|
Published Articles >> Table of Contents >> Abstract
Sixth IEEE Workshop on Mobile Computing Systems and Applications (WMCSA'04)
pp. 94-101
Anticipatory Routing for Highly Mobile Endpoints
Fabrice Tchakountio, BBN Technologies
Ram Ramanathan, BBN Technologies
Full Article Text:
 
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/MCSA.2004.7
Send link to a friend
| Abstract |
|
We consider the problem of routing to endpoints with
very high "effective" mobility, i.e, when the period between
changes in an endpoints location is comparable to the time
it takes for the location tracking mechanism to converge. This
could happen due to increased endpoint speed, increased
control message latency, or decreased cell size. When this
happens, conventional location tracking approaches fail — by
the time such mechanisms converge, the endpoint has already
moved to a new location, and we say the "reactive limit" has
been reached. When mobility exceeds the reactive limit, prediction
techniques are required for network control.
We describe "anticipatory routing", a mechanism that
uses a limited history of past movement of the endpoint to
predict its future locations. In particular, we use linear regression
to predict future locations and affiliation/departure
times of the endpoint. Using a simulation model of a multihop
wireless network, we study the performance of anticipatory
routing. Our results indicate that above a certain mobility
threshold, anticipatory routing significantly outperforms
conventional location tracking mechanisms. Its magnitude of
improvement increases with higher mobility — in particular,
its rate of throughput degradation with speed is 56% better.
|
Additional Information
|
Citation:
Fabrice Tchakountio, Ram Ramanathan,
"Anticipatory Routing for Highly Mobile Endpoints,"
wmcsa,
pp. 94-101,
Sixth IEEE Workshop on Mobile Computing Systems and Applications (WMCSA'04),
2004
|
|