3,754 research outputs found
Reliable routing scheme for indoor sensor networks
Indoor Wireless sensor networks require a highly dynamic, adaptive routing scheme to deal with the high rate of topology changes due to fading of indoor wireless channels. Besides that, energy consumption rate needs to be consistently distributed among sensor nodes and efficient utilization of battery power is essential. If only the link reliability metric is considered in the routing scheme, it may create long hops routes, and the high quality paths will be frequently used. This leads to shorter lifetime of such paths; thereby the entire network's lifetime will be significantly minimized. This paper briefly presents a reliable load-balanced routing (RLBR) scheme for indoor ad hoc wireless sensor networks, which integrates routing information from different layers. The proposed scheme aims to redistribute the relaying workload and the energy usage among relay sensor nodes to achieve balanced energy dissipation; thereby maximizing the functional network lifetime. RLBR scheme was tested and benchmarked against the TinyOS-2.x implementation of MintRoute on an indoor testbed comprising 20 Mica2 motes and low power listening (LPL) link layer provided by CC1000 radio. RLBR scheme consumes less energy for communications while reducing topology repair latency and achieves better connectivity and communication reliability in terms of end-to-end packets delivery performance
Nature-Inspired Interconnects for Self-Assembled Large-Scale Network-on-Chip Designs
Future nano-scale electronics built up from an Avogadro number of components
needs efficient, highly scalable, and robust means of communication in order to
be competitive with traditional silicon approaches. In recent years, the
Networks-on-Chip (NoC) paradigm emerged as a promising solution to interconnect
challenges in silicon-based electronics. Current NoC architectures are either
highly regular or fully customized, both of which represent implausible
assumptions for emerging bottom-up self-assembled molecular electronics that
are generally assumed to have a high degree of irregularity and imperfection.
Here, we pragmatically and experimentally investigate important design
trade-offs and properties of an irregular, abstract, yet physically plausible
3D small-world interconnect fabric that is inspired by modern network-on-chip
paradigms. We vary the framework's key parameters, such as the connectivity,
the number of switch nodes, the distribution of long- versus short-range
connections, and measure the network's relevant communication characteristics.
We further explore the robustness against link failures and the ability and
efficiency to solve a simple toy problem, the synchronization task. The results
confirm that (1) computation in irregular assemblies is a promising and
disruptive computing paradigm for self-assembled nano-scale electronics and (2)
that 3D small-world interconnect fabrics with a power-law decaying distribution
of shortcut lengths are physically plausible and have major advantages over
local 2D and 3D regular topologies
Hybrid Satellite-Terrestrial Communication Networks for the Maritime Internet of Things: Key Technologies, Opportunities, and Challenges
With the rapid development of marine activities, there has been an increasing
number of maritime mobile terminals, as well as a growing demand for high-speed
and ultra-reliable maritime communications to keep them connected.
Traditionally, the maritime Internet of Things (IoT) is enabled by maritime
satellites. However, satellites are seriously restricted by their high latency
and relatively low data rate. As an alternative, shore & island-based base
stations (BSs) can be built to extend the coverage of terrestrial networks
using fourth-generation (4G), fifth-generation (5G), and beyond 5G services.
Unmanned aerial vehicles can also be exploited to serve as aerial maritime BSs.
Despite of all these approaches, there are still open issues for an efficient
maritime communication network (MCN). For example, due to the complicated
electromagnetic propagation environment, the limited geometrically available BS
sites, and rigorous service demands from mission-critical applications,
conventional communication and networking theories and methods should be
tailored for maritime scenarios. Towards this end, we provide a survey on the
demand for maritime communications, the state-of-the-art MCNs, and key
technologies for enhancing transmission efficiency, extending network coverage,
and provisioning maritime-specific services. Future challenges in developing an
environment-aware, service-driven, and integrated satellite-air-ground MCN to
be smart enough to utilize external auxiliary information, e.g., sea state and
atmosphere conditions, are also discussed
Classification of networks-on-chip in the context of analysis of promising self-organizing routing algorithms
This paper contains a detailed analysis of the current state of the
network-on-chip (NoC) research field, based on which the authors propose the
new NoC classification that is more complete in comparison with previous ones.
