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Topological Hole Detection

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Title: Topological Hole Detection


1
Topological Hole Detection
  • Ritesh Maheshwari
  • CSE 590

2
Paper
  • S. Funke, Topological Hole Detection and its
    Applications, DIALM-POMC, 2005.
  • Basically, aim is to identify which nodes form
    the boundary, outer or inner (of holes), in a
    wireless sensor network

3
Motivation
  • Imagine a remote nature preserve
  • Long summer drought, resulting in
  • Wildfires!
  • Airplanes dropping thousands of cheap sensor
    nodes, so that the sensor network
  • Organizes itself, routes messages
  • Identifies current firefront
  • Answers Queries efficiently

4
Motivation
  • Imagine a remote nature preserve
  • Long summer drought, resulting in
  • Wildfires!
  • Airplanes dropping thousands of cheap sensor
    nodes, so that the sensor network
  • Organizes itself, routes messages
  • Identifies current firefront gt Hole Detection!
  • Answers Queries efficiently

5
Other Uses
  • Provide topology information to Location unaware
    protocols like GLIDER
  • Help in Landmark selection for GLIDER
  • Better Virtual coordinates in absence of Location
    Information

6
Assumptions
  • Region R
  • Every point in R is covered for sensing by
    atleast one sensor
  • Usually comm range larger than sensing range
  • Unit Disk Graph
  • No location information
  • Only connectivity information available

7
The continuous case
  • A beacon point
  • Construct contours of Euclidean distance from
    beacon
  • Observation contours usually break at boundary

8
Discrete Case
  • No points only sensor nodes
  • No distance measurement only hop-count
  • Connected Components of same hop-count from
    beacon form contours

9
Discrete Case
  • Beacon node p
  • dp(v) is hop-count from p to node v
  • I(k) v dp(v) k is isoset of level k
  • I(k) may be disconnected, so resulting connected
    components are called C1(k), C2(k), C3(k)..

10
Discrete Case
  • Boundary nodes are now the end nodes of the
    Connected Components - C1(k), C2(k) etc
  • Pick random node r in Ci(k) and find nodes in
    Ci(k) with highest hop-count from r
  • Usually, one beacon is not enough. They use 4

11
Algorithms
12
Beacon Selection
  • The 4 beacons should be as far away as possible
  • Choose 1st beacon randomly
  • Other 3 chosen on the basis of their distance
    from the 1st beacon

13
Distributed Implementation
  • Topology exploration done only rarely
  • Thus naïve implementation suits
  • Can be done by Flooding a constant number of times

14
Application Landmark Selection in GLIDER
  • Landmarks divide the network into tiles using
    Voronoi diagrams
  • Local coordinate system constructed within each
    tile
  • When p in tilep wants to send packet to q in
    tileq,
  • Inter-tile Packet is routed to a neighboring
    tile which is nearer to tileq than tilep and so
    on
  • Intra-tile When reaching tileq, local coordinate
    system used to route to q

15
(No Transcript)
16
Problems of unaware Landmark-Selection
17
Problems of unaware Landmark-Selection
18
Solution First Attempt
  • Observation If 2 landmarks are on same hole
    boundary, then the hole cannot be totally inside
    one tile

19
Solution Second Attempt
  • Hole Repulsion and Pruning

20
More Applications
  • To find Virtual Coordinates in presence of holes
  • Medial-Axis-Based Routing

21
Evaluation UDG - random
22
Evaluation UDG - grid
23
Evaluation Non-UDG
24
Conclusion
  • Simple protocol
  • Only Connectivity info required
  • Hole detection gt Event detection
  • But useful only for dense networks
  • Not that bad, as they assume cheap sensors

25
Thank You!
  • ?
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