Title of article
Safari: A self-organizing, hierarchical architecture for scalable ad hoc networking
Author/Authors
Lin-Shu Du، نويسنده , , Ahamed Khan، نويسنده , , Santashil PalChaudhuri، نويسنده , , Ansley Post، نويسنده , , Amit Kumar Saha، نويسنده , , Peter Druschel، نويسنده , , David B. Johnson MD، نويسنده , , Rudolf Riedi، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
23
From page
485
To page
507
Abstract
As wireless devices become more pervasive, mobile ad hoc networks are gaining importance, motivating the development of highly scalable ad hoc networking techniques. In this paper, we give an overview of the Safari architecture for highly scalable ad hoc network routing, and we present the design and evaluation of a specific realization of the Safari architecture, which we call Masai. We focus in this work on the scalability of learning and maintaining the routing state necessary for a large ad hoc network. The Safari architecture provides scalable ad hoc network routing, the seamless integration of infrastructure networks when and where they are available, and the support of self-organizing, decentralized network applications. Safari’s architecture is based on (1) a self-organizing network hierarchy that recursively groups participating nodes into an adaptive, locality-based hierarchy of cells; (2) a routing protocol that uses a hybrid of proactive and reactive routing information in the cells and scales to much larger numbers of nodes than previous ad hoc network routing protocols; and (3) a distributed hash table grounded in the network hierarchy, which supports decentralized network services on top of Safari. We evaluate the Masai realization of the Safari architecture through analysis and simulations, under varying network sizes, fraction of mobile nodes, and offered traffic loads. Compared to both the DSR and the L+ routing protocols, our results show that the Masai realization of the Safari architecture is significantly more scalable, with much higher packet delivery ratio and lower overhead.
Keywords
Safari , Hybrid routing , Landmark routing , Ad hoc network routing , Peer-to-peer networking , Masai , Reactive routing , Proactive routing , Hierarchical routing
Journal title
Ad Hoc Networks
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Ad Hoc Networks
Record number
968378
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