207 research outputs found

    Circular Sailing Routing for Wireless Networks

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    EASR: Graph-based Framework for Energy Efficient Smart Routing in MANET using Availability Zones

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    Energy consumption in MobileAdhoc Network (MANET) is a topic of research from more than a decade. Althoughthere are multiple archival of literatures, that have proposed variousenergy-efficient algorithms for reducing the energy consumption to improveenergy efficiency. Establishing correct and reliable route is important designissue in MANET, but a more challenging goal is to provide energy efficientroute. But, it was observed that majority of such energy efficient routingprotocols just give symptomatic solution which addresses and mitigated theenergy issues overlooking various associated issues like quality of services.Moreover, in majority of research previous studies it is found that AODV andDSDV are highly in adoption rate among the researcher for solving energy issuesusing routing protocols. This manuscript after reviewing some of thesignificant literatures in past explored issues in existing AODV and DSDVandĀ  proposes a novel energy efficientrouting protocols by incorporating a new actor called availability zone. Theproposed model shows better energy efficiency and QoS compared to AODV andDSDV

    Internet of Things and Sensors Networks in 5G Wireless Communications

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    This book is a printed edition of the Special Issue Internet of Things and Sensors Networks in 5G Wireless Communications that was published in Sensors

    Internet of Things and Sensors Networks in 5G Wireless Communications

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    The Internet of Things (IoT) has attracted much attention from society, industry and academia as a promising technology that can enhance day to day activities, and the creation of new business models, products and services, and serve as a broad source of research topics and ideas. A future digital society is envisioned, composed of numerous wireless connected sensors and devices. Driven by huge demand, the massive IoT (mIoT) or massive machine type communication (mMTC) has been identified as one of the three main communication scenarios for 5G. In addition to connectivity, computing and storage and data management are also long-standing issues for low-cost devices and sensors. The book is a collection of outstanding technical research and industrial papers covering new research results, with a wide range of features within the 5G-and-beyond framework. It provides a range of discussions of the major research challenges and achievements within this topic

    Efficient tree-based content-based routing schemes

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    This thesis is about routing and forwarding for inherently multicast communication such as the communication typical of information-centric networks. The notion of Information-Centric Networking (ICN) is an evolution of the Internet from the current host-centric architecture to a new architecture in which communication is based on ā€œnamed informationā€. The ambitious goal of ICN is to effectively support the exchange and use of information in an ever more connected world, with billions of devices, many of which are mobile, producing and consuming large amounts of data. ICN is intended to support scalable content distribution, mobility, and security, for such applications as video on demand and networks of sensors or the so-called Internet of Things. Many ICN architectures have emerged in the past decade, and the ICN community has made significant progress in terms of infrastructure, test-bed deployments, and application case studies. And yet, despite the impressive research effort, the fundamental problems of routing and forwarding remain open. In particular, none of the proposed architectures has developed truly scalable name-based routing schemes and efficient name-based forwarding algorithms. This is not surprising, since the problem of routing based on names, in its most general formulation, is known to be fundamentally difficult. In general, one would want to support application-defined names (as opposed to network-defined addresses) with a compact routing scheme (small routing tables) that uses optimal paths and minimizes congestion, and that admits to a fast forwarding algorithm. Furthermore, one would want to construct this routing scheme with a decentralized and incremental protocol for administrative autonomy and efficient dynamic updates. However, there are clear theoretical limits that simply make it impossible to achieve all these goals. In this thesis we explore the design space of routing and forwarding in an information-centric network. Our purpose is to develop routing schemes and forwarding algorithms that combine many desirable properties. We consider two forms of addressing, one tied to network locations, and one based on more expressive content descriptors. We then consider trees as basic routing structures, and with those we develop routing schemes that are intended to minimize path lengths and congestion, separately or together. For one of these schemes based on expressive content descriptors, we also develop a fast forwarding algorithm specialized for massively parallel architectures such as GPUs. In summary, this thesis presents two efficient and scalable routing algorithms for two different types of networks, plus one scalable forwarding algorithm. We summarize each individual contribution below: Low-congestion geographic routing for wireless networks. We develop a low-congestion, multicast routing scheme designed specifically for wireless networks. The scheme supports geographical multicast routing, meaning routing to a set of nodes addressed by their physical position. The scheme builds a geometric minimum spanning tree connecting the source to all the destinations. Then, for each edge in this tree, the scheme routes a message through a random intermediate node, chosen independently of the set of multicast requests. The intermediate node is chosen in the vicinity of the corresponding edge such that congestion is reduced without stretching routes by more than a constant factor. Multi-tree scheme for content-based routing in ICN. We develop a tree-based routing scheme designed for large-scale wired networks such as the Internet. The scheme supports two forms of addresses: application-defined content descriptors, and network-defined locators. We first show that the scheme is effective in terms of stretch and congestion on the current AS-level Internet graph even with only a few spanning trees. Then we show that our content descriptors, which consist of sets of tags and that are more expressive than the name prefixes used in mainstream ICN, aggregate well in practice under our scheme. We also explain in detail how to use descriptors and locators, together with unique content identifiers, to support the efficient transmission and sharing of information through scalable and loop-free routes. Tag-based forwarding (partial matching) algorithm on GPUs. To accompany our ICN routing scheme, we develop a fast forwarding algorithm that matches incoming packets against forwarding tables with tens of millions of entries. To achieve high performance, we develop a practical solution for the partial matching problem that lies at the heart of this forwarding scheme. This solution amounts to a massively parallel algorithm specifically designed for a hybrid CPU/GPU architecture

