3 research outputs found

    Survey on decentralized congestion control methods for vehicular communication

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    Vehicular communications have grown in interest over the years and are nowadays recognized as a pillar for the Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITSs) in order to ensure an efficient management of the road traffic and to achieve a reduction in the number of traffic accidents. To support the safety applications, both the ETSI ITS-G5 and IEEE 1609 standard families require each vehicle to deliver periodic awareness messages throughout the neighborhood. As the vehicles density grows, the scenario dynamics may require a high message exchange that can easily lead to a radio channel congestion issue and then to a degradation on safety critical services. ETSI has defined a Decentralized Congestion Control (DCC) mechanism to mitigate the channel congestion acting on the transmission parameters (i.e., message rate, transmit power and data-rate) with performances that vary according to the specific algorithm. In this paper, a review of the DCC standardization activities is proposed as well as an analysis of the existing methods and algorithms for the congestion mitigation. Also, some applied machine learning techniques for DCC are addressed

    DCC-enabled contention based forwarding scheme for VANETs

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    International audienceAlthough IEEE 802.11p technology is standardized for road safety and efficiency applications, the channel congestion problem is its key weakness necessitating distributed congestion control (DCC) algorithms on different layers of the communication stack. In this paper, we propose DCC-enabled Contention based Forwarding scheme targeting multi-hop dissemination of Decentralised Event Notification Messages (DENMs). The proposed scheme adapts the parameters of the ETSI standardised forwarding scheme, contention based forwarding (CBF), by taking account the channel load condition. Simulation evaluations are carried out to investigate the performances of the proposed scheme targeting a highway scenario and considering that the wireless channel is shared by DENMs and Cooperative Awareness Messages (CAMs), which are periodically broadcasted by individual vehicles. In the simulations, a dual DCC, the facilities layer DCC, which controls CAM generation rates, and the networking layer DCC, CBF2C, which targets DENMs, are applied and evaluated. Simulation results clearly show that DCC on CAM has a significant impact on communication performances of both the DENM and CAM messages. DCC on networking layer further improves performances in terms of packet delivery ratio (PDR), delay, and communication overhead

    Quality of Service in Vehicular Ad Hoc Networks: Methodical Evaluation and Enhancements for ITS-G5

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    After many formative years, the ad hoc wireless communication between vehicles has become a vehicular technology available in mass production cars in 2020. Vehicles form spontaneous Vehicular Ad Hoc Networks (VANETs), which enable communication whenever vehicles are nearby without need for supportive infrastructure. In Europe, this communication is standardised comprehensively as Intelligent Transport Systems in the 5.9 GHz band (ITS-G5). This thesis centres around Quality of Service (QoS) in these VANETs based on ITS-G5 technology. Whilst only a few vehicles communicate, radio resources are plenty, and channel congestion is a minor issue. With progressing deployment, congestion control becomes crucial to preserve QoS by preventing high latencies or foiled information dissemination. The developed VANET simulation model, featuring an elaborated ITS-G5 protocol stack, allows investigation of QoS methodically. It also considers the characteristics of ITS-G5 radios such as the signal attenuation in vehicular environments and the capture effect by receivers. Backed by this simulation model, several enhancements for ITS-G5 are proposed to control congestion reliably and thus ensure QoS for its applications. Modifications at the GeoNetworking (GN) protocol prevent massive packet occurrences in a short time and hence congestion. Glow Forwarding is introduced as GN extension to distribute delay-tolerant information. The revised Decentralized Congestion Control (DCC) cross-layer supports low-latency transmission of event-triggered, periodic and relayed packets. DCC triggers periodic services and manages a shared duty cycle budget dedicated to packet forwarding for this purpose. Evaluation in large-scale networks reveals that this enhanced ITS-G5 system can reliably reduce the information age of periodically sent messages. The forwarding budget virtually eliminates the starvation of multi-hop packets and still avoids congestion caused by excessive forwarding. The presented enhancements thus pave the way to scale up VANETs for wide-spread deployment and future applications
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