65 research outputs found

    Technologies of Mobile Communication

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    Long-Term Evolution (LTE) is a new technology recently specified by 3GPP-Third Generation Partnership Project on the way towards fourth-generation mobile. This thesis presents the main technical features of this technology as well as its performances in terms of peak bit rate and average cell throughput, among others. LTE entails a big technological improvement as compared with the previous 3G standards. 1 However, this thesis also demonstrates that LTE performances do not fulfill the technical requirements established by ITU-R to classify one radio access technology as a member of the IMT-Advanced family of standards. Thus, this thesis describes the procedure followed by 3GPP to address these challenging requirements. Through the design and optimization of new radio access techniques and a further evolution of the system, 3GPP is laying down the foundations of the future LTE-Advanced standard, the 3GPP candidate for 4G

    Technology Assessment for the Future Aeronautical Communications System

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    To address emerging saturation in the VHF aeronautical bands allocated internationally for air traffic management communications, the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) has requested development of a common global solution through its Aeronautical Communications Panel (ACP). In response, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and Eurocontrol initiated a joint study, with the support of NASA and U.S. and European contractors, to provide major findings on alternatives and recommendations to the ICAO ACP Working Group C (WG-C). Under an FAA/Eurocontrol cooperative research and development agreement, ACP WG-C Action Plan 17 (AP-17), commonly referred to as the Future Communications Study (FCS), NASA Glenn Research Center is responsible for the investigation of potential communications technologies that support the long-term mobile communication operational concepts of the FCS. This report documents the results of the first phase of the technology assessment and recommendations referred to in the Technology Pre-Screening Task 3.1 of AP-17. The prescreening identifies potential technologies that are under development in the industry and provides an initial assessment against a harmonized set of evaluation criteria that address high level capabilities, projected maturity for the time frame for usage in aviation, and potential applicability to aviation. A wide variety of candidate technologies were evaluated from several communications service categories including: cellular telephony; IEEE-802.xx standards; public safety radio; satellite and over-the-horizon communications; custom narrowband VHF; custom wideband; and military communications

    Cooperative diversity schemes for wireless communication systems

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    Mestrado em Engenharia Electrónica e TelecomunicaçõesA presente dissertação insere-se na área das comunicações sem fios, ou mais especificamente na temática da diversidade cooperativa. Neste trabalho é feito o estudo, implementação e avaliação do desempenho de esquemas de diversidade cooperativa de baixa complexidade para sistemas de comunicação móvel. Estes esquemas são mapeados em modelos de simulação baseados em OFDMA e são completamente simulados em CoCentric System Studio. Os resultados obtidos com os modelos desenvolvidos mostram que os esquemas de diversidade cooperativa atenuam os efeitos do desvanecimento induzido pela propagação multipercurso, aumentando desta forma a capacidade e cobertura dos sistemas wireless. Os ganhos são particularmente altos quando as perdas de percurso são consideráveis, como é o caso das zonas urbanas densas. ABSTRACT: This dissertation is inserted into the wireless communication, or more specifically, into the cooperative diversity field. within this thesis, the performance of low-complexity cooperative diversity schemes projected for mobile communication systems are studied, implemented and evaluated. These schemes are mapped into simulation models based on OFDMA and are fully simulated in the CoCentric System Studio environment. The obtained results show that the proposed cooperative schemes for the uplink communication mitigate fading induced by multipath propagation, thereby increasing the capacity and coverage of wireless systems. Cooperation gains are particularly high when multipath losses are considerable, as is the case for dense urban regions

    Quality of service and channel-aware packet bundling for capacity improvement in cellular networks

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    Title from PDF of title page, viewed on May 26, 2011VitaIncludes bibliographical references (p. 76-84)Thesis (Ph.D.)--School of Computing and Engineering. University of Missouri--Kansas City, 2011We study the problem of multiple packet bundling to improve spectral efficiency in cellular networks. The packet size of real-time data, such as VoIP, is often very small. However, the common use of time division multiplexing limits the number of VoIP users supported, because a packet has to wait until it receives a time slot, and if only one small VoIP packet is placed in a time slot, capacity is wasted. Packet bundling can alleviate such a problem by sharing a time slot among multiple users. A recent revision of cdma2000 1xEV-DO introduced the concept of the multi-user packet (MUP) in the downlink to overcome limitations on the number of time slots. However, the efficacy of packet bundling is not well understood, particularly in the presence of time varying channels. We propose a novel QoS and channel-aware packet bundling algorithm that takes advantage of adaptive modulation and coding. We show that optimal algorithms are NP complete and recommend heuristic approaches. We also show that channel utilization can be significantly increased by slightly delaying some real-time packets within their QoS requirements while bundling those packets with like channel conditions. We validate our study through extensive OPNET simulations with a complete EV-DO implementation.Introduction -- Related work -- Background on wireless systems -- Multiple packet bundling -- Evaluation -- Conclusion

