As wireless communication gains popularity, significant
research has been devoted to supporting real-time transmission with
stringent Quality of Service (QoS) requirements for wireless
applications. At the same time, a wireless hybrid network that
integrates a mobile wireless ad hoc network (MANET) and a wireless
infrastructure network has been proven to be a better alternative for
the next generation wireless networks. By directly adopting resource
reservation-based QoS routing for MANETs, hybrids networks inherit
invalid reservation and race condition problems in MANETs. How to
guarantee the QoS in hybrid networks remains an open problem. In this
paper, we propose a QoS-Oriented Distributed routing protocol (QOD)
to enhance the QoS support capability of hybrid networks. Taking
advantage of fewer transmission hops and anycast transmission
features of the hybrid networks, QOD transforms the packet routing
problem to a resource scheduling problem. QOD incorporates five
algorithms: 1) a QoS-guaranteed neighbor selection algorithm to meet
the transmission delay requirement, 2) a distributed packet
scheduling algorithm to further reduce transmission delay, 3) a
mobility-based segment resizing algorithm that adaptively adjusts
segment size according to node mobility in order to reduce
transmission time, 4) a traffic redundant elimination algorithm to
increase the transmission throughput, and 5) a data redundancy
elimination-based transmission algorithm to eliminate the redundant
data to further improve the transmission QoS. Analytical and
simulation results based on the random way-point model and the real
human mobility model show that QOD can provide high QoS performance
in terms of overhead, transmission delay, mobility-resilience, and
scalability.
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