2,063 research outputs found
A Simple and Robust Dissemination Protocol for VANETs
Several promising applications for Vehicular Ad-hoc Networks (VANETs) exist. For most of these applications, the communication among vehicles is envisioned to be based on the broadcasting of messages. This is due to the inherent highly mobile environment and importance of these messages to vehicles nearby. To deal with broadcast communication, dissemination protocols must be defined in such a way as to (i) prevent the so-called broadcast storm problem in dense networks and (ii) deal with disconnected networks in sparse topologies. In this paper, we present a Simple and Robust Dissemination (SRD) protocol that deals with these requirements in both sparse and dense networks. Its novelty lies in its simplicity and robustness. Simplicity is achieved by considering only two states (cluster tail and non- tail) for a vehicle. Robustness is achieved by assigning message delivery responsibility to multiple vehicles in sparse networks. Our simulation results show that SRD achieves high delivery ratio and low end-to-end delay under diverse traffic conditions
Models and Performance of VANET based Emergency Braking
The network research community is working in the field of automotive to provide VANET based safety applications to reduce the number of accidents, deaths, injuries and loss of money. Several approaches are proposed and investigated in VANET literature, but in a completely network-oriented fashion. Most of them do not take into account application requirements and no one considers the dynamics of the vehicles. Moreover, message repropagation schemes are widely proposed without investigating their benefits and using very complicated approaches. This technical report, which is derived from the Master Thesis of Michele Segata, focuses on the Emergency Electronic Brake Lights (EEBL) safety application, meant to send warning messages in the case of an emergency brake, in particular performing a joint analysis of network requirements and provided application level benefits. The EEBL application is integrated within a Collaborative Adaptive Cruise Control (CACC) which uses network-provided information to automatically brake the car if the driver does not react to the warning. Moreover, an information aggregation scheme is proposed to analyze the benefits of repropagation together with the consequent increase of network load. This protocol is compared to a protocol without repropagation and to a rebroadcast protocol found in the literature (namely the weighted p-persistent rebroadcast). The scenario is a highway stretch in which a platoon of vehicles brake down to a complete stop. Simulations are performed using the NS_3 network simulation in which two mobility models have been embedded. The first one, which is called Intelligent Driver Model (IDM) emulates the behavior of a driver trying to reach a desired speed and braking when approaching vehicles in front. The second one (Minimizing Overall Braking Induced by Lane change (MOBIL)), instead, decides when a vehicle has to change lane in order to perform an overtake or optimize its path. The original simulator has been modified by - introducing real physical limits to naturally reproduce real crashes; - implementing a CACC; - implementing the driver reaction when a warning is received; - implementing different network protocols. The tests are performed in different situations, such as different number of lanes (one to five), different average speeds, different network protocols and different market penetration rates and they show that: - the adoption of this technology considerably decreases car accidents since the overall average maximum deceleration is reduced; - network load depends on application-level details, such as the implementation of the CACC; - VANET safety application can improve safety even with a partial market penetration rate; - message repropagation is important to reduce the risk of accidents when not all vehicles are equipped; - benefits are gained not only by equipped vehicles but also by unequipped ones
Simulation Framework for Cooperative Adaptive Cruise Control with Empirical DSRC Module
Wireless communication plays a vital role in the promising performance of
connected and automated vehicle (CAV) technology. This paper proposes a
Vissim-based microscopic traffic simulation framework with an analytical
dedicated short-range communication (DSRC) module for packet reception. Being
derived from ns-2, a packet-level network simulator, the DSRC probability
module takes into account the imperfect wireless communication that occurs in
real-world deployment. Four managed lane deployment strategies are evaluated
using the proposed framework. While the average packet reception rate is above
93\% among all tested scenarios, the results reveal that the reliability of the
vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) communication can be influenced by the deployment
strategies. Additionally, the proposed framework exhibits desirable scalability
for traffic simulation and it is able to evaluate transportation-network-level
deployment strategies in the near future for CAV technologies.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure, 44th Annual Conference of the IEEE Industrial
Electronics Societ
Infocast: A New Paradigm for Collaborative Content Distribution from Roadside Units to Vehicular Networks Using Rateless Codes
In this paper, we address the problem of distributing a large amount of bulk
