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Physical Sciences and Mathematics Commons

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Computer Sciences

Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems

Series

2001

Wireless networks

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Autoconfiguration, Registration And Mobility Management For Pervasive Computing, Archan Misra, Subir Das, Anthony Mcauley, Sajal K. Das Aug 2001

Autoconfiguration, Registration And Mobility Management For Pervasive Computing, Archan Misra, Subir Das, Anthony Mcauley, Sajal K. Das

Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems

In the vision of pervasive computing, users will exchange information and control their environments from anywhere using various wireline/wireless networks and computing devices. We believe that current protocols, such as DHCP, PPP, and Mobile IP, must be enhanced to support pervasive network access. In particular, this article identifies three fundamental functions: autoconfiguration, registration, and mobility management, that need such enhancements. Realizing that the IP autoconfiguration capabilities must be extended to configure routers and large dynamic networks, we first describe our autoconfiguration solution based on the dynamic configuration and distribution protocol (DCDP). Second, we discuss why providing user-specific services over a …


Tcp Hack: Tcp Header Checksum Option To Improve Performance Over Lossy Links, Rajesh Krishna Balan, Boon Peng Lee, Renjish Kumar, Jacob Lillykutty, Winston Seah, A. L. Ananda Apr 2001

Tcp Hack: Tcp Header Checksum Option To Improve Performance Over Lossy Links, Rajesh Krishna Balan, Boon Peng Lee, Renjish Kumar, Jacob Lillykutty, Winston Seah, A. L. Ananda

Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems

Wireless networks have become increasingly common and an increasing number of devices are communicating with each other over lossy links. Unfortunately, TCP performs poorly over lossy links as it is unable to differentiate the loss due to packet corruption from that due to congestion. We present an extension to TCP which enables TCP to distinguish packet corruption from congestion in lossy environments resulting in improved performance. We refer to this extension as the HeAder ChecKsum option (HACK). We implemented our algorithm in the Linux kernel and performed various tests to determine its effectiveness. Our results have shown that HACK performs …