Abstract

A novel framework, Medium-Term Disruption Tolerant Software Defined Network (MDT-SDN), is proposed to handle medium-term disruptions of the order 10 seconds to 6 minutes. Such medium-term disruptions are crucial for the next generation wireless networks that use TCP/IP protocol stack, where the existing disruption tolerant approaches may under-perform due to resource constraints. MDT-SDN enables network control with an additional STORE action which exploits the nodes’ memory for buffering packets within the TCP/IP stack during link disruptions and forwards them as the links become alive. First, we model the network with medium-term disruptions using temporal graphs and design an Earliest Arrival Path with Minimal Storage Time (EAPMST) controller algorithm to demonstrate the MDT-SDN framework. The framework is realized in a software defined wireless mesh network testbed, using in-band control, involving mobile nodes with three mobility models: ( ${i}$ ) stationary nodes, ( ii ) group mobility, and ( iii ) random mobility. Experimental results with four application protocols justify the efficacy of MDT-SDN in providing storage control and additional performance benefits. MDT-SDN along with EAPMST improves the throughput beyond 25% with random mobility model and is capable of carrying packets and maintaining sessions during medium-term disruptions using the existing TCP/IP stack. The use of EAPMST reduces packets’ buffering time by 24.45% in group mobility while the buffering time increases in random mobility by 5.82%. However, EAPMST significantly reduces the buffer occupancy by 60.28% and 44.49% for group and random mobility, respectively.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call