116 research outputs found

    Hybrid routing scheme for vehicular delay tolerant networks

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    In Vehicular Delay Tolerant Networks (VDTN) connection from source to destination at any required period is not necessarily available. Therefore, the node with the message, save it in its own buffer and carry it until an opportunity comes across for forwarding. Fix nodes enhances the performance of VDTN. It helps in message storage and relaying messages. Due to mobility the bit error rate is high in mobile nodes connection but it is not considered in any of the previous routing schemes for VDTN. The connection between fix nodes will always have low bit error rate as compared to connection involving mobile nodes. All the pervious schemes are one dimensional. Environmental hindrances are not taken under consideration as well. Its effect can be both negative and positive. In this paper, a scheme titled Hybrid routing scheme is suggested to overcome the above stated problems. Features of another vehicular network called Vehicular Ad Hoc Networks (VANETs) are added to Maximum Priority (MaxProp) routing scheme for VDTN. Different propagation models of VANETs are implemented for both with and without mobile node communication for VDTN. The concept of bit error rate is also featured in Hybrid routing scheme. This makes Hybrid routing scheme two dimensional and more intelligent. The implementation and performance assessment of the proposed scheme is evaluated via Opportunistic Network Environment (ONE) Simulator. The Hybrid routing scheme outperform MaxProp in terms of the delivery probability and delivery delay

    Content storage and retrieval mechanisms for vehicular delay-tolerant networks

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    Vehicular delay-tolerant networks (VDTNs) were proposed as a novel disruptive network concept based on the delay tolerant networking (DTN) paradigm. VDTN architecture uses vehicles to relay messages, enabling network connectivity in challenging scenarios. Due to intermittent connectivity, network nodes carry messages in their buffers, relaying them only when a proper contact opportunity occurs. Thus, the storage capacity and message retrieving of intermediate nodes directly affects the network performance. Therefore, efficient and robust caching and forwarding mechanisms are needed. This dissertation proposes a content storage and retrieval (CSR) solution for VDTN networks. This solution consists on storage and retrieval control labels, attached to every data bundle of aggregated network traffic. These labels define cacheable contents, and apply cachecontrol and forwarding restrictions on data bundles. The presented mechanisms gathered several contributions from cache based technologies such as Web cache schemes, ad-hoc and DTN networks. This solution is fully automated, providing a fast, safe, and reliable data transfer and storage management, while improves the applicability and performance of VDTN networks significantly. This work presents the performance evaluation and validation of CSR mechanisms through a VDTN testbed. Furthermore it presents several network performance evaluations and results using the well-known DTN routing protocols, Epidemic and Spray and Wait (including its binary variant). The comparison of the network behavior and performance on both protocols, with and without CSR mechanisms, proves that CSR mechanisms improve significantly the overall network performance

    Modelling and Delay Analysis of Intermittently Connected Roadside Communication Networks

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    During the past decade, consumers all over the world have been showing an incremental interest in vehicular technology. The world’s leading vehicle manufacturers have been and are still engaged in continuous competitions to present for today’s sophisticated drivers, vehicles that gratify their demands. This has lead to an outstanding advancement and development of the vehicular manufacturing industry and has primarily contributed to the augmentation of the twenty first century’s vehicle with an appealing and intelligent personality. Particularly, the marriage of information technology to the transport infrastructure gave birth to a novel communication paradigm known as Vehicular Networking. More precisely, being equipped with computerized modules and wireless communication devices, the majority of today’s vehicles qualify to act as typical mobile network nodes that are able to communicate with each other. In addition, these vehicles can as well communicate with other wireless units such as routers, access points, base stations and data posts that are arbitrarily deployed at fixed locations along roadways. These fixed units are referred to as Stationary Roadside Units (SRUs). As a result, ephemeral and self-organized networks can be formed. Such networks are known as Vehicular Networks and constitute the core of the latitudinarian Intelligent Transportation System (ITS) that embraces a wide variety of applications including but not limited to: traffic management, passenger and road safety, environment monitoring and road surveillance, hot-spot guidance, on the fly Internet access, remote region connectivity, information sharing and dissemination, peer-to-peer services and so forth. This thesis presents an in-depth investigation on the possibility of exploiting mobile vehicles to establish connectivity between isolated SRUs. A network of intercommunicating SRUs is referred to as an Intermittently Connected Roadside Communication Network (ICRCN). While inter-vehicular communication as well as vehicle-to-SRU communication has been widely studied in the open literature, the inter-SRU communication has received very little attention. In this thesis, not only do we focus on inter-SRU connectivity establishment through the transport infrastructure but also on the objective of achieving delay-minimal data delivery from a source SRU to a destination SRU in. This delivery process is highly dependent on the vehicular traffic behaviour and more precisely on the arrival times of vehicles to the source SRU as well as these vehicles’ speeds. Vehicle arrival times and speeds are, in turn, highly random and are not available a priori. Under such conditions, the realization of the delay-minimal data delivery objective becomes remarkably challenging. This is especially true since, upon the arrival of vehicles, the source SRU acts on the spur of the moment and evaluates the suitability of the arriving vehicles. Data bundles are only released to those vehicles that contribute the most to the minimization of the average bundle end-to-end delivery delays. Throughout this thesis, several schemes are developed for this purpose. These schemes differ in their enclosed vehicle selection criterion as well as the adopted bundle release mechanism. Queueing models are developed for the purpose of capturing and describing the source SRU’s behaviour as well as the contents of its buffer and the experienced average bundle queueing delay under each of theses schemes. In addition, several mathematical frameworks are established for the purpose of evaluating the average bundle transit delay. Extensive simulations are conducted to validate the developed models and mathematical analyses

