• DocumentCode
    31432
  • Title

    Recovering From a Node Failure in Wireless Sensor-Actor Networks With Minimal Topology Changes

  • Author

    Abbasi, A.A. ; Younis, M.F. ; Baroudi, U.A.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Comput. Eng., King Fahd Univ. of Pet. & Miner., Dhahran, Saudi Arabia
  • Volume
    62
  • Issue
    1
  • fYear
    2013
  • fDate
    Jan. 2013
  • Firstpage
    256
  • Lastpage
    271
  • Abstract
    In wireless sensor-actor networks, sensors probe their surroundings and forward their data to actor nodes. Actors collaboratively respond to achieve predefined application mission. Since actors have to coordinate their operation, it is necessary to maintain a strongly connected network topology at all times. Moreover, the length of the inter-actor communication paths may be constrained to meet latency requirements. However, a failure of an actor may cause the network to partition into disjoint blocks and would, thus, violate such a connectivity goal. One of the effective recovery methodologies is to autonomously reposition a subset of the actor nodes to restore connectivity. Contemporary recovery schemes either impose high node relocation overhead or extend some of the inter-actor data paths. This paper overcomes these shortcomings and presents a Least-Disruptive topology Repair (LeDiR) algorithm. LeDiR relies on the local view of a node about the network to devise a recovery plan that relocates the least number of nodes and ensures that no path between any pair of nodes is extended. LeDiR is a localized and distributed algorithm that leverages existing route discovery activities in the network and imposes no additional prefailure communication overhead. The performance of LeDiR is analyzed mathematically and validated via extensive simulation experiments.
  • Keywords
    mathematical analysis; telecommunication network reliability; telecommunication network routing; telecommunication network topology; wireless sensor networks; LeDiR algorithm; contemporary recovery scheme; distributed algorithm; high node relocation overhead; interactor communication path; interactor data path; least-disruptive topology repair algorithm; localized algorithm; mathematical simulation; node failure recovery; prefailure communication overhead; route discovery activity; wireless sensor-actor network; Maintenance engineering; Network topology; Optimized production technology; Relays; Sensors; Topology; Wireless sensor networks; Fault tolerance; network recovery; topology management; wireless sensor-actor network (WSAN);
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Vehicular Technology, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9545
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TVT.2012.2212734
  • Filename
    6264108