    Sécurité dans les réseaux mobiles de nouvelle génération

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    RÉSUMÉ Les réseaux de nouvelle génération visent à converger les réseaux fixes et mobiles hétérogènes afin d’offrir tous les services à travers un réseau coeur tout IP. Faisant parti du réseau d’accès mobile, un des principaux objectifs du réseau 4G est de permettre une relève ininterrompue entre les réseaux cellulaires et WIFI pour ainsi favoriser l’apprivoisement de services vidéo mobiles exigeant des critères de qualité de service très stricts à moindres coûts. Cependant, l’uniformisation du trafic au niveau de la couche réseau favorise sa centralisation à travers un réseau coeur IP partagé par tous les opérateurs, la rendant ainsi comme une cible vulnérable de choix pour les pirates informatiques. La conception de solutions sécuritaires dans un environnement où les entités ne se connaissent pas à priori s’annonce comme une tâche très ardue. La thèse se penche sur quatre problématiques importantes dans les réseaux de nouvelle génération dont chacune est traitée dans un article distinct. Les deux premiers articles touchent à la sécurité dans un contexte décentralisé, à savoir les réseaux mobiles ad hoc (MANETs), alors que les deux derniers proposent des mécanismes innovateurs pour sécuriser des solutions visant à réduire la consommation de bande passante et d’énergie, en conformité avec le virage vert informatique promu par les opérateurs réseautiques. Plus précisément, le troisième article traite de la sécurisation des flots multicast dans un environnement à haut taux de perte de paquet et le dernier propose une solution d’optimisation de route sécuritaire pour mobile IPv6 (MIPv6) utilisant une version améliorée de l’algorithme de genération d’adresses cryptographiques (CGA) et les extensions de sécurité du système de nom de domaine (DNSSEC). Les systèmes de détection d’intrusion (IDS) pour les MANETs basés sur la réputation des noeuds classifient les participants du réseau selon leur degré de confiance. Cependant, ils partagent tous une vulnérabilité commune : l’impossibilité de détecter et de réagir aux attaques complices. Le premier article propose un IDS qui intègre efficacement le risque de collusion entre deux ou plusieurs noeuds malveillants dans le calcul de la fiabilité d’un chemin. L’algorithme propos´e ne se limite pas qu’au nombre et à la réputation des noeuds intermédiaires formant un chemin, mais intègre également d’autres informations pertinentes sur les voisins des noeuds intermédiaires d’un chemin pouvant superviser le message original et celui retransmis. Le IDS proposé détecte efficacement les noeuds malicieux et complices dans le but de les isoler rapidement du réseau. Les simulations lancées dans divers environnements MANETs contenant une proportion variable d’attaquants complices montrent bien l’efficacité du IDS proposée en offrant un gain en débit considérable comparativement aux solutions existantes. À l’instar de prévenir les comportements égoïstes des noeuds par la menace d’être privés de certaines fonctions, voire même isolés du réseau, due à une baisse de réputation, le second article opte pour un incitatif non-punitif en la monnaie virtuelle plus communément appelée nuglets. Plus précisément, l’article présente un cadre de travail issu de la théorie des jeux basé sur la compétition de Bertrand pour inciter les noeuds intermédiaires à retransmettre les messages selon les requis de QoS demandés par la source. Pour qu’un noeud source envoie ou accède à un flot sensible à la QoS comme par exemple les applications en temps réel, il débute par envoyer un contrat qui spécifie les critères de QoS, sa durée et son prix de réserve. Sur réception du contrat, les noeuds intermédiaires formant une route entre la source et la destination partagent les informations sur eux-mêmes et celles recueillies sur les noeuds voisins, anciens et courants pour estimer la probabilité de bris de contrat ainsi que le nombre de compétiteurs actifs. Ces deux paramètres sont cruciaux dans le processus de fixation des prix. Une fois les réponses de route recueillies, la source choisit la route la moins chère. Le cadre de travail multijoueur proposé, basé sur la compétition de Bertrand avec des firmes asymétriques et ayant accès à de l’information imparfaite, possède un équilibre de Nash en stratégies mixtes dans lequel le profit des firmes est positif et baisse non seulement avec le nombre de compétiteurs, mais aussi avec l’impression d’une précision accrue que les compétiteurs ont sur le coût de production du joueur. Les résultats montrent que l’incertitude sur les coûts augmente le taux de la marge brute et la fluctuation des prix tout en diminuant les chances d’honorer le contrat. Dans un autre ordre d’idée, l’intérêt sans cesse grandissant des opérateurs à converger les réseaux fixes et mobiles dans le but d’offrir une relève sans interruption favorise l’utilisation des applications vidéo mobiles qui surchargeront rapidement leurs réseaux. Dans un contexte du virage vert qui prend de plus en plus d’ampleur dans le domaine des télécommunications, la transmission des flots en multidiffusion (multicast) devient