DocumentCode :
37279
Title :
Measuring Temporal Lags in Delay-Tolerant Networks
Author :
Casteigts, Arnaud ; Flocchini, Paola ; Mans, Bernard ; Santoro, Nicola
Author_Institution :
LaBRI, Univ. Bordeaux 1, Talence, France
Volume :
63
Issue :
2
fYear :
2014
fDate :
Feb. 2014
Firstpage :
397
Lastpage :
410
Abstract :
Delay-tolerant networks (DTNs) are characterized by a possible absence of end-to-end communication routes at any instant. Yet, connectivity can be achieved over time and space, leading to evaluate a given route both in terms of topological length or temporal length. The problem of measuring temporal distances in a social network was recently addressed through postprocessing contact traces like email data sets, in which all contacts are punctual in time (i.e., they have no duration). We focus on the distributed version of this problem and address the more general case that contacts can have arbitrary durations (i.e., be nonpunctual). Precisely, we ask whether each node in a network can track in real time how "out-of-dateâ it is with respect to every other. Although relatively straightforward with punctual contacts, this problem is substantially more complex with arbitrarily long contacts: consecutive hops of an optimal route may either be disconnected (intermittent connectedness of DTNs) or connected (i.e., the presence of links overlaps in time, implying a continuum of path opportunities). The problem is further complicated (and yet, more realistic) by the fact that we address continuous-time systems and nonnegligible message latencies (time to propagate a single message over a single link); however, this latency is assumed fixed and known. We demonstrate the problem is solvable in this general context by generalizing a time-measurement vector clock construct to the case of "nonpunctualâ causality, which results in a tool we call T-Clocks, of independent interest. The remainder of the paper shows how T-Clocks can be leveraged to solve concrete problems such as learning foremost broadcast trees (BTs), network backbones, or fastest broadcast trees in periodic DTNs.
Keywords :
continuous time systems; delay tolerant networks; mobile computing; broadcast trees; continuous time systems; delay tolerant networks; end to end communication routes; network backbones; nonnegligible message latencies; optimal route; punctual contacts; temporal lags; temporal length; time measurement vector clock; topological length; Clocks; Educational institutions; Image edge detection; Real time systems; Social network services; Vectors; Clocks; Distributed networks; Educational institutions; Image edge detection; Real time systems; Social network services; Vectors; mobile computing; store and forward networks;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Computers, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9340
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TC.2012.208
Filename :
6291709
Link To Document :
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