Evaluating Opportunistic Delivery of Large Content with TCP over WiFi in I2V Communication
With the increasing interest in connected vehicles, it is useful to evaluate the capability of delivering large content over a WiFi infrastructure to vehicles. The throughput achieved over WiFi channels can be highly variable and also rapidly degrades as the distance from the access point increases....
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Zusammenfassung: | With the increasing interest in connected vehicles, it is useful to evaluate
the capability of delivering large content over a WiFi infrastructure to
vehicles. The throughput achieved over WiFi channels can be highly variable and
also rapidly degrades as the distance from the access point increases. While
this behavior is well understood at the data link layer, the interactions
across the various protocol layers (data link and up through the transport
layer) and the effect of mobility may reduce the amount of content transferred
to the vehicle, as it travels along the roadway.
This paper examines the throughput achieved at the TCP layer over a carefully
designed outdoor WiFi environment and the interactions across the layers that
impact the performance achieved, as a function of the receiver mobility. The
experimental studies conducted reveal that impairments over the WiFi link
(frame loss, ARQ and increased delay) and the residual loss seen by TCP causes
a cascade of duplicate ACKs to be generated. This triggers large congestion
window reductions at the sender, leading to a drastic degradation of throughput
to the vehicular client. To ensure outdoor WiFi infrastructures have the
potential to sustain reasonable downlink throughput for drive-by vehicles, we
speculate that there is a need to adapt how WiFi and TCP (as well as mobility
protocols) function for such vehicular applications. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1410.2662 |