980 research outputs found
RS + LDPC-Staircase Codes for the Erasure Channel: Standards, Usage and Performance
Application-Level Forward Erasure Correction (AL-FEC) codes are a key element of telecommunication systems. They are used to recover from packet losses when retransmission are not feasible and to optimize the large scale distribution of contents. In this paper we introduce Reed-Solomon/LDPCStaircase codes, two complementary AL-FEC codes that have recently been recognized as superior to Raptor codes in the context of the 3GPP-eMBMS call for technology [1]. After a brief introduction to the codes, we explain how to design high performance codecs which is a key aspect when targeting embedded systems with limited CPU/battery capacity. Finally we present the performances of these codes in terms of erasure correction capabilities and encoding/decoding speed, taking advantage of the 3GPP-eMBMS results where they have been ranked first
LT Code Design for Inactivation Decoding
We present a simple model of inactivation decoding for LT codes which can be
used to estimate the decoding complexity as a function of the LT code degree
distribution. The model is shown to be accurate in variety of settings of
practical importance. The proposed method allows to perform a numerical
optimization on the degree distribution of a LT code aiming at minimizing the
number of inactivations required for decoding.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
A UAV-Based Content Delivery Architecture for Rural Areas and Future Smart Cities
[EN] Content delivery in vehicular environments can serve multiple purposes, such as safety, entertainment, and news delivery that can be geographically relevant to vehicles traveling within a certain area. The traditional approach to address this problem, based on fixed networking infrastructure, suffers from the following two drawbacks: First, the efficient delivery of large-sized contents to multiple moving receivers simultaneously can be hard to achieve, and second, most of the roads outside the main urban areas lack such fixed infrastructures due to economic reasons. In this paper, we tackle both these issues by proposing rapidly deployable wireless access infrastructures combining RaptorQ-protected content diffusion and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). We performed experiments using actual vehicles and UAVs, and our results showed that RaptorQ-based content dissemination mechanisms is highly efficient when transmitting to multiple moving receivers simultaneously, and UAVs can serve as cheap, effective, and rapidly deployable mobile wireless access elements.Ortiz-Mayordomo, S.; Tavares De Araujo Cesariny Calafate, CM.; Cano, J.; Manzoni, P.; Toh, C. (2019). A UAV-Based Content Delivery Architecture for Rural Areas and Future Smart Cities. IEEE Internet Computing. 23(1):29-36. https://doi.org/10.1109/MIC.2018.2884277S293623
On the Energy Efficiency of LT Codes in Proactive Wireless Sensor Networks
This paper presents an in-depth analysis on the energy efficiency of Luby
Transform (LT) codes with Frequency Shift Keying (FSK) modulation in a Wireless
Sensor Network (WSN) over Rayleigh fading channels with pathloss. We describe a
proactive system model according to a flexible duty-cycling mechanism utilized
in practical sensor apparatus. The present analysis is based on realistic
parameters including the effect of channel bandwidth used in the IEEE 802.15.4
standard, active mode duration and computation energy. A comprehensive
analysis, supported by some simulation studies on the probability mass function
of the LT code rate and coding gain, shows that among uncoded FSK and various
classical channel coding schemes, the optimized LT coded FSK is the most
energy-efficient scheme for distance d greater than the pre-determined
threshold level d_T , where the optimization is performed over coding and
modulation parameters. In addition, although the optimized uncoded FSK
outperforms coded schemes for d < d_T , the energy gap between LT coded and
uncoded FSK is negligible for d < d_T compared to the other coded schemes.
These results come from the flexibility of the LT code to adjust its rate to
suit instantaneous channel conditions, and suggest that LT codes are beneficial
in practical low-power WSNs with dynamic position sensor nodes.Comment: accepted for publication in IEEE Transactions on Signal Processin
Online Coding for Reliable Data Transfer in Lossy Wireless Sensor Networks
Abstract. Bulk transport underlies data exfiltration and code update facilities in WSNs, but existing approaches are not designed for highly lossy and variable-quality links. We observe that Maymounkov’s rateless online codes are asymptotically more efficient, but can perform poorly in the WSN operating region. We analyze and optimize coding parameters and present the design and evaluation of RTOC, a protocol for bulk transport that recovered over 95 % of application data despite up to 84% packet loss in a MicaZ network.
Collaborative Communication And Storage In Energy-Synchronized Sensor Networks
In a battery-less sensor network, all the operation of sensor nodes are strictly constrained by and synchronized with the fluctuations of harvested energy, causing nodes to be disruptive from network and hence unstable network connectivity. Such wireless sensor network is named as energy-synchronized sensor networks. The unpredictable network disruptions and challenging communication environments make the traditional communication protocols inefficient and require a new paradigm-shift in design. In this thesis, I propose a set of algorithms on collaborative data communication and storage for energy-synchronized sensor networks. The solutions are based on erasure codes and probabilistic network codings. The proposed set of algorithms significantly improve the data communication throughput and persistency, and they are inherently amenable to probabilistic nature of transmission in wireless networks.
The technical contributions explore collaborative communication with both no coding and network coding methods. First, I propose a collaborative data delivery protocol to exploit the optimal performance of multiple energy-synchronized paths without network coding, i.e. a new max-flow min-variance algorithm. In consort with this data delivery protocol, a localized TDMA MAC protocol is designed to synchronize nodes\u27 duty-cycles and mitigate media access contentions. However, the energy supply can change dynamically over time, making determined duty cycles synchronization difficult in practice. A probabilistic approach is investigated. Therefore, I present Opportunistic Network Erasure Coding protocol (ONEC), to collaboratively collect data. ONEC derives the probability distribution of coding degree in each node and enable opportunistic in-network recoding, and guarantee the recovery of original sensor data can be achieved with high probability upon receiving any sufficient amount of encoded packets. Next, OnCode, an opportunistic in-network data coding and delivery protocol is proposed to further improve data communication under the constraints of energy synchronization. It is resilient to packet loss and network disruptions, and does not require explicit end-to-end feedback message. Moreover, I present a network Erasure Coding with randomized Power Control (ECPC) mechanism for collaborative data storage in disruptive sensor networks. ECPC only requires each node to perform a single broadcast at each of its several randomly selected power levels. Thus it incurs very low communication overhead. Finally, I propose an integrated algorithm and middleware (Ravine Stream) to improve data delivery throughput as well as data persistency in energy-synchronized sensor network
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