Title :
Enhancing IEEE 802.11 Random Backoff in Selfish Environments
Author :
Guang, Lei ; Assi, Chadi M. ; Benslimane, Abderrahim
Author_Institution :
Voice & Data Syst. Inc., Montreal, QC
fDate :
5/1/2008 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Wireless access protocols currently deployed in mobile ad hoc networks use distributed contention resolution mechanisms for sharing the wireless channel. In such an environment, selfish hosts that fail to adhere to the medium access control (MAC) protocol may obtain an unfair share of the channel bandwidth at the expense of performance degradation of well-behaved hosts. We present a novel access method, called predictable random backoff (PRB), that is capable of mitigating the misbehavior of selfish hosts, particularly hosts that deliberately do not respect the random deferment of the transmission of their packets. PRB is based on minor modifications of the IEEE 802.11 binary exponential backoff (BEB) and forces each node to generate a predictable backoff interval. The key idea is to adjust, in a predictable manner, the lower bound of the contention window to enhance the per-station fairness in selfish environments. Hosts that do not follow the operation of PRB are therefore easily detected and isolated. We present an accurate analytical model to compute the system throughput using a 3-D Markov chain. We evaluate the performance of PRB under the normal case and in the presence of selfish hosts. Our results show that PRB and BEB similarly perform in the former case. Selfish hosts, however, achieve substantially higher throughput than well-behaved hosts under BEB. PRB, on the other hand, can effectively enhance IEEE 802.11 BEB by mitigating the impacts of these MAC selfish misbehaviors and guarantee a fair share of the wireless channel for well-behaved hosts.
Keywords :
Markov processes; access protocols; ad hoc networks; bandwidth allocation; channel allocation; mobile radio; wireless LAN; wireless channels; 3D Markov chain; IEEE 802.11 random backoff; distributed contention resolution mechanism; mobile ad hoc network; selfish host; wireless channel bandwidth sharing; wireless medium access control protocol; Ad hoc networks; IEEE 802.11; ad hoc networks; medium access control; medium access control (MAC); performance evaluation; selfish misbehavior;
Journal_Title :
Vehicular Technology, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TVT.2007.909291