Abstract

In larger-scale sensor networks, sink or target mobility brings new challenges in route maintenance and update. Conventional routing approaches suggest reconstructing a new route using flooding based protocols or simply repairing the old route locally. The flooding based scheme introduces lots of unnecessary control traffic, thus wasting sensor power and channel bandwidth. The local route repair leads to an excessively long route when the sink or the target keeps on moving. In this paper an efficient route update protocol (ERUP) is proposed to localize the flooding of route update messages within the neighborhood of the old route. By using this new scheme, route-wide renovation is assured to maintain the freshness and short length of the new route, and at the same time, greatly reduces the route update traffic with the help of the old route. Our simulations show that ERUP can always build a shorter and fresher route with very low control traffic compared with conventional approaches, which is beneficial to the energy conserving and balancing of the whole network.

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