Department of Computer Science and Information Systems

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    A Cross-Layer Delay-Aware Multipath Routing Algorithm for Mobile Adhoc Networks
    (AIRCJJ, 2014-05) Gudino, Lucy J.
    Mobile Ad Hoc Networks (MANETS) require reliable routing and Quality of Service(QoS) mechanism to support diverse applications with varying and stringent requirements. Routing protocols such as AODV, AOMDV, DSR and OLSR use minimum hop count as the metric for path selection, hence are not suitable for delay sensitive real time applications. To support such applications delay constrained routing protocols are employed. These Protocols makes path selection based on the delay over the discovered links during routing discovery and routing table calculations. We propose a variation of a node-disjoint Multipath QoS Routing protocol called Cross Layer Delay aware Node Disjoint Multipath AODV (CLDM-AODV) based on delay constraint. It employs cross-layer communications between MAC and routing layers to achieve link and channel-awareness. It regularly updates the path status in terms of lowest delay incurred at each intermediate node. Performance of the proposed protocol is compared with single path AODV and NDMR protocols. Proposed CLDM-AODV is superior in terms of better packet delivery and reduced overhead between intermediate nodes.
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    Cross Layer Best effort QoS aware routing protocol for Ad Hoc Network
    (IEEE, 2015) Gudino, Lucy J.
    Mobile Ad Hoc Networks (MANETs) are a self organizing and adaptive wireless networks. Currently MANETs possess an advanced challenge in providing Quality of Service( QoS) support for real time application data streaming through the network. These applications are delay sensitive and get affected due to congestion in the network. Thus, performance degrades due to high data loss, frequent link breakage and excessive retransmission. The strict layered network structure makes even more difficult to provide solutions for such issues. We propose a protocol which cooperates between adjacent layers and performs cross layer communication. We propose a novel QoS routing for MANET called Cross Layer Best effort QoS aware routing protocol (CLBQ) which considers the metric of link quality, data rates and MAC delay as the QoS parameters. The proposed protocol implements cross layer interaction between PHY, MAC and Network layer. The simulation results conducted shows best effort QoS service to the network in discovering the route and data transfer. Our analysis shows that the protocol has improved throughput and low network overhead.
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    Cross layer multi QoS metric routing for multimedia traffic in 802.11E over MANETs
    (IEEE, 2016) Gudino, Lucy J.
    To support QoS for a multimedia traffic, IEEE 802.11e standard Enhanced distributed channel access (EDCA) has been proposed. However, the EDCA is more focused on providing quality of service(QoS) solution at the MAC layer, which is necessary, but perhaps not sufficient as the layered TCP stack architecture does not satisfy the QoS demands in ad hoc network. This is due to the fact that routing protocol is responsible for the successful packet delivery and QoS Support. The conventional single scalar routing protocols are not suitable for high traffic QoS sensitive multimedia traffic load on Mobile ad Hoc Networks (MANETs). The paper proposes a Cross layer Multimetric link disjoint Multipath Routing (CMMR) protocol based on distinct QoS constraints. The paper uses cross-layer communications to consider multiple layer metrics like MAC queue utilization, node density degree, and mobility factor to achieve channel state awareness and keep the up to date status of the route in terms of QOS proficiency at each intermediate node. The proposed algorithm is validated with an extensive simulation with high real time traffic using NS3. The results show significant improvement of CMMR in terms of packet delivery, and end-to-end delay.
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    Cross layered adaptive cooperative routing mode in mobile ad hoc networks
    (IEEE, 2016) Gudino, Lucy J.
    A Cooperative communication technique has gained considerable attention in the recent time to improve the quality of service (QoS) of ad hoc networks. Cooperative communication significantly improves link capacity through physical layer technique, and spatial diversity gain is achieved by using neighboring nodes to retransmit the overheard information to the intended destination node. However, upper layer protocols are not elegantly designed to adequately exploit the spatial diversity to improve overall network performance in ad hoc networks. Limiting the cooperation to one network layer may not be the best solution. Thus, in this paper, we intend to achieve multilayer functionality from physical layer to the routing layer to provide cooperative communication. An adaptive cross layered cooperative routing algorithm (ACCR) is proposed to analyze the channel state variations and selectively choose the cooperative MAC scheme on demand by exploiting spatial diversity. The algorithm dynamically selects best relay candidates based on QoS metric, contention delay and node energy fairness. Network layer, then chooses an optimized path from source to destination through the selected relay nodes. We validate the algorithm with extensive simulations. The results clearly show that cooperative cross-layer design approach effectively improves the average throughput and average delay for each packet transmission.
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    A Cross-Layer Delay-Aware Node Disjoint Multipath Routing Algorithm for Mobile Ad Hoc Networks
    (AIRCJJ, 2014) Gudino, Lucy J.
    Mobile Ad Hoc Networks (MANETS) require reliable routing and Quality of Service(QoS) mechanism to support diverse applications with varying and stringent requirements. Routing protocols such as AODV, AOMDV, DSR and OLSR use minimum hop count as the metric for path selection, hence are not suitable for delay sensitive real time applications. To support such applications delay constrained routing protocols are employed. These Protocols makes path selection based on the delay over the discovered links during routing discovery and routing table calculations. We propose a variation of a node-disjoint Multipath QoS Routing protocol called Cross Layer Delay aware Node Disjoint Multipath AODV (CLDM-AODV) based on delay constraint. It employs cross-layer communications between MAC and routing layers to achieve link and channel-awareness. It regularly updates the path status in terms of lowest delay incurred at each intermediate node. Performance of the proposed protocol is compared with single path AODV and NDMR protocols. Proposed CLDM-AODV is superior in terms of better packet delivery and reduced overhead between intermediate nodes.
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    Congestion-adaptive and delay-sensitive multirate routing protocol in MANETs: a cross-layer approach
    (Hindawi Publishing Corporation, 2019) Gudino, Lucy J.
    With a growing demand of multimedia communication over MANETs, to support quality of service (QoS), the MAC standards such as 802.11a/b/g operate with multiple data rates to efficiently utilize the limited resources. Since the wireless channel is shared among the neighbors in MANETs, determining delay-sensitive and congestion-aware routes using the IEEE 802.11 MAC is still a challenging problem. This paper proposes a novel cross-layer approach called congestion-adaptive and delay-sensitive multirate (CADM) routing protocol in MANETs. The CADM protocol exploits the cross-layer interaction between the network layer, MAC, and physical layer. The CADM accesses the correlation between data rate, congestion metric, and MAC delay in delay-sensitive applications to provide enhanced network efficiency in MANETs. The protocol discovers multiple node-disjoint routes and facilitates optimal data rates between the links based on the estimated delay to admit a flow with the certain delay requirement in multirate MANETs. The proposed CADM protocol discovers the route through less congested nodes and also actively handles the congestion if it occurs. The performance of the CADM protocol is comprehensively assessed through the simulation, which highlights the advantages of our cross-layer mechanism.