Title :
Adaptive autonomous management of ad hoc networks
Author :
Shen, Chien-Chung ; Srisathapornphat, Chavalit ; Jaikaeo, Chaiporn
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. & Inf. Sci., Delaware Univ., Newark, DE, USA
Abstract :
Ad hoc networks are fundamentally different from wireline networks due to the following peculiarities. Ad hoc networks are autonomously formed with a large number of heterogeneous nodes (ranging in complexity from sensors to palmtops and fully functional laptops and routers) without the aid of any pre-existing communication infrastructure. Therefore, tasks are distributed over and carried out by groups of collaborating nodes. In addition, the nodes run on battery. They will have to be power-conscious to conserve energy, and the functions offered by a node will depend on its available power level and capability. Furthermore, their topology can be highly dynamic due to autonomous mobility of nodes and physical characteristics of wireless links. Energy constraints, varying wireless communication bandwidth and quality, and node mobility result in networks becoming partitioned more frequently. These make managing ad hoc networks significantly more challenging than managing wireline networks. We propose the Guerrilla Management Architecture to satisfy the survivability, adaptability, autonomy, economy, heterogeneity, and scalability requirements in managing ad hoc networks. Success in addressing these research issues will lead to robust deployment of ad hoc networks and their effective network operations and efficient resource utilization. The Guerrilla management architecture builds on the following model and mechanisms to address these specific management requirements.
Keywords :
adaptive systems; distributed programming; land mobile radio; network topology; software agents; telecommunication computing; telecommunication network management; Guerrilla management architecture; ad hoc networks; adaptive autonomous management; efficient resource utilization; energy constraints; heterogeneous nodes; laptops; mobile code; network nodes; network topology; palmtops; routers; sensors; wireless communication bandwidth; wireless communication quality; wireless links; Ad hoc networks; Bandwidth; Batteries; Collaboration; Network topology; Personal digital assistants; Portable computers; Robustness; Scalability; Wireless communication;
Conference_Titel :
Network Operations and Management Symposium, 2002. NOMS 2002. 2002 IEEE/IFIP
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7382-0
DOI :
10.1109/NOMS.2002.1015636