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Mobile Networking Prof. JeanPierre Hubaux http:mobnet.epfl.ch

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The course is about the system aspects of mobile networking. Therefore, it covers: ... J. Schiller: Mobile Communications, Second Edition. Addison-Wesley, 2004 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mobile Networking Prof. JeanPierre Hubaux http:mobnet.epfl.ch


1
Mobile NetworkingProf. Jean-Pierre
Hubauxhttp//mobnet.epfl.ch
2
About this course
  • The course is about the system aspects of mobile
    networking
  • Therefore, it covers
  • networking issues (MAC and routing, principally)
  • wireless security issues
  • estimation of network capacity and resource
    management
  • It does not cover
  • radio propagation models
  • modulation and equalization techniques
  • source or channel coding
  • speech coding or other signal processing aspects
  • Software-centric aspects (e.g., mobile agents)
  • It is focused on mechanisms, and avoids a
    detailed (and boring) description of standards
  • However, it does propose an insight on IEEE
    802.11

3
Course outline/calendar and textbook
http//mobnet.epfl.ch/index.php?pagecalendar
- J. Schiller Mobile Communications, Second
Edition Addison-Wesley, 2004
http//www.inf.fu-berlin.de/inst/ag-tech/resources
/mobkom/mobile_communications.htm
  • W. Stallings Wireless Communications
    Networks, Second Edition, Prentice Hall, 2005
  • http//www.WilliamStallings.com/Wireless/Wireless2
    e.html

4
Module A Introduction(Part A1)
5
Wireless communication and mobility
  • Aspects of mobility
  • user mobility users communicate anytime,
    anywhere, with anyone
  • device portability devices can be connected
    anytime, anywhere to the network
  • Wireless vs. mobile Examples ? ?
    stationary computer (desktop) ? ? notebook
    in a hotel ? ? wireless LANs in historic
    buildings ? ? Personal Digital Assistant
    (PDA)
  • The demand for mobile communication creates the
    need for integration of wireless networks or
    mobility mechanisms into existing fixed networks
  • telephone network ? cellular telephony (e.g.,
    GSM)
  • local area networks ? Wireless LANs (e.g., IEEE
    802.11)
  • Internet ? Mobile IP

6
Examples of applications (1/2)
  • Person to person communication (e.g., voice, SMS)
  • Person to server (e.g., timetable consultation,
    telebanking)
  • Vehicles
  • position via GPS
  • local ad-hoc network with vehicles close-by to
    prevent accidents, guidance system, adaptive
    cruise control
  • transmission of news, road condition, weather,
    music via Digital Audio Broadcasting
  • vehicle data (e.g., from buses, trains,
    aircrafts) transmitted for maintenance
  • Disaster situations
  • replacement of a fixed infrastructure in case of
    earthquakes, hurricanes, fire etc.
  • Military networks

7
Typical application road traffic
GSM, UMTS TETRA, ...
ad hoc
http//ivc.epfl.ch http//www.sevecom.org
8
Examples of applications (2/2)
  • Traveling salespeople
  • direct access to customer files stored in a
    central location
  • consistent databases for all agents
  • mobile office
  • Replacement of fixed networks
  • Sensors
  • trade shows networks
  • LANs in historic buildings
  • Entertainment, education, ...
  • outdoor Internet access
  • travel guide with up-to-datelocation dependent
    information
  • ad-hoc networks formulti user games
  • Location-dependent advertising

Built 150BC
9
Location dependent services
  • Location aware services
  • what services, e.g., printer, fax, phone, server
    etc. exist in the local environment
  • Follow-on services
  • automatic call-forwarding, transmission of the
    actual workspace to the current location
  • Information services
  • push e.g., current special offers in the shop
    nearby
  • pull e.g., where is the closest Migros?
  • Support services
  • caches, intermediate results, state information
    etc. follow the mobile device through the fixed
    network

10
Mobile devices
  • Laptop
  • functionally eq. to desktop
  • standard applications
  • Wireless sensors
  • Limited proc. power
  • Small battery
  • Mobile phones
  • voice, data
  • simple text displays
  • RFID tag
  • A few thousands of logical gates
  • Responds only to the RFID reader requests
    (no battery)
  • Pager
  • receive only
  • tiny displays
  • simple text messages
  • PDA
  • simple graphical displays
  • character recognition
  • simplified WWW

performance
11
Wireless networks in comparison to fixed networks
  • Higher data loss-rates due to notably to
    interferences
  • emissions of e.g., engines, lightning, other
    wireless networks, micro-wave ovens
  • Restrictive regulations of frequencies
  • Usage of frequencies has to be coordinated,
    useful frequencies are almost all occupied
  • Lower transmission rates
  • From a few kbit/s (e.g., GSM) to a few 10s of
    Mbit/s (e.g. WLAN)
  • Higher jitter
  • Lower security (higher vulnerability)
  • Radio link permanently shared ? need of
    sophisticated MAC
  • Fluctuating quality of the radio links
  • Unknown and variable access points ?
    authentication procedures
  • Unknown location of the mobile station ? mobility
    management

