• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 45
  • 11
  • 11
  • 10
  • 7
  • 5
  • 3
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 114
  • 114
  • 55
  • 55
  • 54
  • 36
  • 35
  • 30
  • 28
  • 17
  • 16
  • 13
  • 13
  • 12
  • 12
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Connectionless Approach to Vehicular Ad Hoc Networks in Metropolitan Environments

Wu, Ming-chang 28 July 2009 (has links)
none
2

Hybrid Routing Protocol Based on k-hop Clustering Structure in MANETs

Kho, Kuan-ping 24 August 2009 (has links)
This paper proposes a hybrid routing protocol based on the k-hop clustering structure for MANETs. The source sends packets to the destination directly if it is in the source¡¦s neighbor table; otherwise the source reactively sends the route request packet (RREQ) to trigger the routing process. Instead of adopting the nodes that forwards the RREQ as the route between the source and destination, the route reply packet (RREP) is broadcasted via the nodes in the clusters that the RREQ has ever passed to find the route. The route constructed in this way can avoid the clusterheads always being in the transmission route and collapsing due to overloading. In comparison with the Cluster Based Routing Protocol (CBRP), the proposed protocol can distribute the communication workload from the clusterheads to member nodes. Simulation results demonstrate that the proposed protocol has better packet delivery ratio and end-to-end delay time than that of CBRP.
3

Design study of energy-efficient routing protocol for wireless sensor networks.

Lu, Lifang January 2009 (has links)
Recent advances in wireless sensor networks have led to an emergence of many routing protocols. Limited battery capacity of sensor nodes makes energy efficiency a major and challenge problem in wireless sensor networks. Thus, the routing protocols for wireless sensor networks must be energy efficient in order to maximise the network lifetime. In this thesis, we developed a centralised clustering, energy-efficient routing protocol for wireless sensor networks. Our protocol consists of a cluster head selection algorithm, a cluster formation scheme and a routing algorithm for the data transmission between cluster heads and the base station. The cluster head selection algorithm is performed by the base station using global information of the network. This algorithm aiming at choosing cluster heads that ensure both the intra-cluster data transmission and inter-cluster data transmission are energy-efficient. The cluster formation scheme is accomplished by exchanging messages between non-cluster-head nodes and the cluster head to ensure a balanced energy load among cluster heads. The routing algorithm is based on the optimal transmission range for the data transmission between cluster heads and the base station using multi-hop. The performance of our routing protocol is evaluated by comparing with three existing routing protocols on a simulation platform. The simulation results show that our protocol can achieve better performance in terms of energy efficiency and network lifetime. Because of the centralised algorithm and multi-hop routing, there is a small communication overhead and transmission delay when using our protocol. Since our protocol can save energy and prolong network lifetime, it is well suited for applications where energy and network lifetime are the primary considerations and small overhead and time delay can be tolerated. / http://proxy.library.adelaide.edu.au/login?url= http://library.adelaide.edu.au/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?BBID=1456494 / Thesis (M.Eng.Sc.) - University of Adelaide, School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, 2009
4

Rate-aware Cost-efficient Multiratecasting Routing in Wireless Sensor Networks

Liu, Xidong 04 March 2013 (has links)
In the multiratecasting problem in wireless sensor networks, the source sensor is usually required to report to multiple destinations at dif- ferent rates for each of them. We present a MST-based rate-aware cost-efficient multiratecast routing protocol (MSTRC). The proposed MSTRC examines only one set partition of destinations at each for- warding step. A message split occurs when the locally-built minimum spanning tree (MST) over the current node and the set of destina- tions has multiple edges originated at the current node. Destinations spanned by each of these edges are grouped together, and for each of these subsets the best neighbor is selected as the next hop. We also suggested a novel face recovery mechanism to deal with void ar- eas, when no neighbor provides positive progress toward destinations. It constructs a MST of current node and destinations without the progress via neighbors, and for each set partition of destinations cor- responding to an edge e in MST, the face routing keeps going until a node that is closer to one of these destinations is found, allowing for greedy continuation, while the process repeats for the remaining desti- nations similarly. Our experimental results demonstrate that MSTRC is highly rate-efficient in all scenarios, and unlike existing solutions, it is adaptive to destination rate deviations.
5

A Minimum Delay Anycast Routing Protocol

Huang, Wei-Cherng 03 September 2003 (has links)
Anycast is a new communication service defined in IPv6 (Internet Protocol Version 6) [6]. An anycast message is the one that should be delivered to the 'nearest' member in a group of designated recipients. The ¡¥nearest¡¦ is not always the ¡¥best¡¦ member. In this paper, we propose a routing protocol for anycast message. It is composed of two subprotocols: the routing table establishment subprotocol and the packet forwarding subprotocol. In the routing table establishment subprotocol, we propose a mininum delay path method (MDP). We get a minimum delay path from router to destination by MDP. In the packet forwarding protocol, we propose a minimum delay and load balancing method (MDLB). We dispatch traffic load to a server with minimum delay and light load by MDLB. The performance has demonstrated the benefits of MDP and MDLB in reducing end-to-end delay and increasing throughput of network.
6

