Opportunistic Routing: Difference between revisions
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The error rate may be high, but most pairs of nodes have at least a minimal chance of hearing each others packets (in a non-deterministic manner). Even more: Every node receives all packets which are sent by all of its neighbours, which is a difference to wired networks where all communication is somehow directed. The new approach, called "Extremely Opportunistic Routing" tries to use the advantages of these characteristics, to create a more powerful routing protocol for MANETs. |
The error rate may be high, but most pairs of nodes have at least a minimal chance of hearing each others packets (in a non-deterministic manner). Even more: Every node receives all packets which are sent by all of its neighbours, which is a difference to wired networks where all communication is somehow directed. The new approach, called "Extremely Opportunistic Routing" tries to use the advantages of these characteristics, to create a more powerful routing protocol for MANETs. |
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== Idea behind ExOR == |
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== Example Transmission == |
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== Protocol details == |
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=== Stage 1: Select Forwarding Candidates === |
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=== Stage 2: Acknowledgements === |
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=== Stage 3: Forwarding Decision === |
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== Evaluation and Simulation Results == |
Revision as of 22:28, 7 February 2005
still under construction
Introduction
Most conventional approaches for routing in MANETs (mobile ad-hoc networks) use a model, which is deviated from the wired model: Each pair of nodes is seen either as linked or not linked, only linked nodes can communicate directly:
Using algorithms known from wired networks, static routes are chosen before a packet is sent through the network. Unfortunately, this masks the wireless characteristics: In wireless networks, all nodes - in principle - can communicate with each other:
The error rate may be high, but most pairs of nodes have at least a minimal chance of hearing each others packets (in a non-deterministic manner). Even more: Every node receives all packets which are sent by all of its neighbours, which is a difference to wired networks where all communication is somehow directed. The new approach, called "Extremely Opportunistic Routing" tries to use the advantages of these characteristics, to create a more powerful routing protocol for MANETs.