    Network-on-Chip

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    Limitations of bus-based interconnections related to scalability, latency, bandwidth, and power consumption for supporting the related huge number of on-chip resources result in a communication bottleneck. These challenges can be efficiently addressed with the implementation of a network-on-chip (NoC) system. This book gives a detailed analysis of various on-chip communication architectures and covers different areas of NoCs such as potentials, architecture, technical challenges, optimization, design explorations, and research directions. In addition, it discusses current and future trends that could make an impactful and meaningful contribution to the research and design of on-chip communications and NoC systems

    A wireless sensor network system for border security and crossing detection

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    The protection of long stretches of countriesā€™ borders has posed a number of challenges. Effective and continuous monitoring of a border requires the implementation of multi-surveillance technologies, such as Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN), that work as an integrated unit to meet the desired goals. The research presented in this thesis investigates the application of topologically Linear WSN (LWSNs) to international border monitoring and surveillance. The main research questions studied here are: What is the best form of node deployment and hierarchy? What is the minimum number of sensor nodes to achieve kāˆ’ barrier coverage in a given belt region? iven an appropriate network density, how do we determine if a region is indeed kāˆ’barrier covered? What are the factors that affect barrier coverage? How to organise nodes into logical segments to perform in-network processing of data? How to transfer information from the networks to the end users while maintaining critical QoS measures such as timeliness and accuracy. To address these questions, we propose an architecture that specifies a mechanism to assign nodes to various network levels depending on their location. These levels are used by a cross-layer communication protocol to achieve data delivery at the lowest possible cost and minimal delivery delay. Building on this levelled architecture, we study the formation of weak and strong barriers and how they determine border crossing detection probability. We propose new method to calculate the required node density to provide higher intruder detection rate. Then, we study the effect of people movement models on the border crossing detection probability. At the data link layer, new energy balancing along with shifted MAC protocol are introduced to further increase the network lifetime and delivery speed. In addition, at network layer, a routing protocol called Level Division raph (LD ) is developed. LD utilises a complex link cost measurement to insure best QoS data delivery to the sink node at the lowest possible cost. The proposed system has the ability to work independently or cooperatively with other monitoring technologies, such as drowns and mobile monitoring stations. The performance of the proposed work is extensively evaluated analytically and in simulation using real-life conditions and parameters. The simulation results show significant performance gains when comparing LD to its best rivals in the literature Dynamic Source Routing. Compared to DSR, LD achieves higher performance in terms of average end-to-end delays by up to 95%, packet delivery ratio by up to 20%, and throughput by up to 60%, while maintaining similar performance in terms of normalised routing load and energy consumption

