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Mobile and Ad hoc Networks

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Title: Mobile and Ad hoc Networks


1
Mobile and Ad hoc Networks
Background of Ad hoc Wireless Networks
Wireless Communication Technology and Research
Ad hoc Routing and Mobile IP and Mobility
Wireless Sensor and Mesh Networks
Student Presentations
QoS in Ad Hoc
http//web.uettaxila.edu.pk/CMS/SP2012/teAWNms/
2
Overview
  • Introduction
  • Ad-hoc Network definition
  • Overview Ad-hoc networks
  • Network architecture
  • Applications of ad-hoc networks
  • Ad-hoc networks characteristics and requirements
  • Overview QoS
  • What is QoS ?
  • The need of QoS in MANETs
  • Why QoS is hard in MANETs
  • Current Solutions for Support in MANETs
  • Flexible QoS Model for MANETs
  • INSIGNIA-MANETs QoS Signaling
  • SWAN for MANETs
  • Conclusions
  • QA

3
Ad Hoc Network definition
  • An ad-hoc network is a wireless LAN, in which
    some devices are part of the network only for the
    duration of a communication session or while in
    some close proximity to the rest of the network.
  • A "mobile ad hoc network" (MANET) is an
    autonomous system of mobile routers (and
    associated hosts) connected by wireless links
    forming an arbitrary graph. Routers are free to
    move randomly and organize themselves
    arbitrarily network topology may change rapidly
    and unpredictably. May operate in a stand-alone
    fashion, or may be connected to the Internet.
  • An ad hoc network can be regarded as a
    spontaneous network a network that
    automatically emerges when nodes gather together

4
MANET Mobile Ad hoc NETworks
C
B
A
D
  • - Mobility - Self configuring and healing -
    Rapid Deployment
  • High capacity - Independent of public
    infrastructure - Relaying
  • Internet compatible standards-based wireless
    systems

5
Network Architecture
  • Multi-layered network infrastructure
  • Flat network infrastructure

6
Applications of Ad Hoc Networks
  • Personal communications
  • Cell phones, laptops
  • Cooperative environments
  • Taxi cab network
  • Meeting rooms
  • Emergency operations
  • Policing and fire fighting
  • Military environments
  • Battlefield
  • Network of sensors or floats over water

7
Ad Hoc Networks Characteristics and Requirements
  • Autonomous and spontaneous nature of nodes
  • Distributed Algorithms to support security,
    reliability and consistency of exchanged and
    stored information
  • Time-varying network topology (no pre-existing
    infrastructure or central administration)
  • Scalable routing and mobility management
    techniques to face network dynamics
  • Fluctuating link capacity and network resources
  • Enhanced functionalities to improve link layer
    performance, QoS network support and end-to-end
    efficiency
  • Low-power devices
  • Energy conserving techniques at all layers

8
What is QoS ?
  • Hard to agree on a common definition of QoS
  • A QoS enabled network shall ensure
  • That its applications and/or their users have
    their QoS parameters fulfilled, while at the same
    time ensuring an efficient resource usage
  • That the most important traffic still has its QoS
    parameters fulfilled during network overload
  • What are the most important QoS parameters
  • Throughput, availability, delay, jitter and
    packet loss

9
The need for QoS in MANETs
  • Applications have special service requirements
  • VoIP delay, jitter, minimum bandwidth
  • Needs intelligent buffer handling and queueing
  • High mobility of users and network nodes
  • Routing traffic is important
  • No retransmission of lost broadcast messages
  • Routing contol messages must be prioritized
  • For use in emergency and military operations
  • User traffic prioritization is needed
  • user, role, situation etc
  • Wireless bandwidth and battery capacity are
    scarce resources
  • Need efficient resource usage
  • E.g. only route high priority traffic through
    terminals that are low on power
  • Need QoS aware routing

10
Why QoS is Hard in Mobile Ad Hoc Networks?
Video frame without QoS Support
Video frame with QoS Support
11
Why QoS is Hard in Mobile Ad Hoc Networks?
  • Dynamic network topology
  • Flow stops receiving QoS provisions due to path
    disconnections
  • New paths Must be established, causing data loss
    and delays
  • Imprecise state information
  • Link state changes continuously
  • Flow states change over time
  • No central control for coordination
  • Error-prone shared medium
  • Hidden terminal problem
  • Limited resources availability
  • Bandwidth, battery life, storage, processing
    capabilities
  • Insecure medium

12
Current Solutions for QoS support in Mobile Ad
Hoc Networks
  • Because of the unique characteristics of the
    ad-hoc environment three models provide some good
    insight into the issues of QoS in MANETs
  • These models provide a comprehensive solutions,
    namely
  • FQMM
  • INSIGNIA
  • SWAN
  • FQMM
  • INSIGNIA
  • SWAN

Flexibility!
Can be integrated with multiple routing
protocols
?
?
13
Flexible QoS Model for MANETs (FQMM)
  • First QoS Model proposed in 2000 for MANETs by
    Xiao et al
  • Proposes a hybrid provisioning that combines
    the per-flow granularity on IntServ and per-class
    granularity of DiffServ
  • Adopts DiffServ, but improves the per-class
    granularity to per-flow granularity for certain
    class of traffic
  • Built over IntServ and DiffServ models, it can
    operate with extranet traffic
  • Classification is made at the source node
  • QoS provisioning is made on every node along the
    path
  • FQMM Model provisions the traffic into two
    portions
  • the highest priority is assigned per-flow
    granularity.
  • the rest is assigned per-class granularity.
  • Three types of nodes defined
  • Ingress (transmit)
  • Interior (forward)
  • Egress (receive)

14
Comparison
Best-Effort
Diffserv
Intserv
Service
  • Connectivity
  • No isolation
  • No guarantees
  • Per aggregation isolation
  • Per aggregation guarantee
  • Per flow isolation
  • Per flow guarantee

