Cross-layer handoff management scheme in heterogeneous networks

Author(s):  
Chen Jie ◽  
Liao Chulin ◽  
Li Shaoqian
2015 ◽  
Vol E98.B (7) ◽  
pp. 1333-1344
Author(s):  
Raymundo BUENROSTRO-MARISCAL ◽  
Maria COSIO-LEON ◽  
Juan-Ivan NIETO-HIPOLITO ◽  
Juan-Antonio GUERRERO-IBANEZ ◽  
Mabel VAZQUEZ-BRISENO ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 68 (4) ◽  
pp. 3154-3162 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hazem Ahmed ◽  
Samuel Pierre ◽  
Alejandro Quintero

Author(s):  
László Bokor ◽  
Zoltán Faigl ◽  
Sándor Imre

This paper is committed to give an overview of the Host Identity Protocol (HIP), to introduce the basic ideas and the main paradigms behind it, and to make an exhaustive survey of mobility management schemes in the Host Identity Layer. The authors' goal is to show how HIP emerges from the list of potential alternatives with its wild range of possible usability, complex feature set and power to create a novel framework for future Mobile Internet architectures. In order to achieve this, the authors also perform an extensive simulation evaluation of four selected mobility solutions in the Host Identity Layer: the standard HIP mobility/multihoming (RFC5206), a micromobility solution (µHIP), a network mobility management scheme (HIP-NEMO) and a proactive, cross-layer optimized, distributed proposal designed for flat architectures (UFA-HIP).


Author(s):  
Ricardo de O. Schmidt ◽  
Reinaldo Gomes ◽  
Djamel Sadok ◽  
Judith Kelner ◽  
Martin Johnsson

Autoconfiguration is an important functionality pursued by research in the contexts of dynamic ad hoc and next generation of networks. Autoconfiguration solutions span across all architectural layers and range from network configuration to applications, and also implement cross-layer concepts. In networking, the addressing system plays a fundamental role as long as hosts must be uniquely identified. A proper identification is the base for other network operations, such as routing and security issues. Due to its importance, addressing is a challenging problem in dynamic and heterogeneous networks, where it becomes more complex and critical. This chapter presents a review and considerations for addressing autoconfiguration, focusing on the addressing procedure. Several self-addressing solutions for autonomous networks are surveyed, covering a wide range of possible methodologies. These solutions are also categorized according to the methodology they implement, their statefulness, and the way they deal with addresses duplication and/or conflicts. Special considerations regarding conformity to IPv6 are also presented.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document