Cross-Layer Flow Control in Lightly-Loaded
Multi-Hop Ad Hoc Networks
- Authors
- Alex Varshavsky, Baochun Li and Eyal de Lara
- Abstract
-
The throughput in multi-hop ad hoc networks (MANETs) is highly dependent
on the sending rate and the route length from the source node to the
destination. Sending packets at the optimal rate for a given route length
maximizes throughput in the network, whereas slightly increasing the
sending rate over the optimal value may decrease throughput
by up to 55%.
This paper presents a novel cross-layer technique for flow control in
lightly-loaded MANETs. The technique allows applications to send packets
at the rate that maximizes throughput for a given route length. To
achieve this, the routing layer notifies interested applications about
routing changes, and the applications adaptively modify their sending
rates based on the new route length to the destination. In static and
mobile networks, this technique outperforms UDP-based flows with a fixed
sending rate and doubles the throughput of TCP for networks with up to 2
concurrent flows.
- Published
-
In Proceedings of the International Workshop on Network Design and Architecture (IWNDA), Montreal, Quebec, August 2004.
- Text
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