DocumentCode :
150099
Title :
Comparing LIMERIC and DCC approaches for VANET channel congestion control
Author :
Bansal, Gourab ; Bin Cheng ; Rostami, Ahmad ; Sjoberg, Katrin ; Kenney, John B. ; Gruteser, Marco
Author_Institution :
Toyota InfoTechnology Center, Mountain View, CA, USA
fYear :
2014
fDate :
14-15 Sept. 2014
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
7
Abstract :
Channel congestion is one of the major challenges for IEEE 802.11p-based vehicular ad hoc networks. Unless controlled, congestion increases with vehicle density, leading to high packet loss and degraded safety application performance. In this paper, we study two classes of congestion control - reactive and adaptive. The reactive approach is represented by the Decentralized Congestion Control (DCC) framework defined in ETSI. The adaptive approach is represented by the LIMERIC linear control algorithm. Both approaches control safety message transmission as a function of channel load (i.e. Channel Busy Ratio, CBR). A reactive approach uses CBR directly, defining an appropriate transmission behavior for each CBR value, e.g. via a table lookup. By contrast, an adaptive approach identifies the transmission behavior that drives CBR to a target channel load, thus achieving the best message throughput possible for any given vehicle density. The paper considers two variations of DCC, one in which it serves as a traffic shaping “gatekeeper” above the MAC sublayer, and another in which it additionally limits safety message generation at the facilities layer. The paper has two main results. First, it is shown that LIMERIC generally outperforms both DCC variations in a winding road scenario with various vehicle densities. Inter-packet reception gap and position tracking error are the primary metrics. This advantage is due to primarily LIMERIC´s ability to achieve a target load consistent with maximum throughput and vehicle awareness. Second, it is shown that both DCC variations are subject to steady state oscillations, and the case in which DCC also limits message generation is subject to truly unstable variations. The paper uses NS-2 simulation results to support these conclusions.
Keywords :
decentralised control; intelligent transportation systems; telecommunication congestion control; telecommunication standards; vehicular ad hoc networks; wireless LAN; DCC; IEEE 802.11p; LIMERIC linear control; MAC sublayer; NS-2 simulation; VANET channel congestion control; channel busy ratio; decentralized congestion control; interpacket reception gap; position tracking error; traffic shaping; vehicle awareness; vehicle density; vehicular ad hoc networks; Computer aided manufacturing; Europe; Roads; Safety; Vehicle dynamics; Vehicles; Windings; DCC; DSRC; IEEE 802.11p; ITS-G5; congestion control;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Wireless Vehicular Communications (WiVeC), 2014 IEEE 6th International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Vancouver, BC
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/WIVEC.2014.6953217
Filename :
6953217
Link To Document :
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