Publication | Closed Access
DTN routing as a resource allocation problem
425
Citations
25
References
2007
Year
Cluster ComputingEngineeringNetwork RoutingNetwork AnalysisDelay-tolerant NetworkingIntentional DtnOperations ResearchScalable RoutingSeveral MetricsMeeting ProbabilitiesCombinatorial OptimizationNetwork OptimizationRouting ProtocolRoutingNetwork Routing AlgorithmNetwork ScienceEdge ComputingCloud ComputingDtn Routing
Many DTN routing protocols use a variety of mechanisms, including discovering the meeting probabilities among nodes, packet replication, and network coding. The primary focus of these mechanisms is to increase the likelihood of finding a path with limited information, so these approaches have only an incidental effect on such routing metrics as maximum or average delivery latency. In this paper, we present RAPID , an intentional DTN routing protocol that can optimize a specific routing metric such as worst-case delivery latency or the fraction of packets that are delivered within a deadline. The key insight is to treat DTN routing as a resource allocation problem that translates the routing metric into per-packet utilities which determine how packets should be replicated in the system. We evaluate RAPID rigorously through a prototype of RAPID deployed over a vehicular DTN testbed of 40 buses and simulations based on real traces. To our knowledge, this is the first paper to report on a routing protocol deployed on a real DTN at this scale. Our results suggest that RAPID significantly outperforms existing routing protocols for several metrics. We also show empirically that for small loads RAPID is within 10% of the optimal performance.
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