An Adjustable Load Balancing Cluster-based Routing for Wireless Sensor Networks

Lin, Yan-lin 24 July 2009 (has links)
Wireless sensor networks consist of hundreds to thousands of low-power multifunctioning sensor nodes, operating in an unattended environment, with limited computational and sensing capabilities. Since the sensor nodes are equipped with small, often irreplaceable, batteries with limited power capacity, it is essential that the network be energy efficient in order to maximize the life span of the network. Hierarchical routing is an efficient way to lower energy consumption within a cluster, performing data aggregation and fusion.Within a clustering organization, intra-cluster communication can be single hop or multihop, as well as inter-cluster communication. Multihop communication between a data source and a data sink is usually more energy efficient than direct transmission because of the characteristics of wireless channel. However, the hot-spots problem arises when using the multihop forwarding model in inter-cluster communication. Because the cluster heads closer to the data sink are burdened with heavy relay traffic, they will die much faster than the other cluster heads. This paper presents an cluster-based routing protocol named An Adjustable Load Balancing Cluster-based Routing for Wireless Sensor Networks(ALBAC).The aim of the work is to let the cluster size be small nearby base station because cluster heads closer to the base station need relay more data.We wnat to let every cluster heads consume same energy. Simulation results show that our unequal clustering mechanism clearly improves the network lifetime over LEACH and BCDCP.
7

AODV-Based Backup Routing Scheme in Mobile Ad Hoc Networks

Huang, Sheng-yu 01 February 2010 (has links)
As effective routing is critical in mobile ad hoc networks (MANETs), the Ad Hoc On-demand Distance Vector (AODV) has been extensively studied in recent years. AODV is a single path routing protocol that requires a new route discovery procedure whenever a link breaks, such frequent route discoveries incur a high routing overhead and increase end-to-end delay. Therefore, by modifying the AODV protocol, this work presents a novel backup routing scheme capable of repairing disrupted links locally without activating a route re-discovery procedure. Additionally, backup paths are established based on 2-hop neighbor knowledge. These backup paths are geographically close to the primary path in order to provide efficient recovery from route failure and maintain an adequate routing length. Simulation results indicate that the proposed backup routing scheme obtains a lower average end-to-end delay and less routing overhead than those of the Ad hoc On-demand Multipath Distance Vector (AOMDV) and the conventional AODV.
8

Energy Efficient RPL Routing Protocol in Smart Buildings

Rezaei, Elnaz January 2014 (has links)
Energy is an important factor that must be considered by multi-hop wireless mesh routing protocols because most sensors are powered by batteries with a limited capacity. We focus on the industry-standard RPL (Routing Protocol over Low-power and lossy networks) routing protocol that must find energy-efficient paths in low-power and lossy networks. However, the existing RPL objective functions route based on hop-count and ETX (expected transmission count) metrics alone, ignoring the energy cost of data transmission and reception. We address this issue in two ways. First, we design an objective function for RPL that finds paths that require, in expectation, the minimum amount of energy. Second, we design a probing mechanism which configures the transmission power of sensors to minimize energy consumption. The proposed approach is implemented and evaluated using simulations as well as on a small testbed with two Zolertial Z1 motes.
9

Rate-aware Cost-efficient Multiratecasting Routing in Wireless Sensor Networks

Liu, Xidong 04 March 2013 (has links)
In the multiratecasting problem in wireless sensor networks, the source sensor is usually required to report to multiple destinations at dif- ferent rates for each of them. We present a MST-based rate-aware cost-efficient multiratecast routing protocol (MSTRC). The proposed MSTRC examines only one set partition of destinations at each for- warding step. A message split occurs when the locally-built minimum spanning tree (MST) over the current node and the set of destina- tions has multiple edges originated at the current node. Destinations spanned by each of these edges are grouped together, and for each of these subsets the best neighbor is selected as the next hop. We also suggested a novel face recovery mechanism to deal with void ar- eas, when no neighbor provides positive progress toward destinations. It constructs a MST of current node and destinations without the progress via neighbors, and for each set partition of destinations cor- responding to an edge e in MST, the face routing keeps going until a node that is closer to one of these destinations is found, allowing for greedy continuation, while the process repeats for the remaining desti- nations similarly. Our experimental results demonstrate that MSTRC is highly rate-efficient in all scenarios, and unlike existing solutions, it is adaptive to destination rate deviations.
10

Rate-aware Cost-efficient Multiratecasting Routing in Wireless Sensor Networks

Liu, Xidong January 2013 (has links)
In the multiratecasting problem in wireless sensor networks, the source sensor is usually required to report to multiple destinations at dif- ferent rates for each of them. We present a MST-based rate-aware cost-efficient multiratecast routing protocol (MSTRC). The proposed MSTRC examines only one set partition of destinations at each for- warding step. A message split occurs when the locally-built minimum spanning tree (MST) over the current node and the set of destina- tions has multiple edges originated at the current node. Destinations spanned by each of these edges are grouped together, and for each of these subsets the best neighbor is selected as the next hop. We also suggested a novel face recovery mechanism to deal with void ar- eas, when no neighbor provides positive progress toward destinations. It constructs a MST of current node and destinations without the progress via neighbors, and for each set partition of destinations cor- responding to an edge e in MST, the face routing keeps going until a node that is closer to one of these destinations is found, allowing for greedy continuation, while the process repeats for the remaining desti- nations similarly. Our experimental results demonstrate that MSTRC is highly rate-efficient in all scenarios, and unlike existing solutions, it is adaptive to destination rate deviations.

Page generated in 0.1314 seconds