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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Opportunistic routing in multi-hop wireless networks

Sanjit Biswas, +1 more
- Vol. 34, Iss: 1, pp 69-74
TLDR
Extremely Opportunistic Routing is described, a new unicast routing technique for multi-hop wireless networks that reduces the total number of transmissions by nearly a factor of two over the best possible pre-determined route.
Abstract
This paper describes Extremely Opportunistic Routing (ExOR), a new unicast routing technique for multi-hop wireless networks. ExOR forwards each packet through a sequence of nodes, deferring the choice of each node in the sequence until after the previous node has transmitted the packet on its radio. ExOR then determines which node, of all the nodes that successfully received that transmission, is the node closest to the destination. That closest node transmits the packet. The result is that each hop moves the packet farther (or average) than the hops of the best possible pre-determined route.The ExOR design addresses the challenge of choosing a forwarding node after transmission using a distributed algorithm. First, when a node transmits a packet, it includes in the packet a simple schedule describing the priority order in which the potential receivers should forward the packet. The node computes the schedule based on shared measurements of inter-node delivery rates. ExOR then uses a distributed slotted MAC protocol for acknowledgements to ensure that the receivers agree who the highest priority receiver was.The efficacy of ExOR depends mainly on the rate at which the reception probability falls off with distance. Simulations based on measured radio characteristics [6] suggest that ExOR reduces the total number of transmissions by nearly a factor of two over the best possible pre-determined route.

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Citations
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A simple Cooperative diversity method based on network path selection

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XORs in the air: practical wireless network coding

TL;DR: The results show that using COPE at the forwarding layer, without modifying routing and higher layers, increases network throughput, and the gains vary from a few percent to several folds depending on the traffic pattern, congestion level, and transport protocol.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Trading structure for randomness in wireless opportunistic routing

TL;DR: More as mentioned in this paper is a MAC-independent opportunistic routing protocol, which randomly mixes packets before forwarding them to ensure that routers that hear the same transmission do not forward the same packets, thus, it needs no special scheduler to coordinate routers and can run directly on top of 802.11.
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Cognitive radio networking and communications: an overview

TL;DR: This paper provides a systematic overview on CR networking and communications by looking at the key functions of the physical, medium access control (MAC), and network layers involved in a CR design and how these layers are crossly related.
Journal ArticleDOI

XORs in the air: practical wireless network coding

TL;DR: The results show that COPE largely increases network throughput, and the gains vary from a few percent to several folds depending on the traffic pattern, congestion level, and transport protocol.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Cooperative diversity in wireless networks: Efficient protocols and outage behavior

TL;DR: Using distributed antennas, this work develops and analyzes low-complexity cooperative diversity protocols that combat fading induced by multipath propagation in wireless networks and develops performance characterizations in terms of outage events and associated outage probabilities, which measure robustness of the transmissions to fading.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Ad-hoc on-demand distance vector routing

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.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

GPSR: greedy perimeter stateless routing for wireless networks

TL;DR: Greedy Perimeter Stateless Routing is presented, a novel routing protocol for wireless datagram networks that uses the positions of routers and a packet's destination to make packet forwarding decisions and its scalability on densely deployed wireless networks is demonstrated.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Highly dynamic Destination-Sequenced Distance-Vector routing (DSDV) for mobile computers

TL;DR: The modifications address some of the previous objections to the use of Bellman-Ford, related to the poor looping properties of such algorithms in the face of broken links and the resulting time dependent nature of the interconnection topology describing the links between the Mobile hosts.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A high-throughput path metric for multi-hop wireless routing

TL;DR: Measurements taken from a 29-node 802.11b test-bed demonstrate the poor performance of minimum hop-count, illustrate the causes of that poor performance, and confirm that ETX improves performance.