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    <pubDate>Sat, 18 May 2013 20:13:09 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>Combinatorial structures for communication networks</title>
      <link>http://hdl.handle.net/2307/427</link>
      <description>&lt;Title&gt;Combinatorial structures for communication networks&lt;/Title&gt;
&lt;Authors&gt;Sperduto, Ezio&lt;/Authors&gt;
&lt;Issue Date&gt;2009-04-02&lt;/Issue Date&gt;
&lt;Abstract&gt;This thesis deals with a class of theoretical problems arising in applications&#xD;
in communication networks. The dissertation is mainly divided in two parts.&#xD;
In the first part,  we attempt to solve a set of survivability network design&#xD;
problems. Network survivability refers to the guarantees that a communication&#xD;
network provides in the event that one or more failures occur. An attack or&#xD;
failure can significantly reduce the capability of the communication network to&#xD;
efficiently deliver basic services to users. In several cases,  when a failure occurs, &#xD;
the network operators are interested in restoring traffic by re-routing it through&#xD;
different links. Since re-routing traffic can be rather expensive and may cause&#xD;
delays in transmissions,  a key property is that of requiring that traffic which is&#xD;
not affected by the failure is not redirected in failure situations.&#xD;
We study the problem of determining whether a given network,  where the traffic&#xD;
is commonly routed on the edges of a shortest path tree (e.g. Ethernet networks&#xD;
with the Spanning Tree Protocol),  may satisfy the above mentioned property.&#xD;
We provide computational complexity results for directed and undirected net-&#xD;
works. In particular,  for the directed case,  we prove that such problem is in&#xD;
general NP-hard and that it remains NP-hard also in some special cases. More-&#xD;
over,  we show how to assign weights to the links of the network in order to&#xD;
configure a routing topology with the above mentioned property.&#xD;
In the second part of the thesis,  we deal with a problem regarding broadcast-&#xD;
ing in telecommunication networks. We investigate a new version of the well&#xD;
known Minimum Broadcast Time problem which has been deeply studied in&#xD;
the past,  since broadcasting is a basic primitive in the communication networks&#xD;
area. Fundamental requirements for a broadcast process are that it completes in&#xD;
the quickest way and that,  at the end of the procedure,  all the peers in the net-&#xD;
work are informed. In this thesis we deal with an objective function that takes&#xD;
into account the quality of the service associated with the broadcast,  namely&#xD;
the minimization of the average broadcast time of the peers.&#xD;
We show that the considered version of the broadcast problem is an NP-hard&#xD;
problem. Indeed,  the problem becomes polynomially solvable,  if the instance&#xD;
graph is a tree. We also provide a distributed approximation algorithm for our&#xD;
version of the broadcast problem,  in which every network node does not know&#xD;
the network topology.&lt;/Abstract&gt;</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 01 Apr 2009 22:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <dc:date>2009-04-01T22:00:00Z</dc:date>
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