LGNIDec 3, 2020

Dynamic RAN Slicing for Service-Oriented Vehicular Networks via Constrained Learning

arXiv:2012.01991v1151 citations
AI Analysis

This work provides a method for optimizing resource allocation in vehicular networks, which is important for network operators to manage diverse IoV services efficiently.

This paper addresses the problem of dynamically allocating radio spectrum and computing resources and distributing computation workloads for different Internet of Vehicles (IoV) services with varying Quality of Service (QoS) requirements. The proposed two-layer constrained reinforcement learning algorithm, RAWS, effectively reduces system cost while satisfying QoS requirements with high probability.

In this paper, we investigate a radio access network (RAN) slicing problem for Internet of vehicles (IoV) services with different quality of service (QoS) requirements, in which multiple logically-isolated slices are constructed on a common roadside network infrastructure. A dynamic RAN slicing framework is presented to dynamically allocate radio spectrum and computing resource, and distribute computation workloads for the slices. To obtain an optimal RAN slicing policy for accommodating the spatial-temporal dynamics of vehicle traffic density, we first formulate a constrained RAN slicing problem with the objective to minimize long-term system cost. This problem cannot be directly solved by traditional reinforcement learning (RL) algorithms due to complicated coupled constraints among decisions. Therefore, we decouple the problem into a resource allocation subproblem and a workload distribution subproblem, and propose a two-layer constrained RL algorithm, named Resource Allocation and Workload diStribution (RAWS) to solve them. Specifically, an outer layer first makes the resource allocation decision via an RL algorithm, and then an inner layer makes the workload distribution decision via an optimization subroutine. Extensive trace-driven simulations show that the RAWS effectively reduces the system cost while satisfying QoS requirements with a high probability, as compared with benchmarks.

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