196 research outputs found

    CoAP congestion control for the Internet of Things

    Get PDF
    “© © 2017 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.” August Betzler, Javier Isern, Carles Gomez, Ilker Demirkol, Josep Paradells, "Experimental evaluation of congestion control for CoAP communications without end-to-end reliability", Ad Hoc Networks, pp. , 2016, ISSN 15708705. DOI: 10.1109/MCOM.2016.7509394CoAP is a lightweight RESTful application layer protocol devised for the IoT. Operating on top of UDP, CoAP must handle congestion control by itself. The core CoAP specification defines a basic congestion control mechanism, but it is not capable of adapting to network conditions. However, IoT scenarios exhibit significant resource constraints, which pose new challenges on the design of congestion control mechanisms. In this article we present CoCoA, an advanced congestion control mechanism for CoAP being standardized by the Internet Engineering Task Force CoRE working group. CoCoA introduces a novel round-trip time estimation technique, together with a variable backoff factor and aging mechanisms in order to provide dynamic and controlled retransmission timeout adaptation suitable for the peculiarities of IoT communications. We conduct a comparative performance analysis of CoCoA and a variety of alternative algorithms including state-of-the-art mechanisms developed for TCP. The study is based on experiments carried out in real testbeds. Results show that, in contrast to the alternative methods considered, CoCoA consistently outperforms the default CoAP congestion control mechanism in all evaluated scenarios.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Performance Evaluation of MPTCP in Indoor Heterogeneous Networks

    Get PDF

    A Smart TCP Acknowledgment Approach for Multihop Wireless Networks

    Full text link

    TCP-MAC Interaction in Multi-hop Ad-hoc Networks

    Get PDF

    On the benefits of Cross Layer Feedback in Multi-hop Wireless Networks

    Full text link
    Wireless networks operate under harsh and time-varying channel conditions. In wireless networks the time varying channel conditions lead to variable SINR and high BER. The wireless channel is distinct from and more unpredictable than the far more reliable wireline channel. {\em Cross layer feedback} is a mechanism where layers provide {\em selective} information to other layers to boost the performance of wireless networks. {\em Cross layer feedback} can lead to a tremendous increase in the performance of the TCP/IP stack in wireless networks, and an increase in the user's satisfaction level. However, it is possible that naive feedbacks (or optimizations) can work non-coherently; therefore, these can negatively effect the performance of the TCP/IP stack. In this paper, we holistically analyze each layer of the TCP/IP stack, and propose possible Cross layer feedbacks which work coherently. The proposed Cross layer feedbacks can greatly enhance the performance of the TCP/IP stack in wireless networks

    TCP Performance Enhancement over UMTS Network with RNC Feedback

    Full text link
    TCP optimization for wireless networks to deal with packet losses due to fading, shadowing and contention should preferably maintain TCP end-to-end semantics with minimal dependence on intermediate nodes. The development of advanced 3G networks and services makes it necessary to find a way of improving TCP's efficiency and resource utilization. Previous research on this issue suggests that TCP needs radio network feedback to distinguish wireless related losses from congestion related losses. This paper presents such a mechanism that notifies the TCP sender of any noncongestion related losses by introducing a proxy at the RNC node of the UMTS network. Only a minimal change to the standard TCP is required to achieve this. OPNET is used in this study and the simulation results show that the proposed scheme significantly improves the TCP performanc

    A Study on MPTCP for Tolerating Packet Reordering and Path Heterogeneity in Wireless Networks

    Get PDF
    • …
    corecore