1st Annual Conference on Broadband Networks

Research Article

Determining intra-flow contention along multihop paths in wireless networks

  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.1109/BROADNETS.2004.32,
        author={Kimaya Sanzgiri and Ian D.  Chakeres and Elizabeth M.  Belding-Royer},
        title={Determining intra-flow contention along multihop paths in wireless networks},
        proceedings={1st Annual Conference on Broadband Networks},
        publisher={IEEE},
        proceedings_a={BROADNETS},
        year={2004},
        month={12},
        keywords={},
        doi={10.1109/BROADNETS.2004.32}
    }
    
  • Kimaya Sanzgiri
    Ian D. Chakeres
    Elizabeth M. Belding-Royer
    Year: 2004
    Determining intra-flow contention along multihop paths in wireless networks
    BROADNETS
    IEEE
    DOI: 10.1109/BROADNETS.2004.32
Kimaya Sanzgiri1,*, Ian D. Chakeres2,*, Elizabeth M. Belding-Royer1,*
  • 1: Dept. of Computer Science, University of California, Santa Barbara
  • 2: Dept. of Electrical & Computer Engineering, University of California, Santa Barbara
*Contact email: kimaya@cs.ucsb.edu, idc@engineering.ucsb.edu, ebelding@cs.ucsb.edu

Abstract

Admission control of flows is essential for providing quality of service in multihop wireless networks. In order to make an admission decision for a new flow, the expected bandwidth consumption of the flow must be correctly determined. Due to the shared nature of the wireless medium, nodes along a multihop path contend among themselves for access to the medium. This leads to intra-flow contention; contention between packets of the same flow being forwarded at different hops along a multihop path causing the actual bandwidth consumption of the flow to become a multiple of its single hop bandwidth requirement. Determining the amount of intra-flow contention is non-trivial since interfering nodes may not be able to communicate directly if they are outside each other's transmission range. In this paper, we propose two methods to determine the extent of intra-flow contention along multihop paths. The highlight of the proposed solutions is that carrier-sensing data is used to deduce information about carrier-sensing neighbors, and no high power transmissions are necessary. Analytical and simulation results show that our methods estimate intra-flow contention with low error, while significantly reducing overhead, energy consumption and latency as compared to previous approaches.