3.9 KiB
3.9 KiB
DTN Protocols
Forwarding Based
Where each message may only be under the custody of a single node.
- Upon forwarding the message, the receiving node also takes on the responsibility of custody.
- This means there will exist only one copy of the message within the network at any period of time.
Direct Transmission
- Direct transmission is the simplest single-copy forwarding protocol possible.
- Once the source has generated a message, it will retain custody and carry it until it encounters the destination.
- Once a connection with the destination is established, the message is forwarded directly
- This uses minimal resources
- Has unbounded amounts of latency
- Probability of a message being delivered is only as likely as the probability of the node encountering the destination node
First Contact
- First contact is a single-copy based forwarding protocol - it randomly chooses a node out of all possible nodes and forwards as many messages as possible to that node.
- If no connections are available, the first encountered node will be used.
- Once the message(s) are sent, the messages on the original node are deleted, relinquishing custody to the new node.
- This protocol routes messages throughout the network via a random walk pattern.
- This can lead to packets being routed to dead ends.
- Packets can make negative progress or getting stuck in a loop.
Replication Based
Replication-based protocols disseminate messages throughout the network via replication of the messages.
- When one node encounters another, it will forward the message while retaining the local copy it has.
- The existence of multiple copies increases the probability of message delivery and reduces latency.
- The more nodes carrying the message, the more chance one node encounters the destination.
- However this also means there are many redundant messages on the network - therefore more resources are needed.
Epidemic
- Utilising the flooding concept, Epidemic aims to achieve message delivery by flooding the network with message copies.
- When any two nodes meet, they compare messages.
- They then exchange messages they do not have in common
- This is repeated allowing the messages to spread similar to an epidemic.
- This method achieves minimal latency & high delivery probabilities however suffers from limited resources.
MaxProp
- Like epidemic, maxprop floods the network, however each message has a priority.
- Messages stored in a ordered-queue in the message buffer.
- Messages with a higher probability of being delivered have a higher priory of being forwarded first.
- To determine the probability, it looks at history of encounters, maintaining a vector with tracks the likelihood of the node encountering any other node in the network.
- When two nodes meet, they exchange messages and vectors, updating their own local copy.
- These vectors are then used to compute the shortest path for each message, messages are then ordered within the buffer by destination cost.
- MaxProp uses overhead messages to acknowledge when a message has reached it destination
- Once this ACK signal is received, all local copies of redundant messages are dropped.
PROPHET
Probabilistic Routing Protocol using History of Encounters and Transitivity (PRoPHET)
- PROPHET maintains a vector that keeps track of a history of the encountered nodes.
- It uses this vector to calculate the probability of a message copy reaching its destination by being forwarded to a particular node.
- When a source node forwards a message copy, it selects a subset of nodes that it can possibly send to.
- The algorithm then ranks these nodes based on the calculated probabilities, with the copy being forwarded to the highest ranked nodes first.
- This is effective however the routing tables rapidly grow as a result of the amount of information on the nodes required to calculate the probability predictions.