunistic cooperative offloading (OCO) strategy that recruits the IoT device’s nearby spatially random idle-state users as helpers and opportunistically schedules one of them to partially execute the latency-critical task, and forwards the rest portion of the task to the MEC server. For the OCO strategy, we investigate the helper scheduling under three cases of system information availability, i.e., the global, partial, and distance information cases, and develop an offloading-outage optimal scheduling scheme for each case. For each scheduling scheme, an approximate expression is derived for the offloading-outage probability, with which the achieved diversity order is also theoretically evaluated. Simulation results verify our performance analysis for the OCO strategy using helper scheduling and show its achieved offloading-outage/energy consumption reduction over multi-helper cooperative offloading that fully uses all helpers for cooperation. In addition, the advantages of the proposed helper scheduling schemes over existing scheduling schemes are also demonstrated by simulations.

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