DocumentCode
3504550
Title
Impact of Upper Layer Adaptation on End-to-end Delay Management in Wireless Ad Hoc Networks
Author
He, Wenbo ; Nahrstedt, Klara
Author_Institution
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
fYear
2006
fDate
04-07 April 2006
Firstpage
59
Lastpage
70
Abstract
A good amount of research has been developed to support QoS issues in IEEE 802.11 ad hoc networks, such as QoS routing, MAC layer QoS support, and cross-layer QoS design. However, QoS solution at upper layers for real-time multimedia applications is overlooked. This paper investigates impact of the adaptation mechanisms at application layer and middleware layer on end-to-end delay management. Upper layer adaptation is a localized method with small overhead, and the adaptation mechanism is hardware independent. The application layer adaptor is to dynamically change the requirement levels based on end-to-end QoS measurement. The middleware adaptor is to dynamically adjust the service classes for applications by feedback control theory. We use real IEEE 802.11 ad hoc network environment to evaluate the impact of upper layer adaptation, and conclude that the upper layer adaptation for end-to-end delay is efficient in many scenarios, but it is not enough for contention scenarios, where lower layer scheduling should be adopted.
Keywords
Ad hoc networks; Added delay; Bandwidth; Feedback control; Intelligent networks; Jitter; Middleware; Quality of service; Scheduling; Wireless networks;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Real-Time and Embedded Technology and Applications Symposium, 2006. Proceedings of the 12th IEEE
ISSN
1545-3421
Print_ISBN
0-7695-2516-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/RTAS.2006.20
Filename
1613323
Link To Document