9th International Conference on Communications and Networking in China

Research Article

A Propagation-Delay-Tolerant MAC Protocol with Adaptive Reservation for Long Propagation Delay Networks

  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.4108/icst.chinacom.2014.256458,
        author={Furong Xu and Kai Liu and Feng Liu and Dongdong Wang},
        title={A Propagation-Delay-Tolerant MAC Protocol with Adaptive Reservation for Long Propagation Delay Networks},
        proceedings={9th International Conference on Communications and Networking in China},
        publisher={IEEE},
        proceedings_a={CHINACOM},
        year={2015},
        month={1},
        keywords={satellite networks; medium access control; propagation-delay-tolerate; qos guarantee},
        doi={10.4108/icst.chinacom.2014.256458}
    }
    
  • Furong Xu
    Kai Liu
    Feng Liu
    Dongdong Wang
    Year: 2015
    A Propagation-Delay-Tolerant MAC Protocol with Adaptive Reservation for Long Propagation Delay Networks
    CHINACOM
    IEEE
    DOI: 10.4108/icst.chinacom.2014.256458
Furong Xu1,*, Kai Liu1, Feng Liu1, Dongdong Wang2
  • 1: School of Electronics and Information Engineering, Beihang University
  • 2: Integrated Information System Sci. & Tech. Laboratory, Institute of Software, Chinese Academy of Sciences
*Contact email: myfuturexfr@gmail.com

Abstract

In order to eliminate the adverse effects of long propagation delay and ensure the quality-of-service (QoS) of high-priority traffic for long propagation delay networks, a new propagation-delay-tolerate MAC (PDT-MAC) protocol with adaptive reservation is proposed. A novel frame structure is designed to maximize the throughput and avoid packet collisions. A piggyback mechanism is also used to reduce the handshakes and thus decrease the overhead of uplink and downlink channels. Meanwhile, a statistic priority access algorithm is adopted to ensure the QoS of high-priority traffic at high traffic load. An adaptive reservation algorithm can coordinate the number of reservation minislots to ensure low reservation collision probability. Simulation results show that the proposed protocol can effectively solve low channel utilization problem caused by long propagation delay, and outperforms FRODT protocol under different propagation delay in terms of throughput, average packet access delay and packet dropping rate. In addition, the results also validate that the QoS of high priority traffic is guaranteed at high traffic load.