405 research outputs found

    The analysis of achieving TCP fairness in IEEE 802.11 infrastructure WLAN

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    This paper raising the TCP fairness issues that reviewed from three aspects; per-flow, per-station, and per-rate based on the IEEE 802.11 Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs) environment.Due to the strong drive towards wireless Internet access via mobile devices, these issues must be carefully handled in order to build improved systems. We succinctly review and categorize the TCP fairness characteristic and then outline the problems and solutions from previous works through comparative table.Finally, we considered the future direction for solving these problems.Overall this paper summarizes current state of knowledge of the WLAN TCP fairness

    A multichannel relay MAC protocol for IEEE 802.11 wireless LANs

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/109605/1/dac2526.pd

    Improving Performance for CSMA/CA Based Wireless Networks

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    Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Collision Avoidance (CSMA/CA) based wireless networks are becoming increasingly ubiquitous. With the aim of supporting rich multimedia applications such as high-definition television (HDTV, 20Mbps) and DVD (9.8Mbps), one of the technology trends is towards increasingly higher bandwidth. Some recent IEEE 802.11n proposals seek to provide PHY rates of up to 600 Mbps. In addition to increasing bandwidth, there is also strong interest in extending the coverage of CSMA/CA based wireless networks. One solution is to relay traffic via multiple intermediate stations if the sender and the receiver are far apart. The so called “mesh” networks based on this relay-based approach, if properly designed, may feature both “high speed” and “large coverage” at the same time. This thesis focusses on MAC layer performance enhancements in CSMA/CA based networks in this context. Firstly, we observe that higher PHY rates do not necessarily translate into corresponding increases in MAC layer throughput due to the overhead of the CSMA/CA based MAC/PHY layers. To mitigate the overhead, we propose a novel MAC scheme whereby transported information is partially acknowledged and retransmitted. Theoretical analysis and extensive simulations show that the proposed MAC approach can achieve high efficiency (low MAC overhead) for a wide range of channel variations and realistic traffic types. Secondly, we investigate the close interaction between the MAC layer and the buffer above it to improve performance for real world traffic such as TCP. Surprisingly, the issue of buffer sizing in 802.11 wireless networks has received little attention in the literature yet it poses fundamentally new challenges compared to buffer sizing in wired networks. We propose a new adaptive buffer sizing approach for 802.11e WLANs that maintains a high level of link utilisation, while minimising queueing delay. Thirdly, we highlight that gross unfairness can exist between competing flows in multihop mesh networks even if we assume that orthogonal channels are used in neighbouring hops. That is, even without inter-channel interference and hidden terminals, multi-hop mesh networks which aim to offer a both “high speed” and “large coverage” are not achieved. We propose the use of 802.11e’s TXOP mechanism to restore/enfore fairness. The proposed approach is implementable using off-the-shelf devices and fully decentralised (requires no message passing)

    A cross-layer architecture to improve mobile host rate performance and to solve unfairness problem in WLANs

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    The evolution of the Internet has been mainly promoted in recent years by the emergence and pro- liferation of wireless access networks towards a global ambient and pervasive network accessed from mobile devices. These new access networks have introduced new MAC layers independently of the legacy "wire- oriented" protocols that are still at the heart of the pro- tocol stacks of the end systems. This principle of isola- tion and independence between layers advocated by the OSI model has its drawbacks of maladjustment between new access methods and higher-level protocols built on the assumption of a wired Internet. In this paper, we introduce and deliver solutions for several pathologi- cal communication behaviors resulting from the malad- justment between WLAN MAC and higher layer stan- dard protocols such as TCP/IP and UDP/IP. Specially, based on an efficient analytical model for WLANs band- width estimation, we address in this paper the two fol- lowing issues: 1) Performance degradation due to the lack of flow control between the MAC and upper layer resulting in potential MAC buffer overflow; 2) Unfair bandwidth share issues between various type of flows. We show how these syndromes can be efficiently solved from neutral "cross layer" interactions which entail no changes in the considered protocols and standards

    A Survey on Issues and Challenges in Congestion Adaptive Routing in Mobile Ad hoc Network

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    Mobile ad hoc networks is the future wireless communication systems have recently emerged as an important trend. Mobile adhoc network is self-configurable and adaptive. Due to the mobility of nodes, the network congestion occurs and it is difficult to predict load on the network which leads to congestion. Mobile adhoc network suffers from a severe congestion controlling problem due to the nature of shared communication and mobility. Standard TCP controlling mechanism for congestion is not fit to the dynamic changing topology of MANETs. This provides a wide scope of research work in mobile ad hoc network. The purpose of this survey is to study and analyze various issues and challenges in congestion control mechanisms in adaptive routing protocols in Mobile Adhoc Network (MANET)
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