data to a sparse vehicular network from roadside infostations, using efficient
vehicle-to-vehicle collaboration. Due to the highly dynamic nature of the
underlying vehicular network topology, we depart from architectures requiring
centralized coordination, reliable MAC scheduling, or global network state
knowledge, and instead adopt a distributed paradigm with simple protocols. In
other words, we investigate the problem of reliable dissemination from multiple
sources when each node in the network shares a limited amount of its resources
for cooperating with others. By using \emph{rateless} coding at the Road Side
Unit (RSU) and using vehicles as data carriers, we describe an efficient way to
achieve reliable dissemination to all nodes (even disconnected clusters in the
network). In the nutshell, we explore vehicles as mobile storage devices. We
then develop a method to keep the density of the rateless codes packets as a
function of distance from the RSU at the desired level set for the target
decoding distance. We investigate various tradeoffs involving buffer size,
maximum capacity, and the mobility parameter of the vehicles
SDDV: scalable data dissemination in vehicular ad hoc networks
An important challenge in the domain of vehicular ad hoc networks (VANET) is the scalability of data dissemination. Under dense traffic conditions, the large number of communicating vehicles can easily result in a congested wireless channel. In that situation, delays and packet losses increase to a level where the VANET cannot be applied for road safety applications anymore. This paper introduces scalable data dissemination in vehicular ad hoc networks (SDDV), a holistic solution to this problem. It is composed of several techniques spread across the different layers of the protocol stack. Simulation results are presented that illustrate the severity of the scalability problem when applying common state-of-the-art techniques and parameters. Starting from such a baseline solution, optimization techniques are gradually added to SDDV until the scalability problem is entirely solved. Besides the performance evaluation based on simulations, the paper ends with an evaluation of the final SDDV configuration on real hardware. Experiments including 110 nodes are performed on the iMinds w-iLab.t wireless lab. The results of these experiments confirm the results obtained in the corresponding simulations
DFCV: A Novel Approach for Message Dissemination in Connected Vehicles using Dynamic Fog
Vehicular Ad-hoc Network (VANET) has emerged as a promising solution for
enhancing road safety. Routing of messages in VANET is challenging due to
packet delays arising from high mobility of vehicles, frequently changing
topology, and high density of vehicles, leading to frequent route breakages and
packet losses. Previous researchers have used either mobility in vehicular fog
computing or cloud computing to solve the routing issue, but they suffer from
large packet delays and frequent packet losses. We propose Dynamic Fog for
Connected Vehicles (DFCV), a fog computing based scheme which dynamically
creates, increments and destroys fog nodes depending on the communication
needs. The novelty of DFCV lies in providing lower delays and guaranteed
message delivery at high vehicular densities. Simulations were conducted using
hybrid simulation consisting of ns-2, SUMO, and Cloudsim. Results show that
DFCV ensures efficient resource utilization, lower packet delays and losses at
high vehicle densities
Study on QoS support in 802.11e-based multi-hop vehicular wireless ad hoc networks
Multimedia communications over vehicular ad hoc networks (VANET) will play an important role in the future intelligent transport system (ITS). QoS support for VANET therefore becomes an essential problem. In this paper, we first study the QoS performance in multi-hop VANET by using the standard IEEE 802.11e EDCA MAC and our proposed triple-constraint QoS routing protocol, Delay-Reliability-Hop (DeReHQ). In particular, we evaluate the DeReHQ protocol together with EDCA in highway and urban areas. Simulation results show that end-to-end delay performance can sometimes be achieved when both 802.11e EDCA and DeReHQ extended AODV are used. However, further studies on cross-layer optimization for QoS support in multi-hop environment are required
Implementation of CAVENET and its usage for performance evaluation of AODV, OLSR and DYMO protocols in vehicular networks
Vehicle Ad-hoc Network (VANET) is a kind of Mobile Ad-hoc Network (MANET) that establishes wireless connection between cars. In VANETs and MANETs, the topology of the network changes very often, therefore implementation of efficient routing protocols is very important problem. In MANETs, the Random Waypoint (RW) model is used as a simulation model for generating node mobility pattern. On the other hand, in VANETs, the mobility patterns of nodes is restricted along the roads, and is affected by the movement of neighbour nodes. In this paper, we present a simulation system for VANET called CAVENET (Cellular Automaton based VEhicular NETwork). In CAVENET, the mobility patterns of nodes are generated by an 1-dimensional cellular automata. We improved CAVENET and implemented some routing protocols. We investigated the performance of the implemented routing protocols by CAVENET. The simulation results have shown that DYMO protocol has better performance than AODV and OLSR protocols.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version
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