A software support infrastructure for wireless access routers

Routers are expected to play an important role in the Internet protocol-based wireless data network. Although a substantial number of adaptive and intercell coordination techniques have been proposed to improve wireless network performance under dynamic wireless channel conditions and host mobility,...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE journal on selected areas in communications 2005-06, Vol.23 (6), p.1253-1266
Hauptverfasser: Zerfos, P., Zhong, G., Songwu Lu
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Routers are expected to play an important role in the Internet protocol-based wireless data network. Although a substantial number of adaptive and intercell coordination techniques have been proposed to improve wireless network performance under dynamic wireless channel conditions and host mobility, a system support framework is still missing. In this paper, we describe DIRAC, a software-based router system that is designed for wireless networks to facilitate the implementation and evaluation of various channel-adaptive and mobility-aware protocols. DIRAC adopts a distributed architecture that is composed of two parts: a router core (RC) shared by the wireless subnets, and a router agent (RA) at each access point/base station. RAs expose wireless link-layer information to the RC and enforce the control commands issued by the RC. This approach allows the router to make adaptive decisions based on link-layer information feedback on both data and control planes. It also permits the router to enforce its policies (e.g., policing) more effectively through underlying link-layer mechanisms. It further enables interaccess-point coordination at the RC. As showcases, we implement under DIRAC the prototypes of three wireless network services: link-layer assisted fast handover, channel-adaptive scheduling, and link-layer enforced policing. Our implementation and experiments show that our distributed wireless router provides a flexible framework, which enables advanced network-layer wireless services that are adaptive to channel conditions and host mobility.
ISSN:0733-8716
1558-0008
DOI:10.1109/JSAC.2005.845633