Service Scope
  • End-to-end
  • Domain
  • End-to-end

Complexity
  • No set-up
  • Long term setup
  • Per flow setup

Scalability
  • Highly scalable
  • (nodes maintain only routing state)
  • Scalable (edge routers maintains per aggregate
    state core routers per class state)
  • Not scalable (each router maintains per flow
    state)

15
INSIGNIA MANETs QoS Signaling
  • First signalling protocol designed solely for
    MANETs by Ahn et al. 1998
  • In-band signaling
  • Base and enhanced QoS levels
  • Per-flow management
  • Resources management adapted as technology
  • Intelligent packet scheduling
  • Flow reservation, restoration and adaptation
  • QoS reports periodically sent to source node
  • Source node takes action to adapt flows to
    observed network condition
  • Routing
  • Any routing protocol can be used
  • Route maintenance procedure will affect
  • In-band signaling
  • Establish, adapt, tear down reservations
  • Control information embedded in data packets

16
INSIGNIA OPTION Field
  • Supports in-band signaling by adding a new option
    field in the IP header to carry the signaling
    control
  • Reservation Mode (REQ/RES) indicates whether
    there is already a reservation for this packet.
  • If no, the packet is forwarded to INSIGNIA
    Module which in coordination with a AC may
    either
  • grant resources ? Service Type RT (real-time).
  • deny resources? Service Type BE (best-effort).
  • If yes, the packet will be forwarded with the
    allowed resources.
  • Bandwidth Request (MAX/MIN) indicates the
    requested amount of bandwidth.

17
INSIGNIA Bottleneck Node
  • During the flow reservation process a node may be
    a bottleneck
  • The service will degrade from RT/MAX -gt RT/MIN.
  • If M2 is heavy-loaded it may also degrade the
    service level to BE/MIN where there is actually
    no QoS.

18
SWAN - Stateless Wireless Ad Hoc Networks
  • An alternative to INSIGNIA with improved
    scalabilities properties
  • Is a stateless network scheme designed
    specifically for MANETs with no need to process
    complex signaling, or to keep per-flow
    information, to achieve scalability and
    robustness
  • Promotes rate control system that can be used at
    each node to treat traffic either as real-time or
    best-effort
  • Excessive real-time traffic is automatically
    demoted to best-effort
  • While provides a model that deals with traffic on
    a per-class , it uses merely two level of
    service, best-effort and real-time traffic
  • Both level of service can be mapped to DSCPs with
    known PHB (based on bandwidth requirement) to
    facilitate extranet QoS
  • May decide to demote part of the real-time
    traffic to best-effort service due to lack of
    resources
  • The transmission rate for the best-effort traffic
    is locally estimated and adjusted to accommodate
    the bandwidth required by Real Time traffic
  • Supports source-based admission control and
    distributed congestion control for real-time
    traffic
  • Uses Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN)

19
Ad hoc QoS interconnectivity with fixed network
  • Ad-Hoc network needs to cling to a host network
    in order to gain access to the internet
  • Co-operation between ad hoc network and the host
    network can facilitate end-to-end QoS support
  • Framework proposed by Morgan and Kunz defines a
    solution for interaction between ad hoc and host
    networks
  • This framework is not affected by the specific
    QoS model implemented on either side
  • Ad-Hoc network may decide to implement INSIGNIA,
    SWAN, or FQMM, while host network may decide to
    implement DiffServ or IntServ
  • Ad-hoc networks rely on the host network
    resources and services in order to access to the
    outside world
  • The host network provides support for the ad-hoc
    by providing access to specific domain services
    and agreements

20
Conclusion
  • In this lecture, we have discussed different
    existing QoS model for wireless ad-hoc networks
  • INSIGNIA, SWAN and FQMM, each model provide the
    basics for a more comprehensive model
  • Mobile nodes can connect to the Internet gateways
    of different types, providing different QoS
  • Classified different approach with respect to
    different mobility scenarios
  • In order to achieve an end-to-end QoS approach,
    QoS information in both fixed and ad-hoc networks
    should be involved
  • This demands an interaction between these
    sections

21
References
  • 1 Towards End-to-End QoS in Ad-Hoc Networks
    Connected to Fixed Networks, David Remondo
    Catalonia Univ. of Technology (UPC)
  • 2 An architectural framework for MANET QoS
    interaction with access domains, Yasser Morgan
    and Thomas Kunz, Carleton University
  • 3A proposal for an ad-hoc network QoS gateway,
    Yasser Morgan and Thomas Kunz, Carleton
    University
  • 4 A Glance at Quality of Services in Mobile
    Ad-Hoc Networks, Zeinalipour-Yazti Demetrios
    (csyiazti_at_cs.ucr.edu)
  • 5 Quality of Service in Ad-Hoc Networks, Eric
    Chi, Antoins Dimakis el (smartnets_at_uclink.berkeley
    .edu)
  • 6 QoS in Mobile Ad Hoc Networks, Prasant
    Mohapatra, Jian Li and Chao Gui, University of
    California
  • 7 QoS-aware Routing Based on Bandwidth
    Estimation for Mobile Ad Hoc networks, Lei Chen
    and Wendi Heinzelman, University of
    Rochesterchenlei,wheinzel_at_ece.rochester.edu
  • 8 Dynamic Quality of Service for Mobile Ad-Hoc
    Networks, M. Mirhakkak, N. Schult, D. Thomson,
    The MITRE Corporation
  • 9 Network Architecture to Support QoS in Mobile
    Ad Hoc Networks, Lei Chen and Wendi Heizelman,
    University of Rochester

22
Assignment 10
  • Write note on the topics highlighted in Yellow.

23
QA
  • ?
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