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Joint Computing Resource Allocation and Task Offloading in Vehicular Fog Computing Systems Under Asymmetric Information

Published: October 30, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2510.26256v1

By: Geng Sun , Siyi Chen , Zemin Sun and more

Potential Business Impact:

Cars share power to finish tasks faster.

Business Areas:
Autonomous Vehicles Transportation

Vehicular fog computing (VFC) has emerged as a promising paradigm, which leverages the idle computational resources of nearby fog vehicles (FVs) to complement the computing capabilities of conventional vehicular edge computing. However, utilizing VFC to meet the delay-sensitive and computation-intensive requirements of the FVs poses several challenges. First, the limited resources of road side units (RSUs) struggle to accommodate the growing and diverse demands of vehicles. This limitation is further exacerbated by the information asymmetry between the controller and FVs due to the reluctance of FVs to disclose private information and to share resources voluntarily. This information asymmetry hinders the efficient resource allocation and coordination. Second, the heterogeneity in task requirements and the varying capabilities of RSUs and FVs complicate efficient task offloading, thereby resulting in inefficient resource utilization and potential performance degradation. To address these challenges, we first present a hierarchical VFC architecture that incorporates the computing capabilities of both RSUs and FVs. Then, we formulate a delay minimization optimization problem (DMOP), which is an NP-hard mixed integer nonlinear programming problem. To solve the DMOP, we propose a joint computing resource allocation and task offloading approach (JCRATOA). Specifically, we propose a convex optimization-based method for RSU resource allocation and a contract theory-based incentive mechanism for FV resource allocation. Moreover, we present a two-sided matching method for task offloading by employing the matching game. Simulation results demonstrate that the proposed JCRATOA is able to achieve superior performances in task completion delay, task completion ratio, system throughput, and resource utilization fairness, while effectively meeting the satisfying constraints.

Country of Origin
πŸ‡°πŸ‡· πŸ‡¨πŸ‡³ πŸ‡ΈπŸ‡¬ Singapore, Korea, Republic of, China

Page Count
19 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Networking and Internet Architecture