essentiel dans le but de réduire la consommation de bande passante et la congestion du réseau en rejoignant simultanément plusieurs destinataires. La sécurisation des flots en multidiffusion a été largement étudiée dans la littérature antérieure, cependant aucune des solutions proposées ne tient compte des contraintes imposées par les liaisons sans fil et la mobilité des noeuds, en particulier le haut taux de perte de paquets. La nécessité d’un mécanisme de distribution de clés régénératrices efficace et pouvant supporter un grand bassin d’abonnés pour les réseaux mobiles n’aura jamais été aussi urgent avec l’arrivée de la convergence fixe-mobile dans les réseaux 4G. Le troisième article présente deux algorithmes de clés régénératrices basés sur les chaînes de hachage bidirectionnelles pour le protocole de distribution de clés logical key hierarchy (LKH). Ainsi, un membre ayant perdu jusqu’à un certain nombre de clés de déchiffrement consécutives pourrait lui-même les régénérer sans faire la requête de retransmission au serveur de clés. Les simulations effectuées montrent que les algorithmes proposés offrent des améliorations considérables dans un environnement de réseau mobile à taux de perte de paquet, notamment dans le percentage de messages déchiffrés. Le souci d’efficacité énergétique est également présent pour les opérateurs de réseaux cellulaires. D’ailleurs, près de la moitié des abonnements sur Internet proviennent présentement d’unités mobiles et il est attendu que ce groupe d’utilisateurs deviennent le plus grand bassin d’usagers sur Internet dans la prochaine décennie. Pour supporter cette croissance rapide du nombre d’utilisateurs mobiles, le choix le plus naturel pour les opérateurs serait de remplacer mobile IPv4 par MIPv6. Or, la fonction d’optimisation de route (RO), qui remplace le routage triangulaire inefficace de MIP en permettant au noeud mobile (MN) une communication bidirectionnelle avec le noeud correspondant (CN) sans faire passer les messages à travers l’agent du réseau mère (HA), est déficiente au niveau de la sécurité. L’absence d’informations pré-partagées entre le MN et le CN rend la sécurisation du RO un défi de taille. MIPv6 adopte la routabilité de retour (RR) qui est davantage un mécanisme qui vérifie l’accessibilité du MN sur son adresse du réseau mère (HoA) et du réseau visité (CoA) plutôt qu’une fonction de sécurité. D’autres travaux se sont attaqués aux nombreuses failles de sécurité du RR, mais soit leur conception est fautive, soit leurs suppositions sont irréalistes. Le quatrième article présente une version améliorée de l’algorithme de génération cryptographique d’adresse (ECGA) pour MIPv6 qui intègre une chaîne de hachage arrière et offre de lier plusieurs adresses CGA ensemble. ECGA élimine les attaques de compromis temps-mémoire tout en étant efficace. Ce mécanisme de génération d’adresse fait parti du protocole Secure MIPv6 (SMIPv6) proposé avec un RO sécuritaire et efficace grâce à DNSSEC pour valider les CGAs qui proviennent d’un domaine de confiance et qui permet une authentification forte plutôt que l’invariance de source. Le vérificateur de protocoles cryptographiques dans le modèle formel AVISPA a été utilisé pour montrer qu’aucune faille de sécurité n’est présente tout en limitant au maximum les messages échangés dans le réseau d’accès. ----------ABSTRACT Next generation networks aim at offering all available services through an IP-core network by converging fixed-mobile heterogeneous networks. As part of the mobile access network, one of the main objectives of the 4G network is to provide seamless roaming with wireless local area networks and accommodating quality of service (QoS) specifications for digital video broadcasting systems. Such innovation aims expanding video-based digital services while reducing costs by normalizing the network layer through an all-IP architecture such as Internet. However, centralizing all traffic makes the shared core network a vulnerable target for attackers. Design security solutions in such an environment where entities a priori do not know each other represent a daunting task. This thesis tackles four important security issues in next generation networks each in distinct papers. The first two deal with security in decentralized mobile ad hoc networks (MANETs) while the last two focus on securing solutions aiming at reducing bandwidth and energy consumption, in line with the green shift promoted by network operators. More precisely, the third paper is about protecting multicast flows in a packet-loss environment and the last one proposes a secure route optimization function in mobile IPv6 (MIPv6) using an enhanced version of cryptographically generated address (CGA) and domain name service security extensions (DNSSEC). Most intrusion detection systems (IDS) for MANETs are based on reputation system which classifies nodes according to their degree of trust. However, existing IDS all share the same major weakness: the failure to detect and react on colluding attacks. The first paper proposes an IDS that integrates the colluding risk factor into the computation of the path reliability which considers the number and the reputation of nodes that can