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Journal ArticleDOI

Routing in Internet of Vehicles: A Review

TLDR
This work aims to provide a review of the routing protocols in the Internet of Vehicles from routing algorithms to their evaluation approaches, and provides five different taxonomies of routing protocols.
Abstract
This work aims to provide a review of the routing protocols in the Internet of Vehicles (IoV) from routing algorithms to their evaluation approaches. We provide five different taxonomies of routing protocols. First, we classify them based on their transmission strategy into three categories: unicast, geocast, and broadcast ones. Second, we classify them into four categories based on information required to perform routing: topology-, position-, map-, and path-based ones. Third, we identify them in delay-sensitive and delay-tolerant ones. Fourth, we discuss them according to their applicability in different dimensions, i.e., 1-D, 2-D, and 3-D. Finally, we discuss their target networks, i.e., homogeneous and heterogeneous ones. As the evaluation is also a vital part in IoV routing protocol studies, we examine the evaluation approaches, i.e., simulation and real-world experiments. IoV includes not only the traditional vehicular ad hoc networks, which usually involve a small-scale and homogeneous network, but also a much larger scale and heterogeneous one. The composition of classical routing protocols and latest heterogeneous network approaches is a promising topic in the future. This work should motivate IoV researchers, practitioners, and new comers to develop IoV routing protocols and technologies.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Internet of Vehicles: Architecture, Protocols, and Security

TL;DR: This work discusses the benefits of IoV along with recent industry standards developed to promote its implementation, and presents recently proposed communication protocols to enable the seamless integration and operation of the IoV.
Journal ArticleDOI

Networking and Communications in Autonomous Driving: A Survey

TL;DR: This paper surveys the networking and communication technologies in autonomous driving from two aspects: intra- and inter-vehicle.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Cooperative Quality-Aware Service Access System for Social Internet of Vehicles

TL;DR: This work studies a trajectory-based interaction time prediction algorithm to cope with an unstable network topology and high rate of disconnection in SIoVs and proposes a cooperative quality-aware system model, which focuses on a reliability assurance strategy and quality optimization method.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Survey on Acquisition, Tracking, and Pointing Mechanisms for Mobile Free-Space Optical Communications

TL;DR: This survey categorizes ATP mechanisms according to their working principles, use cases, and implementation technology to discuss advantages and disadvantages of the surveyed ATP mechanisms, and presents a discussion on challenges and future research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Vehicular Communications: A Network Layer Perspective

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a comprehensive overview of vehicular communications from the network layer perspective and identify the challenges confronted by the current vehicular networks and present corresponding research opportunities.
References
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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.

Dynamic Source Routing in Ad Hoc Wireless Networks.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a protocol for routing in ad hoc networks that uses dynamic source routing, which adapts quickly to routing changes when host movement is frequent, yet requires little or no overhead during periods in which hosts move less frequently.
Book ChapterDOI

Dynamic Source Routing in Ad Hoc Wireless Networks

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.
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.
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