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RE: [manet] AODV Question
Connectivity is the number of other nodes each node can reach with 1 hop.
Therefore a connectivity of 10 means there is 10 nodes that a can reach
directly. Obviously in an actual network this would vary from node to node.
Rob Cain :-)
>What does the connectivity parameter specify? Is it saying in 100,000
nodes only 10 nodes would be connected?
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Robert Cain [mailto:tgm@ulfius.com]
>Sent: Wednesday, November 12, 2003 11:13 AM
>To: DANIEL BYRNE
>Subject: Re: [manet] AODV Question
>
>
>1 byte seems OK to me.
>
>With some simple analysis assuming a circular homogeneous network of node
>count K and a reasonable connectivity C then the radius of the network in
>hops can be derived to be the square root of K/C. Which for a network size
>of 100,000 and a connectivity of 10 gives a hop count radius of 100.
Seeing
>as a network of size 100,000 will be probably at practical limits of size
>due to performance degradation then I think 1 byte may well be enough.
>
>hope that helps :-)
>
>Rob Cain
>
>>if the
>>
>>"AODV routing protocol is designed for mobile ad hoc networks
>> with populations of tens to thousands of mobile nodes"
>>
>>why is the HopCount limited to only a BYTE? This effectively limits the
>number of hops to 255. Why not expand the hop count to two bytes into the
>reseved region of the RREQ packet. Something similar could be done with
>the RREP packet as well.
>>
>>
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>
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