Abstract

The high-level contribution of this paper is a simulation-based analysis to evaluate the tradeoffs between lifetime and hop count of link-disjoint, node-disjoint and zone-disjoint multi-path routes vis-\`a-vis single-path minimum hop routes for mobile ad hoc networks. The link-disjoint, node-disjoint and zone-disjoint algorithms proposed in this paper can be used to arrive at benchmarks for the time between successive multi-path route discoveries, the number of disjoint paths per multi-path set and the hop count per multi-path set. We assume a multi-path set exists as long as at least one path in the set exists. Simulation results indicate that the number of zone-disjoint paths per multi-path set can be at most 2, which is far lower than the number of node and link-disjoint paths available per multi-path set. Also, the time between zone-disjoint multi-path discoveries would be far lower than the time between node and link-disjoint multi-path route discoveries and can be at most 45% more than the time between single minimum-hop path route discoveries. However, there is no appreciable difference in the average hop counts per zone-disjoint, node-disjoint and link-disjoint multi-path sets and it can be only at most 15% more than the average minimum hop count determined using single-path routing. We also observe that even though the number of link-disjoint paths per multi-path set can be as large as 35-78% more than the number of node-disjoint paths per multi-path set, the time between two successive link-disjoint multi-path discoveries can be at most 15-25% more than the time between two successive node-disjoint multi-path discoveries, without any significant difference in the hop count per multi-path set.

Highlights

  • A mobile ad hoc network (MANET) is a dynamic distributed system characterized by node mobility, limited battery power of nodes and limited channel bandwidth

  • We analyzed the performance of link, node and zone-disjoint multi-path routing algorithms visà-vis single path minimum hop routing with respect to performance metrics such as the time between successive multi-path route discoveries, the hop count per multi-path set and the multipath set size

  • A significant observation is that the link-disjoint multi-paths are only 15-30% more stable compared to node-disjoint multi-paths with often negligible difference in the average hop count

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

A mobile ad hoc network (MANET) is a dynamic distributed system characterized by node mobility, limited battery power of nodes and limited channel bandwidth. Multi-path ondemand routing protocols tend to compute multiple paths, at both the traffic sources as well as at intermediary nodes, in a single route discovery attempt. We determine the sequence of minimum-hop single path s-d routes over the duration of a network simulation session and use it as a benchmark to observe the tradeoff between the stability and average hop count of multipath routes.

LITERATURE REVIEW ON MANET MULTI-PATH ROUTING
Review of Link-Disjoint Multi-path Routing Protocols
Review of Node-Disjoint Multi-path Routing Protocols
Review of Zone-Disjoint Multi-path Routing Protocols
SIMULATIONS
Determining the Sequence of Multi-path and Single Path Routes
Performance Metrics
Average Number of Paths per Multi-path Set
Average Time between Successive Multi-path and Single Path Route Discoveries
Average Hop Count per Multi-path and Single Path
Findings
CONCLUSIONS AND FUTURE WORK
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