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Physical Sciences and Mathematics Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

2012

Brigham Young University

Wireless mesh

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Wifu Transport: A User-Level Protocol Framework, Randall Jay Buck Apr 2012

Wifu Transport: A User-Level Protocol Framework, Randall Jay Buck

Theses and Dissertations

It is well known that the transport layer protocol TCP has low throughput and is unfair in wireless mesh networks. Transport layer solutions for mesh networks have been primarily validated using simulations with simplified assumptions about the wireless network. The WiFu Transport framework complements simulator results by allowing developers to easily create and experiment with transport layer protocols on live networks. We provide a user-space solution that is flexible and promotes code reuse while maintaining high performance and scalability. To validate WiFu Transport we use it to build WiFu TCP, a decomposed Tahoe solution that preserves TCP semantics. Furthermore, we …


Feasibility Of Tcp For Wireless Mesh Networks, Richard Lloyd Lee Mar 2012

Feasibility Of Tcp For Wireless Mesh Networks, Richard Lloyd Lee

Theses and Dissertations

When used in a wireless mesh network, TCP has shortcomings in the areas of throughput and fairness among traffic flows. Several methods have been proposed to deal with TCP's weakness in a wireless mesh, but most have been evaluated with simulations rather than experimentally. We evaluate several major enhancements to TCP – pacing, conservative windows, and delayed ACKs – to determine whether they improve performance or fairness in a mesh network operating in the BYU Computer Science building. We also draw conclusions about the effectiveness of wireless network simulators based on the accuracy of reported simulation results.