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Ad hoc On-Demand Distance Vector (AODV) Routing

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TLDR
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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Journal ArticleDOI

Energy-efficient route selection strategies for wireless sensor networks

TL;DR: This paper studies various route selection strategies that aim at prolonging the lifetime of WSNs, and a new route selection scheme is proposed, that increases further the network lifetime.

An Overview of AODV Routing Protocol

TL;DR: The Ad-hoc On-Demand Distance Vector (AODV) routing protocol is designed for use in ad-Hoc mobile networks and uses traditional routing tables, one entry per destination, and sequence numbers to determine whether routing information is up- to-date and to prevent routing loops.
Book ChapterDOI

Energy-Efficient Multi-path Routing in Wireless Sensor Networks

TL;DR: The paper investigates the usefulness of multi-path routing to achieve lifetime improvements by load balancing and exploiting cross-layer information in wireless sensor networks by altering path update rules of existing on-demand routing schemes.

A Survey of Reliable Broadcast Protocols for Mobile Ad-hoc Networks

TL;DR: Providing reliable multicast is a basic requirement to build more advanced distributed protocols such as total order or leader election, but the protocols developed for wired networks tend to be unsuitable for deployment on mobile ad hoc networks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Original Article: Dynamic congestion detection and control routing in ad hoc networks

TL;DR: A method for dynamic congestion detection and control routing (DCDR) in ad hoc networks based on the estimations of the average queue length at the node level is proposed, which showed better performance than the EDOCR, EDCSCAODV, EDAODV and AODV routing protocols.
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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Guidelines for Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs

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Markku Kojo, +1 more
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