12
History of wireless communication (1/3)
  • Many people in History used light for
    communication
  • heliographs, flags (semaphore), ...
  • 150 BC smoke signals for communication(Greece)
  • 1794, optical telegraph, Claude Chappe
  • Electromagnetic waves are of special importance
  • 1831 Faraday demonstrates electromagnetic
    induction
  • J. Maxwell (1831-79) theory of electromagnetic
    Fields, wave equations (1864)
  • H. Hertz (1857-94) demonstrateswith an
    experiment the wave character of electrical
    transmission through space(1886)

13
History of wireless communication (2/3)
  • 1895 Guglielmo Marconi
  • first demonstration of wireless telegraphy
  • long wave transmission, high transmission power
    necessary (gt 200kw)
  • 1907 Commercial transatlantic connections
  • huge base stations (30 to 100m high antennas)
  • 1915 Wireless voice transmission New York - San
    Francisco
  • 1920 Discovery of short waves by Marconi
  • reflection at the ionosphere
  • smaller sender and receiver, possible due to the
    invention of the vacuum tube (1906, Lee DeForest
    and Robert von Lieben)

14
History of wireless communication (3/3)
  • 1928 Many TV broadcast trials (across Atlantic,
    color TV, TV news)
  • 1933 Frequency modulation (E. H. Armstrong)
  • 1946 First public mobile telephone service in 25
    US cities (1 antenna per city)
  • 1976 Bell Mobile Phone service for NY city
  • 1979 NMT at 450MHz (Scandinavian countries)
  • 1982 Start of GSM-specification
  • goal pan-European digital mobile phone system
    with roaming
  • 1983 Start of the American AMPS (Advanced Mobile
    Phone System, analog)
  • 1984 CT-1 standard (Europe) for cordless
    telephones
  • 1992 Deployment of GSM
  • 2002 Deployment of UMTS

15
Wireless systems development over the last 25
years
wireless LAN
cordlessphones
cellular phones
satellites
1980CT0
1981 NMT 450
1982 Inmarsat-A
1983 AMPS
1984CT1
1986 NMT 900
1987CT1
1988 Inmarsat-C
1989 CT 2
1991 DECT
1991 D-AMPS
1991 CDMA
1992 GSM
1992 Inmarsat-B Inmarsat-M
199x proprietary
1993 PDC
1997 IEEE 802.11
1994DCS 1800
1998 Iridium
What is missing ?
1999 802.11b, Bluetooth
2000GPRS
2000 IEEE 802.11a,g
analogue
2001 UMTS/IMT-2000 CDMA-2000 (USA)
digital
2005 2010 (?) Fourth Generation (Internet
based)
NMT Nordic Mobile Telephone DECT Digital
Enhanced Cordless Telecom. AMPS Advanced Mobile
Phone System (USA) DCS Digital Cellular
System CT Cordless Telephone PDC Pacific
Digital Cellular UMTS Universal Mobile Telecom.
System PAN Personal Area Network
16
Areas of research in mobile communication
  • Wireless Communication
  • transmission quality (bandwidth, error rate,
    delay)
  • modulation, coding, interference
  • media access
  • ...
  • Mobility
  • location dependent services
  • location transparency
  • quality of service support (delay, jitter)
  • security
  • ...
  • Portability
  • integration (system on a chip)
  • power consumption
  • limited computing power, sizes of display, ...
  • usability
  • ...

17
Reference model
Application
Application
Transport
Transport
Network
Network
Data Link
Data Link
Data Link
Data Link
Physical
Physical
Physical
Physical
Radio link
18
Influence of mobile communication on the layer
model
  • Application layer
  • Transport layer
  • Network layer
  • Data link layer
  • Physical layer
  • location-dependent services
  • new applications, multimedia
  • adaptive applications
  • congestion and flow control
  • quality of service
  • addressing, routing, mobility management
  • hand-over
  • media access
  • multiplexing
  • modulation
  • power management, interference
  • attenuation
  • frequency allocation

security
19
Overlay Networks - the global view
Integration of heterogeneous fixed andmobile
networks with varyingtransmission characteristics
wide area
vertical hand-over
metropolitan area
campus-based
horizontal hand-over
in-house
20
References (in addition to the 2 recommended
textbooks)
  • B. Walke Mobile Radio Networks, Wiley, Second
    Edition, 2002
  • T. Rappaport Wireless Communications, Prentice
    Hall, Second Edition, 2001
  • M. Schwartz Mobile Wireless Communications,
    Cambridge University Press, 2004
  • L. Buttyan and JP Hubaux Security and
    Cooperation in Wireless Networks, Cambridge
    University Press, 2007, http//secowinet.epfl.ch
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