Scheduling in multi-radio multi-channel mesh networks: Brief review and novel approach

Author(s):  
Nabil Torjemen ◽  
Nabil Tabbane ◽  
Hend Baklouti ◽  
Sami Tabbane
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Mathias Kretschmer ◽  
Christian Niephaus ◽  
George Ghinea

Wireless Mesh Networks (WMNs) have matured in recent years and the visibility of WMN deployments has attracted commercial operators to investigate this technology for applicability in their networks. Having their roots in the Mobile Adhoc Network (MANET) world and rather cheap off-the-shelf single-radio WLAN routers, WMN routing protocols were not designed for applicability in carrier-grade back-haul networks. For example, protocols such as OLSR or B.A.T.M.A.N. can not address the QoS-requirements of a modern operator back-haul network with its increasing demand for triple-play content. Although numerous solutions have been proposed to introduce QoS-awareness at the protocol or the technology level, traditional WMNs fail to meet commercial operator requirements in terms of reliability, traffic engineering and QoS guarantees. This chapter proposes a novel approach combining an IEEE 802.21-based control plane and an MPLS-based data plane. To provide support for ubiquitous high-bandwidth multi-media services, it seamlessly integrates unidirectional broadcast technologies such as DVB into the heterogeneous multi-radio WiBACK architecture.


2013 ◽  
Vol 765-767 ◽  
pp. 1142-1145
Author(s):  
Ran Li ◽  
Zi Yi Lu ◽  
Xiao Bo Wang ◽  
Bao Qiang Kan

With the number of applications increased in wireless mesh networks (WMNs), insufficient service capability is becoming a main obstacle. Meanwhile, cloud computing is an effective approach for organizing computing resource which can improve service capability remarkably. In this paper, framework of WMNs with cloud computing is proposed. Service capability of WMNs with cloud computing is judged and scored from 6 dimensions to make a composite comparison, which is shown cloud computing will be a promising approach for improving service capability in WMNs.


2011 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 275-285 ◽  
Author(s):  
János Tapolcai ◽  
Bin Wu ◽  
Pin-Han Ho ◽  
Lajos Ronyai

Author(s):  
Iván S. Razo-Zapata ◽  
Gerardo Castañón ◽  
Carlos Mex-Perera

This work presents a novel approach for dealing with failures and attacks on Transparent Optical Packet Switching (TOPS) mesh networks. The approach is composed of two phases, whereas the first one dynamically dimensions the resources in the network, the second one applies an incremental learning algorithm that generates an intelligent policy. At each node, such a policy allows a self-healing behavior when there are failures or attacks in the network. Finally, the performance of this approach is presented as well as future research lines.


2011 ◽  
Vol 403-408 ◽  
pp. 2697-2703
Author(s):  
Hua Mei Qi ◽  
Min Wu ◽  
Zhi Gang Chen

Motivated by the advantage of the gateway that acts as the performance bottleneck in wireless mesh networks (WMNs) while shaping the traffic with the greedy fractal shaper, a novel approach is proposed to derive the upper stochastic/statistical bound of the backlog, delay and delay jitter of the WMNs gateway quality of service (QoS) statistic bound model. By analyzing and evaluating the QoS performance of the present model based on network calculus theory with fair bandwidth distributed strategy, a number of useful curves are achieved. Simulation shows the performance of the present model.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ashvin Verma ◽  
Somesh Kar ◽  
Priyanshi Ahuja

<div>Digital Audio Broadcasting via FM radio continues to be popular, even today, owing to its accessibility, especially in rural areas where even common feature phones and affordable radio receivers are able to freely receive both, mainstream and local vernacular transmissions without any subscription charge. Additionally, it is established that broadcasts undertaken at a local level can play an instrumental role in facilitating cultural expression and aiding information delivery at a local level However, local broadcasts via the current Community Radio Stations (CRS) are not only expensive but also unsuitable for remote, isolated regions with their rugged terrains. </div><div><br></div><div>The authors hereby propose a novel approach to help address these current problems through a distributed system for Digital Audio Broadcasting. Multiple FM transmitting nodes (using VHF II: 87.5-100 MHz) form a WiFi Mesh Network to receive digital audio signals to broadcast from 1 hub node. The components used are off-the-shelf, cost-effective, and modular. It is more cost-effective than current CRS systems for mid-scale local broadcasts, with essentially no data loss between the transmitter units in deployment. Additionally, unlike relays, an existing alternative, built-in redundancy in the system ensures reliability, and caching protects against minor network disturbances when recordings are being broadcast. This approach allows for flexible and efficient deployments with wide, precise and accurate coverage, notably remaining equally effective in areas with an uneven terrain, thereby expanding its potential applications. </div><div><br></div><div>Experiments involving the system were conducted by varying the audio samples and the conditions, for which the evaluation metrics included the PSNR, PSD spectrograms, DFTs, signal strength, and data transmission rate to gauge the transmission quality, range and scalability. Results included a moderate data rate of 12 mbits/s at a 100 metres separation with obstacles from the transmitter, which is sufficient for the broadcasting and fast caching of high-fidelity audio. </div>


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