• DocumentCode
    2017181
  • Title

    How bad TCP can perform in mobile ad hoc networks

  • Author

    Fu, Zhenghua ; Meng, Xiaoqiao ; Lu, Songwu

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Comput. Sci., California Univ., Los Angeles, CA, USA
  • fYear
    2002
  • fDate
    2002
  • Firstpage
    298
  • Lastpage
    303
  • Abstract
    Several recent studies have indicated that TCP performance degrades significantly in mobile ad hoc networks. This paper examines how badly TCP may perform in such networks and provides a quantitative characterization of this performance gap. Previous approaches typically made comparisons by ignoring the inherent dynamics such as mobility, channel error and shared-channel contention. Our work provides a realistic, achievable TCP throughput upper bound, and may serve as a benchmark for future TCP modifications in ad hoc networks. Our simulation findings indicate that node mobility, especially mobility-induced network disconnection and reconnection events, has the most significant impact on TCP performance. TCP NewReno merely achieves about 10% of a reference TCPs throughput in such cases. As mobility increases, the relative throughput drop ranges from almost 0% in the static case to 1000% in a highly mobile scenario (mobility speed is 20 m/sec). In contrast, congestion and mild channel error (say, 1%) have less visible effect on TCP (with less than 10% performance drop compared with the reference TCP).
  • Keywords
    ad hoc networks; mobile computing; mobile radio; telecommunication channels; transport protocols; 0 to 20 m/s; TCP NewReno; TCP performance; channel error; congestion; mobile ad hoc networks; mobile computing; mobility; mobility speed; shared-channel contention; throughput; Ad hoc networks; Computer errors; Computer networks; Degradation; Discrete event simulation; Intelligent networks; Mobile ad hoc networks; Personal digital assistants; Spread spectrum communication; Throughput;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Computers and Communications, 2002. Proceedings. ISCC 2002. Seventh International Symposium on
  • ISSN
    1530-1346
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7695-1671-8
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ISCC.2002.1021693
  • Filename
    1021693