DocumentCode
25739
Title
Does Wireless Sensor Network Scale? A Measurement Study on GreenOrbs
Author
Yunhao Liu ; Yuan He ; Mo Li ; Jiliang Wang ; Kebin Liu ; Xiangyang Li
Author_Institution
Sch. of Software, Tsinghua Univ., Beijing, China
Volume
24
Issue
10
fYear
2013
fDate
Oct. 2013
Firstpage
1983
Lastpage
1993
Abstract
Sensor networks are deemed suitable for large-scale deployments in the wild for a variety of applications. In spite of the remarkable efforts the community put to build the sensor systems, an essential question still remains unclear at the system level, motivating us to explore the answer from a point of real-world deployment view. Does the wireless sensor network really scale? We present findings from a large-scale operating sensor network system, GreenOrbs, with up to 330 nodes deployed in the forest. We instrument such an operating network throughout the protocol stack and present observations across layers in the network. Based on our findings from the system measurement, we propose and make initial efforts to validate three conjectures that give potential guidelines for future designs of large-scale sensor networks. 1) A small portion of nodes bottlenecks the entire network, and most of the existing network indicators may not accurately capture them. 2) The network dynamics mainly come from the inherent concurrency of network operations instead of environment changes. 3) The environment, although the dynamics are not as significant as we assumed, has an unpredictable impact on the sensor network. We suggest that an event-based routing structure can be trained and thus better adapted to the wild environment when building a large-scale sensor network.
Keywords
radiotelemetry; routing protocols; sensor placement; wireless sensor networks; GreenOrbs; event-based routing structure; large-scale operating sensor network system; large-scale sensor network deployment; measurement study; protocol stack; wireless sensor network; Green products; Monitoring; Network topology; Protocols; Routing; Topology; Wireless sensor networks; Wireless sensor networks; critical nodes; environment dynamics; network measurement;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Parallel and Distributed Systems, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1045-9219
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TPDS.2012.216
Filename
6244792
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