DocumentCode
498765
Title
On hierarchical routing in wireless sensor networks
Author
Iwanicki, Konrad ; Van Steen, Maarten
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Vrije Univ. Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands
fYear
2009
fDate
13-16 April 2009
Firstpage
133
Lastpage
144
Abstract
Hierarchical routing is a promising approach for point-to-point routing with very small routing state. While there are many theoretical analyses and high-level simulations demonstrating its benefits, there has been little work to evaluate it in a realistic wireless sensor network setting. Based on numerous proposed hierarchical routing infrastructures, we develop a framework that captures the common characteristics of the infrastructures and identifies design points where the infrastructures differ. We then evaluate the implementation of the framework in TOSSIM and on a 60-node testbed. We demonstrate that from the practical perspective hierarchical routing is also an appealing routing approach for sensor networks. Despite only logarithmic routing state, it can offer low routing stretch: the average of ~1.25 and the 99-th percentile of 2. Moreover, a hierarchical routing infrastructure can be autonomously bootstrapped and maintained by the nodes. By exploring the design points within our framework, the hierarchy maintenance protocol can optimize different metrics, such as the latency of bootstrapping and repairing the hierarchy after failures or the traffic volume, depending on the application requirements. Finally, we also identify a number of practical issues which we believe the applications employing hierarchical routing should be aware of.
Keywords
computer bootstrapping; routing protocols; wireless sensor networks; TOSSIM; bootstrapping; hierarchical routing; logarithmic routing state; point-to-point routing; routing stretch; wireless sensor networks; Application software; Computer science; Delay; Permission; Robustness; Routing protocols; Scalability; Telecommunication traffic; Wireless application protocol; Wireless sensor networks; Cluster Hierarchy; Hierarchical Routing; Low-Power Wireless Networks; Point-to-Point Routing; Scalability; Self-Organizing Protocols; Wireless Sensor Networks;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Information Processing in Sensor Networks, 2009. IPSN 2009. International Conference on
Conference_Location
San Francisco, CA
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-5108-1
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-60558-371-6
Type
conf
Filename
5211936
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