This thesis proposes and discusses solutions to enable network-layer
mobility in wireless ad hoc access networks. The deployment of wireless
access networks has made them ubiquitous and current research strives to
make them pervasive. Users having wireless access to wired IP networks and
the Internet are driving the demand for mobile and heterogeneous solutions.
To enable all kinds of mobility in heterogeneous All-IP networks there are
many issues to be solved. This thesis focuses on network-layer mobility and
connectivity of wireless multi-hop ad hoc networks to the Internet. In a
wireless environment with overlapping service areas, mobile hosts need to
select which gateway(s) to use to access the wireless infrastructure. The
signal-to-noise ratio of an access point, which is part of a wireless LAN,
does not reflect the number of attached hosts or the traffic between them.
The throughput of the access point could be low while the signal is strong.
At the same time an access point with weaker signal could allow higher
throughput. In ad hoc routing, hop count is the most common metric and the
selection of a route to a gateway is affected by the same utilization
problem. This could lead to a situation where a short route is used by more
hosts and performing worse than a longer route serving fewer hosts. This
thesis proposes and discusses solutions to calculating network-layer metrics
and using them in gateway selection and handover decisions.
To enable connectivity of a mobile ad hoc network (MANET) to the Internet, a
gateway must support the wired single-hop and wireless multi-hop approaches.
To deploy network-layer mobility in a MANET, the Mobile IP protocol needs to
be adapted for the multi-hop environment. A MANET enables connectivity to
more than one gateway at a time and combined with multihoming it provides
seamless handover between subnets. The gateway selection and handover
decisions are complicated by the multihoming capabilities. This thesis
proposes and discusses solutions to deploying multihomed mobility into
MANETs and thereby handling multi-hop gateway discovery, registration of
multiple gateways and tunneling to selected gateway(s).
Traffic patterns in wired LANs generally follow the 80/20 ratio of Internet
destined vs. local traffic. The same traffic patterns generally hold true
for wireless hosts. Therefore it is important to maintain the route to the
gateway for the Internet destined traffic. This thesis proposes and
discusses a solution to maintaining gateway connectivity in MANETs by
installing routes to gateways using advertisements.
Deciding the locality of a peer and setting up the forwarding route differs
between single-hop and multi-hop networks. In single-hop networks a source
matches the destination prefix with its own to decide what forwarding policy
to use. Local traffic is sent directly to the destination with the link-
layer protocol while global traffic is forwarded to a default gateway. In
multi-hop networks the ad hoc routing protocol finds the route to a
destination either proactively or on-demand. This thesis proposes and
discusses a solution to deciding on the mobile host destination locality in
a MANET.