Multipath routing and QoS provisioning in mobile ad hoc networks
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A Mobile Ad Hoc Networks (MANET) is a collection of mobile nodes that can
communicate with each other using multihop wireless links without utilizing any
fixed based-station infrastructure and centralized management. Each mobile node
in the network acts as both a host generating flows or being destination of flows
and a router forwarding flows directed to other nodes.
Future applications of MANETs are expected to be based on all-IP
architecture and be capable of carrying multitude real-time multimedia
applications such as voice and video as well as data. It is very necessary for
MANETs to have an efficient routing and quality of service (QoS) mechanism to
support diverse applications.
This thesis proposes an on-demand Node-Disjoint Multipath Routing protocol
(NDMR) with low broadcast redundancy. Multipath routing allows the
establishment of multiple paths between a single source and single destination
node. It is also beneficial to avoid traffic congestion and frequent link breaks in
communication because of the mobility of nodes. The important components of
the protocol, such as path accumulation, decreasing routing overhead and
selecting node-disjoint paths, are explained. Because the new protocol
significantly reduces the total number of Route Request packets, this results in an
increased delivery ratio, smaller end-to-end delays for data packets, lower control
overhead and fewer collisions of packets.
Although NDMR provides node-disjoint multipath routing with low route
overhead in MANETs, it is only a best-effort routing approach, which is not
enough to support QoS. DiffServ is a standard approach for a more scalable way
to achieve QoS in any IP network and could potentially be used to provide QoS
in MANETs because it minimises the need for signalling. However, one of the
biggest drawbacks of DiffServ is that the QoS provisioning is separate from the
routing process. This thesis presents a Multipath QoS Routing protocol for
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supporting DiffServ (MQRD), which combines the advantages of NDMR and
DiffServ. The protocol can classify network traffic into different priority levels
and apply priority scheduling and queuing management mechanisms to obtain
QoS guarantees.
Authors
Li, XuefeiCollections
- Theses [4275]