Title :
Social-aware forwarding in opportunistic wireless networks: Content awareness or obliviousness?
Author :
Moreira, Walter ; Mendes, Paulo
Author_Institution :
COPELABS, Univ. Lusofona, Lisbon, Portugal
Abstract :
Information-Centric Networking (ICN) has gained increasing attention from the research community as it is able to improve content dissemination by releasing the dependency on content location. With the current host-based Internet architecture, networking faces limitations in dynamic scenarios, due mostly to host mobility. The ICN paradigm mitigates such problems by releasing the need to have an end-to-end transport session established during the life time of the data transfer. Moreover, the ICN concept solves the mismatch between the Internet architecture and the way users would like to use it: currently a user needs to know the topological location of the hosts involved in the communication when he/she just wants to get the data, independently of its location. Most of the research efforts aim to come up with a stable ICN architecture in fixed networks, with few examples in ad-hoc and vehicular networks. However, the Internet is becoming more pervasive with powerful personal mobile devices that allow users to form dynamic networks in which content may be exchanged at all times and with low cost. Such pervasive wireless networks suffer with different levels of disruption given user mobility, physical obstacles, lack of cooperation, intermittent connectivity, among others. This paper discusses the combination of content knowledge (e.g., type and interested parties) and social awareness within opportunistic networking as to drive the deployment of ICN solutions in disruptive networking scenarios. With this goal in mind, we go over few examples of social-aware content-based opportunistic networking proposals that consider social awareness to allow content dissemination independently of the level of network disruption. To show how much content knowledge can improve social-based solutions, we illustrate by means of simulation some content-oblivious/oriented proposals in scenarios based on synthetic mobility patterns and real human traces.
Keywords :
Internet; delay tolerant networks; human factors; mobile computing; ICN paradigm; Internet architecture; content awareness; content dissemination; disruptive networking scenarios; dynamic networks; host mobility; host-based Internet architecture; information-centric networking; obliviousness; opportunistic networking; opportunistic wireless networks; personal mobile devices; pervasive wireless networks; real human traces; social awareness; social-aware forwarding; synthetic mobility patterns; user mobility; Ad hoc networks; Communities; Internet; Knowledge engineering; Proposals; Vehicle dynamics; Wireless networks; content knowledge; dynamic networks; information-centric networking; opportunistic routing; social awareness;
Conference_Titel :
World of Wireless, Mobile and Multimedia Networks (WoWMoM), 2014 IEEE 15th International Symposium on a
Conference_Location :
Sydney, NSW
DOI :
10.1109/WoWMoM.2014.6918915