Upward Max-Min Fairness

Author:

Danna Emilie1,Hassidim Avinatan1,Kaplan Haim2,Kumar Alok1,Mansour Yishay3,Raz Danny4,Segalov Michal1

Affiliation:

1. Google

2. Tel Aviv University

3. Tel Aviv University and Microsoft Research

4. Technion

Abstract

Often one would like to allocate shared resources in a fair way. A common and well-studied notion of fairness is Max-Min Fairness , where we first maximize the smallest allocation, and subject to that the second smallest, and so on. We consider a networking application where multiple commodities compete over the capacity of a network. In our setting, each commodity has multiple possible paths to route its demand (for example, a network using Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) tunneling). In this setting, the only known way of finding a max-min fair allocation requires an iterative solution of multiple linear programs. Such an approach, although polynomial time, scales badly with the size of the network, the number of demands, and the number of paths, and is hard to implement in a distributed environment. More importantly, a network operator has limited control and understanding of the inner working of the algorithm. In this article we introduce Upward Max-Min Fairness, a novel relaxation of Max-Min Fairness, and present a family of simple dynamics that converge to it. These dynamics can be implemented in a distributed manner. Moreover, we present an efficient combinatorial algorithm for finding an upward max-min fair allocation. This algorithm is a natural extension of the well-known Water Filling Algorithm for a multiple path setting. We test the expected behavior of this new algorithm and show that on realistic networks upward max-min fair allocations are comparable to the max-min fair allocations both in fairness and in network utilization.

Funder

United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation

Israel Science Foundation

Israeli Centers of Research Excellence (I-CORE) program

Israel Ministry of Science and Technology

German-Israeli Foundation for Scientific Research and Development

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

Artificial Intelligence,Hardware and Architecture,Information Systems,Control and Systems Engineering,Software

Reference13 articles.

1. Y. Afek Y. Mansour and Z. Ostfeld. 1996. On the convergence of rate based flow control. In STOC. 106--143. Y. Afek Y. Mansour and Z. Ostfeld. 1996. On the convergence of rate based flow control. In STOC. 106--143.

2. Centralized and Distributed Algorithms for Routing and Weighted Max-Min Fair Bandwidth Allocation

3. D. Bertsekas and R. Gallager. 2001. Data Networks. Prentice-Hall Englewood Cliffs NJ. D. Bertsekas and R. Gallager. 2001. Data Networks. Prentice-Hall Englewood Cliffs NJ.

4. Approximating Fractional Multicommodity Flow Independent of the Number of Commodities

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