    Intelligent Circuits and Systems

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    ICICS-2020 is the third conference initiated by the School of Electronics and Electrical Engineering at Lovely Professional University that explored recent innovations of researchers working for the development of smart and green technologies in the fields of Energy, Electronics, Communications, Computers, and Control. ICICS provides innovators to identify new opportunities for the social and economic benefits of society.怀 This conference bridges the gap between academics and R&D institutions, social visionaries, and experts from all strata of society to present their ongoing research activities and foster research relations between them. It provides opportunities for the exchange of new ideas, applications, and experiences in the field of smart technologies and finding global partners for future collaboration. The ICICS-2020 was conducted in two broad categories, Intelligent Circuits & Intelligent Systems and Emerging Technologies in Electrical Engineering

    Classification and Comparative Study of Routing Techniques in Adhoc Wireless Networks

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    Wireless systems have been in use since 1980s. We have seen their evolutions to first, second and third generation's wireless systems. Wireless systems operate with the aid of a centralized supporting structure such as an access point. These access points assist the wireless users to keep connected with the wireless system, when they roam from one place to the other. The presence of a fixed supporting structure limits the adaptability of wireless systems. In other words, the technology cannot work effectively in places where there is no fixed infrastructure. Future generation wireless systems will require easy and quick deployment of wireless networks. This quick network deployment is not possible with the Infrastructured wireless systems. Recent advancements such as Bluetooth introduced a new type of wireless systems known as ad-hoc networks. Ad-hoc networks or "short live" networks operate in the absence of fixed infrastructure. They offer quick and easy network deployment in situations where it is not possible otherwise. Ad-hoc is a Latin word, which means "for this or for this only." Mobile ad-hoc network is an autonomous system of mobile nodes connected by wireless links; each node operates as an end system and a router for all other nodes in the network. Nodes in ad-hoc network are free to move and organize themselves in an arbitrary fashion. Each user is free to roam about while communication with others. The path between each pair of the users may have multiple links and the radio between them can be heterogeneous. This allows an association of various links to be a part of the same network. A mobile ad-hoc network is a collection of mobile nodes forming an ad-hoc network without the assistance of any centralized structures. These networks introduced a new art of network establishment and can be well suited for an environment where either the infrastructure is lost or where deploy an infrastructure is not very cost effective. The popular IEEE 802.11 "WI-FI" protocol is capable of providing ad-hoc network facilities at low level, when no access point is available. However in this case, the nodes are limited to send and receive information but do not route anything across the network. Ad-hoc networks can operate in a standalone fashion or could possibly be connected to a larger network such as the Internet. An ad-hoc network has certain characteristics, which imposes new demands on the routing protocol. The most important characteristic is the dynamic topology, which is a consequence of node mobility. Nodes can change position quite frequently; the nodes in an ad-hoc network can consist of laptops and personal digital assistants and are often very limited in resources such as CPU power, storage capacity, battery power and bandwidth. This means that the routing protocol should try to minimize control traffic, such as periodic update messages. The Internet Engineering Task Force currently has a working group named Mobile Ad-hoc Networks that is working on routing specifications for ad-hoc networks. This M.Phill thesis evaluates some of the protocols put forth by the working group. This evaluation is done by means of simulation using Network simulator 2 from Berkeley. This work aims at classification of the existing routing protocols of adhoc wireless networks using some definite parameters. After classification of routing protocols of adhoc wireless network, their comparative study was undertaken in order to yield category wise distribution. Furthermore performance evaluation of these protocols was carried out by employing different parameters like fading models, mobility models, traffic patterns etc using the network simulator NS-2 Hence I explore and evaluate different methods for validation of ad hoc routing protocols which are used to set up forwarding paths in spontaneous networks of mobile/Adhoc devices to accomplish the above mentioned comparative study and classification

    Internet of Things and Sensors Networks in 5G Wireless Communications

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    This book is a printed edition of the Special Issue Internet of Things and Sensors Networks in 5G Wireless Communications that was published in Sensors
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