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Ad hoc On-Demand Distance Vector (AODV) Routing

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A logging instrument contains a pulsed neutron source and a pair of radiation detectors spaced along the length of the instrument to provide an indication of formation porosity which is substantially independent of the formation salinity.
Abstract
The Ad hoc On-Demand Distance Vector (AODV) routing protocol is intended for use by mobile nodes in an ad hoc network. It offers quick adaptation to dynamic link conditions, low processing and memory overhead, low network utilization, and determines unicast routes to destinations within the ad hoc network. It uses destination sequence numbers to ensure loop freedom at all times (even in the face of anomalous delivery of routing control messages), avoiding problems (such as "counting to infinity") associated with classical distance vector protocols.

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Citations
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Survey on Mobile Ad Hoc Network Routing Protocols and Cross-Layer Design

Liang Qin, +1 more
TL;DR: This survey will discuss some new ideas proposed recently mainly to improve MANET throughput and scalability in different ways with some new routing metrics, new technologies such as multi-rate, multi-channel and hierarchical structure, by using cross-layer design.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

On the effect of node misbehavior in ad hoc networks

TL;DR: A classification for misbehaving nodes is derived and an analytical model of the route acquisition process executed by the ad hoc on-demand distance vector (AODV) routing protocol is extended to cover different classes of misbehavior.
Journal ArticleDOI

A routing algorithm for wireless ad hoc networks with unidirectional links

TL;DR: This paper shows that the presence of such links can jeopardize the performance of the existing distance vector routing algorithms, and presents modifications to distance vector based routing algorithms to make them work in ad hoc networks with unidirectional links.

Optimal Flooding Protocol for Routing in Ad- hoc Networks

TL;DR: The Optimal Flooding Protocol (OFP) is proposed, based on a variation of The Covering Problem that is encountered in geometry, to minimize the unnecessary transmissions drastically and still be able to cover the whole region.
Patent

Computing disjoint paths for reactive routing mesh networks

TL;DR: In this article, a reactive routing computer network may be partitioned into diverse logical topologies, and a source node may transmit route request (RREQ) messages toward a destination node on each logical topology.
References
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Ad hoc On-Demand Distance Vector (AODV) Routing for IP version 6

TL;DR: In this article, a logging instrument contains a pulsed neutron source and a pair of radiation detectors spaced along the length of the instrument to provide an indication of formation porosity which is substantially independent of the formation salinity.

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