compare both the source message and the retransmitted one. Also, the extended architecture effectively detects malicious and colluding nodes in order to isolate them and protect the network. The simulations launched in various MANETs containing various proportions of malicious and colluding nodes show that the proposed solution offers a considerable throughput gain compared to current solutions. By effectively selecting the most reliable route and by promptly detecting colluding attacks, the number of lost messages is decreased, and therefore, offering more efficient transmissions. Instead of thwarting selfishness in MANETs by threatening nodes to limit their network functions, the second paper opts for a non-punishment incentive by compensating nodes for their service through the use of virtual money, more commonly known as nuglets. The last paper presents a game-theoretic framework based on Bertrand competition to incite relaying nodes in forwarding messages according to QoS requirements. For a source to send or access QoS-sensitive flows, such as real-time applications, it starts by sending a contract specifying the QoS requirements, its duration and a reservation price. Upon receiving a contract submission, intermediary nodes forming a route between the source and the destination share their current and past collected information on themselves and on surrounding nodes to estimate the probability of breaching the contract and the number of active competitors. Both parameters are crucial in setting a price. Once the source gets the responses from various routes, it selects the most cheapest one. This multiplayer winner-takes-all framework based on Bertrand competition with firms having asymmetric costs and access imperfect information has a mixed-strategy equilibrium in which industry profits are positive and decline not only with the number of firms having an estimated cost below the reservation price but also with the perception of a greater accuracy on a player’s cost that competitors have. In fact,results show that cost uncertainty increases firms’ gross margin rate and the prices fluctuation while making the contract honoring much riskier. On another topic, with the growing interest in converging fixed and mobile networks, mobile applications will require more and more resources from both the network and the mobile device. In a social-motivated context of shifting into green technologies, using multicast transmissions is essential because it lowers bandwidth consumption by simultaneously reaching a group of multiple recipients. Securing multicast flows has been extensively studied in the past, but none of the existing solutions were meant to handle the constraints imposed by mobile scenarios, in particular the high packet-loss rate. The need for a low overhead selfhealing rekeying mechanism that is scalable, reliable and suitable for mobile environments has never been more urgent than with the arrival of fixed-mobile convergence in 4G networks. The second paper presents two self-healing recovery schemes based on the dual directional hash chains for the logical key hierarchy rekeying protocol. This enables a member that has missed up to m consecutive key updates to recover the missing decryption keys without asking the group controller key server for retransmission. Conducted simulations show considerable improvements in the ratio of decrypted messages and in the rekey message overhead in high packet loss environments. The concern of energy efficiency is also present for mobile access network operators. In fact, nearly half of all Internet subscribers come from mobile units at the moment and it is expected to be the largest pool of Internet users by the next decade. The most obvious choice for mobile operators to support more users would be to replace Mobile IP for IPv4 with MIPv6. However, the Route Optimization (RO) function, which replaces the inefficient triangle routing by allowing a bidirectional communication between a mobile node (MN) and the corresponding node (CN) without passing through its home agent (HA), is not secure and has a high overhead. The lack of pre-shared information between the MN and the CN makes security in RO a difficult challenge. MIPv6 adopts the return routability (RR) mechanism which is more to verify the MN reachability in both its home address (HoA) and care-of address (CoA) than a security feature. Other works attempted to solve the multiple security issues in RR but either their design are flawed, or rely on unrealistic assumptions. The third paper presents an enhanced cryptographically generated address (ECGA) for MIPv6 that integrates a built-in backward key chain and offers support to bind multiple logically-linked CGAs together. ECGA tackles the time-memory tradeoff attacks while being very efficient. It is part of the proposed secure MIPv6 (SMIPv6) with secure and efficient RO which uses DNSSEC to validate CGAs from trusted domains and provide strong authentication rather than sender invariance. The AVISPA on-the-fly model checker (OFMC) tool has been used to show that the proposed solution has no security flaws while still being lightweight in signalling messages in the radio network