The state of the domain associated with wireless NoC is investigated, as the
transition to these NoCs reduces latency. There is an assumption that routing
algorithms from classical network theory may demonstrate high performance. So,
in this article, the possibility of the usage of self-organizing algorithms in
a wireless NoC is also provided. This approach has a lot of advantages
described in the paper. The results of the research can be useful for
developers and NoC manufacturers as specific recommendations, algorithms,
programs, and models for the organization of the production and technological
process.Comment: 10 p., 5 fig. Oral presentation on APSSE 2021 conferenc
An Efficient Routing Implementation for Irregular Networks
with the recent advancements in multi-core era workstation clusters have emerged as a cost-effective approach to build a network of workstations NOWs NOWs connect the small groups of processors to a network of switching elements that form irregular topologies Designing an efficient routing and a deadlock avoidance algorithm for irregular networks is quite complicated in terms of latency and area of the routing tables thus impractical for scalability of On Chip Networks Many deadlock free routing mechanisms have been proposed for regular networks but they cannot be employed in irregular networks In this paper a new methodology has been proposed for efficient routing scheme called LBDR-UD which save the average 64 59 routing tables in the switch for irregular networks as compare to up down routing The Basic concept of routing scheme is combination of up down and Logic Based Distributed Routing By simulation it has been shown that the LBDR-UD is deadlock free and adaptive to all dynamic network traffic condition
Resilient Wireless Sensor Networks Using Topology Control: A Review
Wireless sensor networks (WSNs) may be deployed in failure-prone environments, and WSNs nodes easily fail due to unreliable wireless connections, malicious attacks and resource-constrained features. Nevertheless, if WSNs can tolerate at most losing k â 1 nodes while the rest of nodes remain connected, the network is called k â connected. k is one of the most important indicators for WSNsâ self-healing capability. Following a WSN design flow, this paper surveys resilience issues from the topology control and multi-path routing point of view. This paper provides a discussion on transmission and failure models, which have an important impact on research results. Afterwards, this paper reviews theoretical results and representative topology control approaches to guarantee WSNs to be k â connected at three different network deployment stages: pre-deployment, post-deployment and re-deployment. Multi-path routing protocols are discussed, and many NP-complete or NP-hard problems regarding topology control are identified. The challenging open issues are discussed at the end. This paper can serve as a guideline to design resilient WSNs
Tree-structured small-world connected wireless network-on-chip with adaptive routing
Traditional Network-on-Chip (NoC) systems comprised of many cores suffer from debilitating bottlenecks of latency and significant power dissipation due to the overhead inherent in multi-hop communication. In addition, these systems remain vulnerable to malicious circuitry incorporated into the design by untrustworthy vendors in a world where complex multi-stage design and manufacturing processes require the collective specialized services of a variety of contractors. This thesis proposes a novel small-world tree-based network-on-chip (SWTNoC) structure designed for high throughput, acceptable energy consumption, and resiliency to attacks and node failures resulting from the insertion of hardware Trojans. This tree-based implementation was devised as a means of reducing average network hop count, providing a large degree of local connectivity, and effective long-range connectivity by means of a novel wireless link approach based on carbon nanotube (CNT) antenna design. Network resiliency is achieved by means of a devised adaptive routing algorithm implemented to work with TRAIN (Tree-based Routing Architecture for Irregular Networks). Comparisons are drawn with benchmark architectures with optimized wireless link placement by means of the simulated annealing (SA) metaheuristic. Experimental results demonstrate a 21% throughput improvement and a 23% reduction in dissipated energy per packet over the closest competing architecture. Similar trends are observed at increasing system sizes. In addition, the SWTNoC maintains this throughput and energy advantage in the presence of a fault introduced into the system. By designing a hierarchical topology and designating a higher level of importance on a subset of the nodes, much higher network throughput can be attained while simultaneously guaranteeing deadlock freedom as well as a high degree of resiliency and fault-tolerance
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