Search Computing Unplugged's 16,487 article archive 
Home
EasyPrint
News details Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Articles-only Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Twitter Feed Click here for the Twitter feed.
WIRELESS INFRASTRUCTURE
Implementation of distributed hash tables in mobile ad-hoc networks
By Humayun Bakht

Mobile ad-hoc networks are one of the latest developments, and an attractive addition, to the family of wireless networks. With the addition of mobile ad-hoc networks, we can broadly classify wireless networks into two types: wireless fixed and wireless ad-hoc networks. Wireless fixed networks are a collection of wireless nodes that communicate with each other with the aid of some fixed infrastructure. A wireless ad-hoc network operates in the absence of a centralized structure.

Mobile ad-hoc networks introduced a completely new art of networking and can be deployed in places where we lack supporting structures. Each and every bit of a mobile ad-hoc network is unique. While these networks are beneficial in many ways, they do require unique strategies to be developed for routine network controls. Connecting these networks with a larger network, such as the Internet, is a challenging issue.

Distributed hash tables
DHTs (Distributed Hash Tables) can be seen as a platform for building a variety of scalable and dynamic distributed applications for the Internet. Scalable applications include distributed storage systems and application level multi-cast. DHTs can be used to develop a common infrastructure for certain distributed applications. DHTs are similar as they have a file cabinet that spreads over numerous servers. Therefore, if one server goes down, it does not disturb the rest of the network communication. As in peer-to-peer or ad-hoc networks, there is no central server that contains a list of the stored data. Instead, each mobile node has a list, or a routing table, where data is stored in the system.

The current DHT structure poses many challenges, such as fault-tolerance, locating objects, scalability, availability, load balancing, and incremental deployment. It is possible to implement current DHT specifications in mobile ad-hoc networks. If their deployment in mobile ad-hoc networks is successful, it could provide a more efficient way to establish distributed applications and services for ad-hoc networking.

In mobile ad-hoc networks, applications such as file-sharing and resource discovery can benefit from the distributed insert/lookup convergence provided by DHTs. Research in this area suggests one of the two possible approaches -- layered and integrated -- that can be used for the deployment of DHTs in mobile ad-hoc networks provided using a proximity-aware DHT Pastry and DSR (Dynamic Source Routing) protocol.

In a layered approach (hence: "pastry"), a proximity-aware DHT Pastry is directly layered on the top of mobile ad-hoc networks very similarly to the way it's normally layered in the Internet. Pastry maintains its leaf set and routing table entries without source routes while DSR maintains source routes passively with respect to the demand of Pastry routing state. In mobile ad-hoc environment, it's difficult to accomplish straightforward layering. It requires some modifications to accomplish the shared medium access nature of ad-hoc networks.


1  ·  2  ·  Next »
Other articles you might like
Home > Wireless > Ad-Hoc Networking (39 articles)
   Distributed management services in mobile ad-hoc networks
   Handling distributed applications in an ad-hoc environment
   Routing misbehavior in mobile ad-hoc networks
Get Weekly Email Updates
Subscribe to our regular weekly email newsletter. It's packed with tips, reviews, deep analysis, and the latest news.
 
Recent Computing Unplugged Articles
When WordPress 3.0 Multisite won't let you log in
Choosing the right smartphone for you
Picture Porter 35, a portable hard drive/viewer for photographers
Time to pay the paper?
Photoshop CS5's great new lens correction feature
Photoshop CS5's great new high dynamic range imaging features
Photoshop CS5's great new Puppet Warp feature
Computing Unplugged News
Android wallpaper app that steals your data was downloaded by millions
New Zealand pizza lovers suffer information theft from Hell
Could open source tools make Facebook the next AOL?
Amazon unveils 3rd-generation Kindle e-book reader
Dell Streak: What a Mess
$20 Wikipedia Reader Uses 8-Bit Computing Power
Google Assembles Parts for Facebook Rival
>> Read all the news
More from the ZATZ journals
David Gewirtz Online: CNN commentary and analysis
DominoPower: Smart Upgrade bug in Domino 8.5.1 (and some work-around tips)
OutlookPower: The two most motivational words in the English language
-- Advertisement --

EASY DEDICATED AND VIRTUAL DEDICATED SERVERS FOR AS LOW AS $67.99 PER MONTH
Customize and configure your own dedicated server. Simply choose one of our popular plans or select your own Linux or Windows server and plan options.

NO LONG WAITS. Server provisioned within hours.

Tap here now and be up and running with your own server tonight.

-- Advertisement --

How To Save Jobs
This book is about how to create and save jobs. Believe it or not, there's not a single book out there that specifically focuses on job creation and preservation -- until now.

This book, by ZATZ editor-in-chief David Gewirtz, is about helping your business work better. It's about helping you change the things you need to change so your company can perform more effectively.

Plus, through a grant from ZATZ, it's a free download.

Read it and reap.

ZATZ Home  ·  News  ·  Back Issues  ·  Credits/Trademarks ·  Link To Us
Copyright © 2003-2010, ZATZ Publishing. All rights reserved worldwide.
Editor's Login