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Ad-hoc Storage Overlay System (ASOS): A Delay-Tolerant Approach in MANETs Guang Yang 1, Ling-Jyh Chen 2, Tony Sun 1, Biao Zhou 1, Mario Gerla 1 1 University.

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Presentation on theme: "Ad-hoc Storage Overlay System (ASOS): A Delay-Tolerant Approach in MANETs Guang Yang 1, Ling-Jyh Chen 2, Tony Sun 1, Biao Zhou 1, Mario Gerla 1 1 University."— Presentation transcript:

1 Ad-hoc Storage Overlay System (ASOS): A Delay-Tolerant Approach in MANETs Guang Yang 1, Ling-Jyh Chen 2, Tony Sun 1, Biao Zhou 1, Mario Gerla 1 1 University of California, Los Angeles 2 Academia Sinica, Taiwan

2 Oct. 11, 2006MASS 20062 Motivation  MANETs often deployed in adverse environment that are less reliable.  Nodes in MANETs can crash, lose power, be blocked, or move out of communication range.  Difficult to guarantee continuous end-to-end connectivity in MANETs.

3 Oct. 11, 2006MASS 20063  A new network architecture for challenged scenarios of intermittent connectivity: Space communications, Messages to remote villages, Wildlife monitoring, etc.  DTN highlights: Mimics the post office model, Data are aggregated into bundles, Bundles are sent hop-by-hop to the destination (compared to end-to-end in the Internet). Background: What is DTN?

4 Oct. 11, 2006MASS 20064  In MANETs, connectivity is highly susceptible to mobility, interference, failures, etc. As a result, e2e connections break frequently. Many solutions aim to add new nodes to bridge the gaps.  We introduce the DTN concept into MANETs.  ASOS: Ad-hoc Storage Overlay System: Deploy on existing MANET nodes Data is stored in a distributed and redundant way among participating ASOS peers. Opportunistic data delivery relies on node mobility. Follows DTN semantics and complements end-to-end transport. Why DTN is needed in MANETs

5 Oct. 11, 2006MASS 20065 S D 2: Network partitioning 1: Conventional end-to-end transport 3: Data temporarily stored in nearby ASOS peers 4: ASOS data delivery ASOS overlay ASOS storage node Regular node ASOS Example

6 Oct. 11, 2006MASS 20066 Basic Architecture When the destination node is at location 1 and disconnected from the source node, undeliverable data is submitted to ASOS for storage (1 ’ ). Stored data is delivered to the destination node (2 ’ ) after it is reconnected to the network at location 2.

7 Oct. 11, 2006MASS 20067 Interaction with Routing Two methods to activate ASOS. The first is initiated by the source node after receiving a route error message. The second is initiated by an intermediate ASOS peer node.

8 Oct. 11, 2006MASS 20068 Distributed Storage Distributed storage of a file in ASOS. The first 200 data units of File 1 have been delivered end-to-end to the destination. The next 150 units have been submitted for storage at an earlier ASOS agent A. The current ASOS agent is B with 50 units already submitted.

9 Oct. 11, 2006MASS 20069 Data Replication Probabilistic replication of data. Node B has a lower but non-zero probability of holding a copy. Nodes C and D have comparable probabilities; though neither of them deterministically hold a copy.

10 Oct. 11, 2006MASS 200610 Evaluation – Mobility Model The Virtual Track mobility model. One group is split into three subgroups at the center switch station, while two groups merge at the bottom-right switch station. Key concepts: Switch stations Tracks Mobile/static nodes Groups Split/merge

11 Oct. 11, 2006MASS 200611 Evaluation – Scenario

12 Oct. 11, 2006MASS 200612 Evaluation – Instantaneous Throughput ASOS instantaneous throughput may temporarily go above the input rate. Reason: stored + fresh data.

13 Oct. 11, 2006MASS 200613 Evaluation – Delivery Ratio Cumulative amount of data delivered to the destination. ASOS delivers both fresh and stored data; overall delivery ratio is higher.

14 Oct. 11, 2006MASS 200614 Summary  DTN concept is very useful in MANETs where continuous connectivity cannot be guaranteed,  ASOS is designed for native DTN support in MANETs. Available immediately after network is deployed,  ASOS stores data safely during connectivity disruptions.  Opportunistic data delivery in ASOS eventually increases the delivery ratio compared to pure end-to-end transport.

15 Oct. 11, 2006MASS 200615 Q & As Thank you!


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