Ad-hoc on-demand distance vector routing
C.E. Perkins,E.M. Royer +1 more
- 25 Feb 1999
- pp 90-100
TL;DR: An ad-hoc network is the cooperative engagement of a collection of mobile nodes without the required intervention of any centralized access point or existing infrastructure and the proposed routing algorithm is quite suitable for a dynamic self starting network, as required by users wishing to utilize ad- hoc networks.
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Abstract: An ad-hoc network is the cooperative engagement of a collection of mobile nodes without the required intervention of any centralized access point or existing infrastructure. We present Ad-hoc On Demand Distance Vector Routing (AODV), a novel algorithm for the operation of such ad-hoc networks. Each mobile host operates as a specialized router, and routes are obtained as needed (i.e., on-demand) with little or no reliance on periodic advertisements. Our new routing algorithm is quite suitable for a dynamic self starting network, as required by users wishing to utilize ad-hoc networks. AODV provides loop-free routes even while repairing broken links. Because the protocol does not require global periodic routing advertisements, the demand on the overall bandwidth available to the mobile nodes is substantially less than in those protocols that do necessitate such advertisements. Nevertheless we can still maintain most of the advantages of basic distance vector routing mechanisms. We show that our algorithm scales to large populations of mobile nodes wishing to form ad-hoc networks. We also include an evaluation methodology and simulation results to verify the operation of our algorithm.
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Citations
Routing protocols in Vehicular Delay Tolerant Networks: A comprehensive survey
TL;DR: This article presents a comprehensive survey of routing protocols proposed for routing in Vehicular Delay Tolerant Networks (VDTN) in vehicular environment, focusing on a special type of VANET, where the vehicular traffic is sparse and direct end-to-end paths between communicating parties do not always exist.
180
Outdoor experimental comparison of four ad hoc routing algorithms
Robert S. Gray,David Kotz,Calvin Newport,Nikita Dubrovsky,Aaron Fiske,Jason Liu,Christopher Masone,Susan P. McGrath,Yougu Yuan +8 more
- 04 Oct 2004
TL;DR: This paper reports on an outdoor comparison of four different routing algorithms, APRL, AODV, ODMRP, and STARA, running on top of thirty-three 802.11-enabled laptops moving randomly through an athletic field, providing insight into the behavior of ad hoc routing algorithms at larger real-world scales than have been considered so far.
Transmission-Efficient Clustering Method for Wireless Sensor Networks Using Compressive Sensing
Ruitao Xie,Xiaohua Jia +1 more
TL;DR: A clustering method that uses hybrid CS for sensor networks that finds the optimal size of clusters that can lead to minimum number of transmissions and a centralized clustering algorithm based on the results obtained from the analytical model.
179
RDMAR: a bandwidth-efficient routing protocol for mobile ad hoc networks
George Neonakis Aggelou,Rahim Tafazolli +1 more
- 01 Aug 1999
TL;DR: A loop-free routing protocol for ad hoc mobile networks that is highly adaptive, efficient and scaleable; and is well-suited in large mobile networks whose rate of topological changes is moderate.
179
An Evolving Graph-Based Reliable Routing Scheme for VANETs
Mahmoud Hashem Eiza,Qiang Ni +1 more
TL;DR: This paper is the first to propose an evolving graph-based reliable routing scheme for VANETs to facilitate quality-of-service (QoS) support in the routing process and demonstrates, through the simulation results, that the proposed scheme significantly outperforms the related protocols in the literature.
178
References
Dynamic Source Routing in Ad Hoc Wireless Networks
David B. Johnson,David A. Maltz +1 more
- 01 Jan 1996
TL;DR: This paper presents a protocol for routing in ad hoc networks that uses dynamic source routing that adapts quickly to routing changes when host movement is frequent, yet requires little or no overhead during periods in which hosts move less frequently.
A performance comparison of multi-hop wireless ad hoc network routing protocols
J. Broch,David A. Maltz,David B. Johnson,Yih-Chun Hu,Jorjeta G. Jetcheva +4 more
- 25 Oct 1998
TL;DR: The results of a derailed packet-levelsimulationcomparing fourmulti-hopwirelessad hoc networkroutingprotocols, which cover a range of designchoices: DSDV,TORA, DSR and AODV are presented.
A review of current routing protocols for ad hoc mobile wireless networks
E.M. Royer,Chai-Keong Toh +1 more
TL;DR: Routing protocols for ad hoc networks are examined by providing an overview of eight different protocols by presenting their characteristics and functionality, and then a comparison and discussion of their respective merits and drawbacks are provided.
Multicluster, mobile, multimedia radio network
Mario Gerla,Jack Tzu-Chieh Tsai +1 more
TL;DR: A multi-cluster, multi-hop packet radio network architecture for wireless adaptive mobile information systems is presented that supports multimedia traffic and relies on both time division and code division access schemes.
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