Title :
Restoring Connectivity in Wireless Sensor-Actor Networks with Minimal Topology Changes
Author :
Abbasi, Ameer ; Younis, Mohamed ; Baroudi, Uthman
Author_Institution :
Comput. Eng. Dept., King Fahd Univ. of Petro. & Miner., Dhahran, Saudi Arabia
Abstract :
In Wireless Sensor-Actor Networks (WSANs), actors collect sensor readings and respond collaboratively to achieve an application mission. Since actors coordinate their operation, a strongly connected network topology would be required at all time. In addition, the path between actors may have to be capped in order to meet latency constraints. However, a failure of an actor may cause the network to partition into disjoint blocks and would thus violate such connectivity goal. One of the effective recovery methodologies is to autonomously reposition a subset of the actor nodes to restore connectivity. Contemporary schemes rely on maintaining 1 or 2-hop neighbor lists and predetermine criteria for node´s involvement in the recovery. However, 1-hop based schemes often impose high node relocation overhead. In addition, the repaired inter-actor topology using 2-hop schemes often differs significantly from its pre-failure status and some inter-actor data paths may get extended. This paper presents a Least-Disruptive topology Repair (LeDiR) algorithm. LeDiR relies on the local view of a node about the network in order 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 path discovery activities and imposes no additional pre-failure communication overhead. LeDiR is validated through simulation and is shown to outperform existing schemes.
Keywords :
telecommunication network reliability; telecommunication network topology; wireless sensor networks; 2-hop neighbor lists; LeDiR algorithm; high node relocation overhead; inter-actor topology; least-disruptive topology repair; minimal topology changes; network topology; pre-failure communication overhead; wireless sensor-actor networks; Collaborative work; Communications Society; Computer networks; Computer science; Distributed algorithms; Minerals; Network topology; Peer to peer computing; USA Councils; Wireless sensor networks;
Conference_Titel :
Communications (ICC), 2010 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Cape Town
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-6402-9
DOI :
10.1109/ICC.2010.5502448