    Efficient Passive Clustering and Gateways selection MANETs

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    Passive clustering does not employ control packets to collect topological information in ad hoc networks. In our proposal, we avoid making frequent changes in cluster architecture due to repeated election and re-election of cluster heads and gateways. Our primary objective has been to make Passive Clustering more practical by employing optimal number of gateways and reduce the number of rebroadcast packets

    Convergence: the next big step

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    Recently, web based multimedia services have gained popularity and have proven themselves to be viable means of communication. This has inspired the telecommunication service providers and network operators to reinvent themselves to try and provide value added IP centric services. There was need for a system which would allow new services to be introduced rapidly with reduced capital expense (CAPEX) and operational expense (OPEX) through increased efficiency in network utilization. Various organizations and standardization agencies have been working together to establish such a system. Internet Protocol Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) is a result of these efforts. IMS is an application level system. It is being developed by 3GPP (3rd Generation Partnership Project) and 3GPP2 (3rd Generation Partnership Project 2) in collaboration with IETF (Internet Engineering Task Force), ITU-T (International Telecommunication Union – Telecommunication Standardization Sector), and ETSI (European Telecommunications Standards Institute) etc. Initially, the main aim of IMS was to bring together the internet and the cellular world, but it has extended to include traditional wire line telecommunication systems as well. It utilizes existing internet protocols such as SIP (Session Initiation Protocol), AAA (Authentication, Authorization and Accounting protocol), and COPS (Common Open Policy Service) etc, and modifies them to meet the stringent requirements of reliable, real time communication systems. The advantages of IMS include easy service quality management (QoS), mobility management, service control and integration. At present a lot of attention is being paid to providing bundled up services in the home environment. Service providers have been successful in providing traditional telephony, high speed internet and cable services in a single package. But there is very little integration among these services. IMS can provide a way to integrate them as well as extend the possibility of various other services to be added to allow increased automation in the home environment. This thesis extends the concept of IMS to provide convergence and facilitate internetworking of the various bundled services available in the home environment; this may include but is not limited to communications (wired and wireless), entertainment, security etc. In this thesis, I present a converged home environment which has a number of elements providing a variety of communication and entertainment services. The proposed network would allow effective interworking of these elements, based on IMS architecture. My aim is to depict the possible advantages of using IMS to provide convergence, automation and integration at the residential level

    Identification of Technologies for Provision of Future Aeronautical Communications

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    This report describes the process, findings, and recommendations of the second of three phases of the Future Communications Study (FCS) technology investigation conducted by NASA Glenn Research Center and ITT Advanced Engineering & Sciences Division for the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). The FCS is a collaborative research effort between the FAA and Eurocontrol to address frequency congestion and spectrum depletion for safety critical airground communications. The goal of the technology investigation is to identify technologies that can support the longterm aeronautical mobile communication operating concept. A derived set of evaluation criteria traceable to the operating concept document is presented. An adaptation of the analytical hierarchy process is described and recommended for selecting candidates for detailed evaluation. Evaluations of a subset of technologies brought forward from the prescreening process are provided. Five of those are identified as candidates with the highest potential for continental airspace solutions in L-band (P-34, W-CDMA, LDL, B-VHF, and E-TDMA). Additional technologies are identified as best performers in the unique environments of remote/oceanic airspace in the satellite bands (Inmarsat SBB and a custom satellite solution) and the airport flight domain in C-band (802.16e). Details of the evaluation criteria, channel models, and the technology evaluations are provided in appendixes

    Virtualisation and Thin Client : A Survey of Virtual Desktop environments

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    This survey examines some of the leading commercial Virtualisation and Thin Client technologies. Reference is made to a number of academic research sources and to prominent industry specialists and commentators. A basic virtualisation Laboratory model is assembled to demonstrate fundamental Thin Client operations and to clarify potential problem areas
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