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Reliable optimised flooding in ad hoc networks

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conference contribution
posted on 2024-11-13, 21:10 authored by Justin Lipman, P Boustead, Jose ChicharoJose Chicharo
Information dissemination (flooding) forms an integral part of routing protocols, network management, service discovery and information collection (sensing). Given the broadcast nature of ad hoc network communications, information dissemination provides a challenging problem. Blind flooding in ad hoc networks results in the broadcast storm problem. To limit the broadcast storm problem, mechanisms for optimised flooding have been proposed. However, this optimisation reduces the inherent level of redundancy. the minimum spanning tree (MST) algorithm using local one hop topology in a distributed manner as the basis of a more reliable optimised flooding mechanism called, reliable minimum spanning tree (RMST) flood is proposed. RMST utilises unique properties of MST graphs that allow for broadcast transmissions to be replaced by unicast transmissions. Unicast transmission is inherently more reliable than broadcast transmission as it utilises link layer acknowledgement and retransmission, thereby improving the reliability of a flood and reducing the broadcast storm problem. Simulation is used to show that RMST is able to achieve equivalent reliability in terms of packet delivery compared to blind flooding. Importantly, RMST is able to achieve significantly better performance than MPR and equivalent performance to LMSTFlood in terms of reducing the broadcast storm problem.

History

Citation

This article was originally published as: Lipman, J, Boustead, P & Chicharo, JF, Reliable optimised flooding in ad hoc networks, Proceedings of the IEEE 6th Circuits and Systems Symposium on Emerging Technologies: Frontiers of Mobile and Wireless Communication, 31 May-2 June 2004, vol 2, 521-524. Copyright IEEE 2004.

Parent title

Proceedings of the IEEE 6th Circuits and Systems Symposium on Emerging Technologies: Frontiers of Mobile and Wireless Communication

Volume

2

Pagination

521-524

Language

English

RIS ID

11294

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