English

Middle-mile Network Optimization in Rural Wireless Meshes

Networking and Internet Architecture 2020-09-04 v2

Abstract

The status quo of limited broadband connectivity in rural areas motivates the need for fielding alternatives such as long-distance wireless mesh networks. A key aspect of fielding wireless meshes cost-effectively is planning how to connect the last-mile networks to the core network service providers (i.e., the network between the edge access terminals and the landline / optical fiber terminals) with minimal infrastructure cost and throughput constraints. This so-called middle-mile network optimization, which includes topology construction, tower height assignment, antenna and orientation selection, as well as transmit power assignment, is known to be a computationally hard problem. In this paper, we provide the first polynomial time approximation solution for a generalized version of the middle-mile network optimization problem, wherein point-to-point (i.e., WiFi p2p) links are deployed to bridge last-mile networks. Our solution has a cost performance ratio of O(lnA+BA+A+Bγ)O(\ln{|A|}+\frac{|B|}{|A|}+\frac{|A|+|B|}{\gamma}), where A and B respectively denote the number of terminals and non-terminals and γ\gamma is the ratio of link capacityterminal demand\frac{link\ capacity}{terminal\ demand}. Furthermore, our solution extends to hybrid networks, i.e., point-to-multipoint (i.e., WiFi p2mp) or omnidirectional (i.e., TV White Space) can serve as hyperlinks in addition to point-to-point links, to further reduce the cost of wireless links. We provide a complementary heuristic for our middle-mile network optimization solution that adds hyperlinks if and only if they reduce the cost.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2001.11961,
  title  = {Middle-mile Network Optimization in Rural Wireless Meshes},
  author = {Yung-Fu Chen and Anish Arora},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2001.11961},
  year   = {2020}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-23T13:26:54.712Z