Cross-layer adaptive control for wireless mesh networks
β Scribed by Michael J. Neely; Rahul Urgaonkar
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 529 KB
- Volume
- 5
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1570-8705
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This paper investigates optimal routing and adaptive scheduling in a wireless mesh network composed of mesh clients and mesh routers. The mesh clients are power constrained mobile nodes with relatively little knowledge of the overall network topology. The mesh routers are stationary wireless nodes with higher transmission rates and more capabilities. We develop a notion of instantaneous capacity regions, and construct algorithms for multi-hop routing and transmission scheduling that achieve network stability and fairness with respect to these regions. The algorithms are shown to operate under arbitrary client mobility models (including non-ergodic models with non-repeatable events), and provide analytical delay guarantees that are independent of the timescales of the mobility process. Our control strategies apply techniques of backpressure, shortest path routing, and Lyapunov optimization.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The paper presents the problem of performance degradation of transport layer protocols due to congestion of wireless local area networks. Following the analysis of available solutions to this problem, a cross-layer congestion avoidance scheme (C 3 TCP) is presented, able to obtain higher performance
We present a novel cross-layer design for improving energy efficiency in a wireless sensor network that utilizes a multichannel non-persistent CSMA MAC protocol with adaptive MQAM modulation at the physical layer. Cross-layer interactions are achieved through joint, traffic-dependent adaptation of t
a b s t r a c t IEEE 802.11 devices dynamically choose among different modulation schemes and bitrates for frame transmissions. This rate adaptation, however, is restricted only to unicast frames. Multicast (and broadcast) frames are constrained to use a fixed low bit-rate modulation, resulting in l