Global Mobility Management: A Three Level Architecture for Next Generation Wireless Networks

Author(s):  
Iti Saha Misra ◽  
Mohuya Chakraborty ◽  
Debasish Saha ◽  
Amitava Mukherjee ◽  
Billawdeep Deb ◽  
...  
2015 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haider Noori AL-Hashimi ◽  
Waleed Noori Hussein

VANET Networks are one of the main next generation wireless networks which are envisaged to be an integration of homogeneous and heterogeneous wireless networks. The inter-networking of these wireless networks with the Internet will provide ubiquitous access to roaming network users. However, a seamless handover mechanism with negligible handover delay is required to maintain active connections during roaming across these networks. Several solutions, mainly involving host-based localized mobility management schemes, have been widely proposed to reduce handover delay among homogeneous and heterogeneous wireless networks. However, the handover delay remains high and unacceptable for delay-sensitive services such as real-time and multimedia services. Moreover, these services will be very common in next generation wireless networks. Unfortunately, these widely proposed host-based localized mobility management schemes involve the vehicle in mobility-related signalling hence effectively increasing the handover delay. Furthermore, these schemes do not properly address the advanced handover scenarios envisaged in future wireless networks. This paper, therefore, proposes a VANET mobility management framework utilizing cross-layer design, the IEEE 802.21 future standard, and the recently emerged network-based localized mobility management protocol, Proxy Mobile IPv6, to further reduce handover delay.


Author(s):  
Li Jun Zhang ◽  
Liyan Zhang ◽  
Laurent Marchand ◽  
Samuel Pierre

This chapter provides a survey of IP layer mobility management protocols in next generation wireless networks. In all-IP-based next generation wireless networks, mobile nodes freely change their points of attachment to the network while communicating with correspondent nodes. Hence, mobility management consists of a critical issue, which is to track mobile users’ current location and to efficiently route packets to them. This chapter elaborates the mobility management procedure for the protocols such as mobility support in IPv6 (MIPv6), hierarchical mobile IPv6 mobility management (HMIPv6), fast handovers for mobile IPv6 (FMIPv6), fast handover for hierarchical mobile IPv6 (F-HMIPv6) and proxy mobile IPv6 (PMIPv6). Furthermore, future trends about mobility management are described as well. He authors hope that understanding these mobility management protocols can not only help the researchers to find more advanced solutions in this field, but also provide a training toolkit within the mobile operators.


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