Publication | Closed Access
Interference-aware topology control and QoS routing in multi-channel wireless mesh networks
509
Citations
21
References
2005
Year
Unknown Venue
Topology ControlCross-layer OptimizationWireless RoutingEdge ComputingMesh NetworkNetwork AnalysisWireless NetworksChannel AssignmentMulti-hop RoutingWireless Cooperative NetworkWireless Network ManagementDynamic TrafficInterference-aware Topology Control
The throughput of wireless networks can be significantly improved by multi-channel communications compared with single-channel communications since the use of multiple channels can reduce interference influence. In this paper, we study interference-aware topology control and QoS routing in IEEE 802.11-based multi-channel wireless mesh networks with dynamic traffic. Channel assignment and routing are two basic issues in such networks. Different channel assignments can lead to different network topologies. We present a novel definition of co-channel interference. Based on this concept, we formally define and present an effective heuristic for the minimum INterference Survivable Topology Control (INSTC) problem which seeks a channel assignment for the given network such that the induced network topology is interference-minimum among all K-connected topologies. We then formulate the Bandwidth-Aware Routing (BAR) problem for a given network topology, which seeks routes for QoS connection requests with bandwidth requirements. We present a polynomial time optimal algorithm to solve the BAR problem under the assumption that traffic demands are splittable. For the non-splittable case, we present a maximum bottleneck capacity path routing heuristic. Simulation results show that compared with the simple common channel assignment and shortest path routing approach, our scheme improves the system performance by 57% on average in terms of connection blocking ratio.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1