The ZigBee tree routing is
widely used in many resource-limited devices and applications, since
it does not require any routing table and route discovery overhead to
send a packet to the destination. However, the ZigBee tree routing
has the fundamental limitation that a packet follows the tree
topology; thus, it cannot provide the optimal routing path. In this
paper, we propose the shortcut tree routing (STR) protocol that
provides the near optimal routing path as well as maintains the
advantages of the ZigBee tree routing such as no route discovery
overhead and low memory consumption. The main idea of the shortcut
tree routing is to calculate remaining hops from an arbitrary source
to the destination using the hierarchical addressing scheme in
ZigBee, and each source or intermediate node forwards a packet to the
neighbor node with the smallest remaining hops in its neighbor table.
The shortcut tree routing is fully distributed and compatible with
ZigBee standard in that it only utilizes addressing scheme and
neighbor table without any changes of the specification. The
mathematical analysis proves that the 1-hop neighbor information
improves overall network performances by providing an efficient
routing path and distributing the traffic load concentrated on the
tree links. In the performance evaluation, we show that the shortcut
tree routing achieves the comparable performance to AODV with limited
overhead of neighbor table maintenance as well as overwhelms the
ZigBee tree routing in all the network conditions such as network
density, network configurations, traffic type, and the network
traffic.
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