DocumentCode
37501
Title
Neighborhood-Aware and Overhead-Free Congestion Control for IEEE 802.11 Wireless Mesh Networks
Author
El Masri, Ali ; Sardouk, Ahmad ; Khoukhi, Lyes ; Hafid, Abdelhakim ; Gaiti, Dominique
Author_Institution
CReSTIC IUT of Troyes, Univ. of Reims Champagne Ardenne, Troyes, France
Volume
13
Issue
10
fYear
2014
fDate
Oct. 2014
Firstpage
5878
Lastpage
5892
Abstract
It has been reported that the IEEE 802.11 MAC protocol and the TCP congestion control are highly problematic in terms of flow starvation in wireless mesh networks (WMNs). However, the economic features of IEEE 802.11 make it the commonly-used MAC protocol in WMNs. Therefore, solving starvation at the transport layer seems to be more appropriate. Indeed, the main starvation cause in TCP is that congestion is managed as a link-based problem. However, since bandwidth is a spatially-shared resource in WMNs, congestion is a neighborhood phenomenon that should be handled using mutual cooperation within a congested neighborhood. Such cooperation considerably consumes the already scarce bandwidth of WMNs causing more congestion. In this paper, we propose a neighborhood-aware and overhead-free congestion control scheme (NICC) that solves the starvation problem without impacting the scarce bandwidth of WMNs. NICC makes use of some underexploited fields in the IEEE 802.11 frame header, without modifying the standard frame size, to provide an overhead-free multi-bit congestion feedback; being overhead-free, this feedback allows performing neighborhood cooperation without generating control overhead. Furthermore, being multi-bit, it yields source nodes a fine-grained indication of the congestion degree, providing accurate rate control. The NICC performance in terms of starvation avoidance and bandwidth efficiency is proven through extensive simulations.
Keywords
access protocols; feedback; telecommunication congestion control; transport protocols; wireless LAN; wireless mesh networks; 802.11 wireless mesh networks; IEEE 802.11 MAC protocol; NICC; TCP congestion control; WMN; neighborhood-aware and overhead-free congestion control scheme; neighborhood-aware congestion control; overhead-free congestion control; overhead-free multibit congestion feedback; spatially-shared resource; starvation avoidance; Bandwidth; Channel allocation; IEEE 802.11 Standards; Receivers; Throughput; Wireless communication; IEEE 802.11; TCP; Wireless mesh networks; congestion control; fairness; starvation;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Wireless Communications, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1536-1276
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TWC.2014.2349898
Filename
6880830
Link To Document