Publication:
Transport protocol mechanisms for wireless networking: a review and comparative simulation study

Placeholder

School / College / Institute

Organizational Unit

Program

KU Authors

Co-Authors

N/A

Publication Date

Language

Type

Embargo Status

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Alternative Title

Abstract

Increasing popularity of wireless services has triggered the need for efficient wireless transport mechanisms. TCP, being the reliable transport level protocol widely used in wired network world, was not designed with heterogeneity in mind. The problem with the adaptation of TCP to the evolving wireless settings is because of the assumption that packet loss and unusual delays are mainly caused by congestion. TCP originally assumes that packet loss is very small. on the other hand, wireless links often suffer from high bit error rates and broken connectivity due to handoffs. A range of schemes, namely end-to-end, split-connection and link-layer protocols, has been proposed to improve the performance of transport mechanisms, in particular TCP, on wireless settings. In this study, we examine these mechanisms for wireless transport, and discuss our comparative simulation results of end-to-end TCP versions (Tahoe, Reno, NewReno and SACK) in various network settings including wireless LANs and wired-cum-wireless scenarios.

Source

Publisher

Springer-Verlag Berlin

Subject

Computer science, Artificial intelligence, Information systems, Software engineering

Citation

Has Part

Source

Computer and Information Sciences - Iscis 2003

Book Series Title

Edition

DOI

item.page.datauri

Link

Rights

Copyrights Note

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

0

Views

0

Downloads