193 research outputs found
EZ-AG: Structure-free data aggregation in MANETs using push-assisted self-repelling random walks
This paper describes EZ-AG, a structure-free protocol for duplicate
insensitive data aggregation in MANETs. The key idea in EZ-AG is to introduce a
token that performs a self-repelling random walk in the network and aggregates
information from nodes when they are visited for the first time. A
self-repelling random walk of a token on a graph is one in which at each step,
the token moves to a neighbor that has been visited least often. While
self-repelling random walks visit all nodes in the network much faster than
plain random walks, they tend to slow down when most of the nodes are already
visited. In this paper, we show that a single step push phase at each node can
significantly speed up the aggregation and eliminate this slow down. By doing
so, EZ-AG achieves aggregation in only O(N) time and messages. In terms of
overhead, EZ-AG outperforms existing structure-free data aggregation by a
factor of at least log(N) and achieves the lower bound for aggregation message
overhead. We demonstrate the scalability and robustness of EZ-AG using ns-3
simulations in networks ranging from 100 to 4000 nodes under different mobility
models and node speeds. We also describe a hierarchical extension for EZ-AG
that can produce multi-resolution aggregates at each node using only O(NlogN)
messages, which is a poly-logarithmic factor improvement over existing
techniques
QF-MAC: Adaptive, Local Channel Hopping for Interference Avoidance in Wireless Meshes
The throughput efficiency of a wireless mesh network with potentially
malicious external or internal interference can be significantly improved by
equipping routers with multi-radio access over multiple channels. For reliably
mitigating the effect of interference, frequency diversity (e.g., channel
hopping) and time diversity (e.g., carrier sense multiple access) are
conventionally leveraged to schedule communication channels. However,
multi-radio scheduling over a limited set of channels to minimize the effect of
interference and maximize network performance in the presence of concurrent
network flows remains a challenging problem. The state-of-the-practice in
channel scheduling of multi-radios reveals not only gaps in achieving network
capacity but also significant communication overhead.
This paper proposes an adaptive channel hopping algorithm for multi-radio
communication, QuickFire MAC (QF-MAC), that assigns per-node, per-flow
``local'' channel hopping sequences, using only one-hop neighborhood
coordination. QF-MAC achieves a substantial enhancement of throughput and
latency with low control overhead. QF-MAC also achieves robustness against
network dynamics, i.e., mobility and external interference, and selective
jamming attacker where a global channel hopping sequence (e.g., TSCH) fails to
sustain the communication performance. Our simulation results quantify the
performance gains of QF-MAC in terms of goodput, latency, reliability,
communication overhead, and jamming tolerance, both in the presence and absence
of mobility, across diverse configurations of network densities, sizes, and
concurrent flows
Security in Wireless Sensor Networks
Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) is an emerging technology that shows great promise for various futuristic applications both for mass public and military. The sensing technology combined with processing power and wireless communication makes it lucrative for being exploited in abundance in future. The inclusion of wireless communication technology also incurs various types of security threats. The intent of this paper is to investigate the security related issues and challenges in wireless sensor networks. We identify the security threats, review proposed security mechanisms for wireless sensor networks. We also discuss the holistic view of security for ensuring layered and robust security in wireless sensor networks
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