Research Article
The Prohibitive Link between Position-based Routing and Planarity
@ARTICLE{10.4108/mca.1.3.e2, author={David Cairns and Marwan Fayed and Hussein T. Mouftah}, title={The Prohibitive Link between Position-based Routing and Planarity}, journal={EAI Endorsed Transactions on Mobile Communications and Applications}, volume={1}, number={3}, publisher={ICST}, journal_a={MCA}, year={2013}, month={12}, keywords={position-based routing, geographic routing, face routing, wireless routing}, doi={10.4108/mca.1.3.e2} }
- David Cairns
Marwan Fayed
Hussein T. Mouftah
Year: 2013
The Prohibitive Link between Position-based Routing and Planarity
MCA
ICST
DOI: 10.4108/mca.1.3.e2
Abstract
Position-based routing is touted as an ideal routing strategy for resource-constrained wireless networks. One persistent barrier to adoption is due to its recovery phase, where messages are forwarded according to leftor right-hand rule (LHR). This is often referred to as face-routing. In this paper we investigate the limits of LHR with respect to planarity.We show that the gap between non-planarity and successful delivery is a single link within a single configuration. Our work begins with an analysis to enumerate all node configurations that cause intersections in the unit-disc graph. We find that left-hand rule is able to recover from all but a single case, the ‘umbrella’ configuration so named for its appearance. We use this information to propose the Prohibitive Link Detection Protocol (PLDP) that can guarantee delivery over non-planar graphs using standard face-routing techniques. As the name implies, the protocol detects and circumvents the ‘bad’ links that hamper LHR. The goal of this work is to maintain routing guarantees while disturbing the network graph as little as possible. In doing so, a new starting point emerges from which to build rich distributed protocols in the spirit of CLDP and GDSTR.
Copyright © 2013 David Cairns et al., licensed to ICST. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which permits unlimited use, distribution and reproduction in any medium so long as the original work is properly cited.