    Toward Anonymity in Delay Tolerant Networks: Threshold Pivot Scheme

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    Proceedings of the Military Communications Conference (MILCOM 2010), San Jose, CA, October 2010.Delay Tolerant Networks (DTNs) remove traditional assumptions of end-to-end connectivity, extending network communication to intermittently connected mobile, ad-hoc, and vehicular environments. This work considers anonymity as a vital security primitive for viable military and civilian DTNs. DTNs present new and unique anonymity challenges since we must protect physical location information as mobile nodes with limited topology knowledge naturally mix. We develop a novel Threshold Pivot Scheme (TPS) for DTNs to address these challenges and provide resistance to traffic analysis, source anonymity, and sender-receiver unlinkability. Reply techniques adapted from mix-nets allow for anonymous DTN communication, while secret sharing provides a configurable level of anonymity that enables a balance between security and efficiency. We evaluate TPS via simulation on real-world DTN scenarios to understand its feasibility, performance, and overhead while comparing the provided anonymity against an analytically optimal model

    Quality of service aware data dissemination in vehicular Ad Hoc networks

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    Des systèmes de transport intelligents (STI) seront éventuellement fournis dans un proche avenir pour la sécurité et le confort des personnes lors de leurs déplacements sur les routes. Les réseaux ad-hoc véhiculaires (VANETs) représentent l'élément clé des STI. Les VANETs sont formés par des véhicules qui communiquent entre eux et avec l'infrastructure. En effet, les véhicules pourront échanger des messages qui comprennent, par exemple, des informations sur la circulation routière, les situations d'urgence et les divertissements. En particulier, les messages d'urgence sont diffusés par des véhicules en cas d'urgence (p.ex. un accident de voiture); afin de permettre aux conducteurs de réagir à temps (p.ex., ralentir), les messages d'urgence doivent être diffusés de manière fiable dans un délai très court. Dans les VANETs, il existe plusieurs facteurs, tels que le canal à pertes, les terminaux cachés, les interférences et la bande passante limitée, qui compliquent énormément la satisfaction des exigences de fiabilité et de délai des messages d'urgence. Dans cette thèse, en guise de première contribution, nous proposons un schéma de diffusion efficace à plusieurs sauts, appelé Dynamic Partitioning Scheme (DPS), pour diffuser les messages d'urgence. DPS calcule les tailles de partitions dynamiques et le calendrier de transmission pour chaque partition; à l'intérieur de la zone arrière de l'expéditeur, les partitions sont calculées de sorte qu'en moyenne chaque partition contient au moins un seul véhicule; l'objectif est de s'assurer que seul un véhicule dans la partition la plus éloignée (de l'expéditeur) est utilisé pour diffuser le message, jusqu'au saut suivant; ceci donne lieu à un délai d'un saut plus court. DPS assure une diffusion rapide des messages d'urgence. En outre, un nouveau mécanisme d'établissement de liaison, qui utilise des tonalités occupées, est proposé pour résoudre le problème du problème de terminal caché. Dans les VANETs, la Multidiffusion, c'est-à-dire la transmission d'un message d'une source à un nombre limité de véhicules connus en tant que destinations, est très importante. Par rapport à la diffusion unique, avec Multidiffusion, la source peut simultanément prendre en charge plusieurs destinations, via une arborescence de multidiffusion, ce qui permet d'économiser de la bande passante et de réduire la congestion du réseau. Cependant, puisque les VANETs ont une topologie dynamique, le maintien de la connectivité de l'arbre de multidiffusion est un problème majeur. Comme deuxième contribution, nous proposons deux approches pour modéliser l'utilisation totale de bande passante d'une arborescence de multidiffusion: (i) la première approche considère le nombre de segments de route impliqués dans l'arbre de multidiffusion et (ii) la seconde approche considère le nombre d'intersections relais dans l'arbre de multidiffusion. Une heuristique est proposée pour chaque approche. Pour assurer la qualité de service de l'arbre de multidiffusion, des procédures efficaces sont proposées pour le suivi des destinations et la surveillance de la qualité de service des segments de route. Comme troisième contribution, nous étudions le problème de la congestion causée par le routage du trafic de données dans les VANETs. Nous proposons (1) une approche de routage basée sur l’infonuagique qui, contrairement aux approches existantes, prend en compte les chemins de routage existants qui relaient déjà les données dans les VANETs. Les nouvelles demandes de routage sont traitées de sorte qu'aucun segment de route ne soit surchargé par plusieurs chemins de routage croisés. Au lieu d'acheminer les données en utilisant des chemins de routage sur un nombre limité de segments de route, notre approche équilibre la charge des données en utilisant des chemins de routage sur l'ensemble des tronçons routiers urbains, dans le but d'empêcher, dans la mesure du possible, les congestions locales dans les VANETs; et (2) une approche basée sur le réseau défini par logiciel (SDN) pour surveiller la connectivité VANET en temps réel et les délais de transmission sur chaque segment de route. Les données de surveillance sont utilisées en entrée de l'approche de routage.Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) will be eventually provided in the near future for both safety and comfort of people during their travel on the roads. Vehicular ad-hoc Networks (VANETs), represent the key component of ITS. VANETs consist of vehicles that communicate with each other and with the infrastructure. Indeed, vehicles will be able to exchange messages that include, for example, information about road traffic, emergency situations, and entertainment. Particularly, emergency messages are broadcasted by vehicles in case of an emergency (e.g., car accident); in order to allow drivers to react in time (e.g., slow down), emergency messages must be reliably disseminated with very short delay. In VANETs, there are several factors, such as lossy channel, hidden terminals, interferences and scarce bandwidth, which make satisfying reliability and delay requirements of emergency messages very challenging. In this thesis, as the first contribution, we propose a reliable time-efficient and multi-hop broadcasting scheme, called Dynamic Partitioning Scheme (DPS), to disseminate emergency messages. DPS computes dynamic partition sizes and the transmission schedule for each partition; inside the back area of the sender, the partitions are computed such that in average each partition contains at least a single vehicle; the objective is to ensure that only a vehicle in the farthest partition (from the sender) is used to disseminate the message, to next hop, resulting in shorter one hop delay. DPS ensures fast dissemination of emergency messages. Moreover, a new handshaking mechanism, that uses busy tones, is proposed to solve the problem of hidden terminal problem. In VANETs, Multicasting, i.e. delivering a message from a source to a limited known number of vehicles as destinations, is very important. Compared to Unicasting, with Multicasting, the source can simultaneously support multiple destinations, via a multicast tree, saving bandwidth and reducing overall communication congestion. However, since VANETs have a dynamic topology, maintaining the connectivity of the multicast tree is a major issue. As the second contribution, we propose two approaches to model total bandwidth usage of a multicast tree: (i) the first approach considers the number of road segments involved in the multicast tree and (ii) the second approach considers the number of relaying intersections involved in the multicast tree. A heuristic is proposed for each approach. To ensure QoS of the multicasting tree, efficient procedures are proposed for tracking destinations and monitoring QoS of road segments. As the third contribution, we study the problem of network congestion in routing data traffic in VANETs. We propose (1) a Cloud-based routing approach that, in opposition to existing approaches, takes into account existing routing paths which are already relaying data in VANETs. New routing requests are processed such that no road segment gets overloaded by multiple crossing routing paths. Instead of routing over a limited set of road segments, our approach balances the load of communication paths over the whole urban road segments, with the objective to prevent, whenever possible, local congestions in VANETs; and (2) a Software Defined Networking (SDN) based approach to monitor real-time VANETs connectivity and transmission delays on each road segment. The monitoring data is used as input to the routing approach

    Improving relay based cellular networks performance in highly user congested and emergency situations

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    PhDRelay based cellular networks (RBCNs) are the technologies that incorporate multi-hop communication into traditional cellular networks. A RBCN can potentially support higher data rates, more stable radio coverage and more dynamic services. In reality, RBCNs still suffer from performance degradation in terms of high user congestion, base station failure and overloading in emergency situations. The focus of this thesis is to explore the potential to improve IEEE802.16j supported RBCN performance in user congestion and emergency situations using adjustments to the RF layer (by antenna adjustments or extensions using multi-hop) and cooperative adjustment algorithms, e.g. based on controlling frequency allocation centrally and using distributed approaches. The first part of this thesis designs and validates network reconfiguration algorithms for RBCN, including a cooperative antenna power control algorithm and a heuristic antenna tilting algorithm. The second part of this thesis investigates centralized and distributed dynamic frequency allocation for higher RBCN frequency efficiency, network resilience, and computation simplicity. It is demonstrated that these benefits mitigate user congestion and base station failure problems significantly. Additionally, interweaving coordinated dynamic frequency allocation and antenna tilting is investigated in order to obtain the benefits of both actions. The third part of this thesis incorporates Delay Tolerate Networking (DTN) technology into RBCN to let users self-organize to connect to functional base station through multi-hops supported by other users. Through the use of DTN, RBCN coverage and performance are improved. This thesis explores the augmentation of DTN routing protocols to let more un-covered users connect to base stations and improve network load balancin
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