DocumentCode :
2502372
Title :
Deploying Lightweight Queue Management for improving performance of Mobile Ad-hoc Networks (MANETs)
Author :
Kulkarni, P. ; Nazeeruddin, M. ; McClean, S. ; Parr, G. ; Black, M. ; Scotney, B. ; Dini, P.
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Comput. & Inf. Eng., Ulster Univ., Coleraine
fYear :
2006
fDate :
16-18 July 2006
Firstpage :
102
Lastpage :
102
Abstract :
Network based congestion avoidance which involves managing the queues in the network devices is an integral part of any network. Most of the mobile networks today use Droptail queue management where packets are dropped on queue overflow. Droptail, however, is known to suffer from the well known global synchronisation problem which is characterised by the phenomenon of alternating periods of empty and full queues and hence bursty losses. Especially in resource constrained networks such as MANETs, packet loss results in increased overhead in terms of energy wasted to forward a packet which was eventually dropped, additional energy required to retransmit this packet and the degraded service quality as experienced by the end user application. Active queue management (AQM) has been successfully demonstrated as a solution to the global synchronisation problem in the context of wired networks. However, if AQM is to be deployed in MANETs, it should be lightweight, proactive and easy to implement as mobile networks are resource constrained in terms of memory, processing power and battery life. To the best of our knowledge a study addressing the implications of AQM in mobile networks (MANETs in particular) does not exist. This paper presents a predictive queue management strategy named PAQMAN that proactively manages the queue, is simple to implement and requires negligible computational overhead (and hence uses the limited resources efficiently). The performance of PAQMAN (coupled with explicit congestion notification - ECN) has been compared with Droptail through ns2 simulations. Results from this study show that PAQMAN reduces packet loss ratio (and hence the fraction of retransmissions) while at the same time increasing transmission efficiency. Moreover, as its computational overhead is negligible, it is ideally suited for deployment in MANETs
Keywords :
ad hoc networks; mobile radio; queueing theory; synchronisation; telecommunication network management; Droptail queue management; MANET; PAQMAN; active queue management; computational overhead; end user application; explicit congestion notification; global synchronisation problem; lightweight queue management; mobile ad-hoc networks; network based congestion avoidance; ns2 simulations; packet loss ratio; packet loss results; predictive queue management; queue overflow; resource constrained networks; service quality; wired networks; Ad hoc networks; Batteries; Computer network management; Computer networks; Delay; Engineering management; Mobile ad hoc networks; Mobile computing; Propagation losses; Resource management;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Networking and Services, 2006. ICNS '06. International conference on
Conference_Location :
Slicon Valley, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-2622-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICNS.2006.37
Filename :
1690572
Link To Document :
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