<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<XML><RECORDS>
<RECORD>
	<REFERENCE_TYPE>3</REFERENCE_TYPE>
	<AUTHORS>
		<AUTHOR>Bow-Nan Cheng</AUTHOR>
		<AUTHOR>Murat Yuksel</AUTHOR>
		<AUTHOR>Shivkumar Kalyanaraman</AUTHOR>
	</AUTHORS>
	<YEAR>2006</YEAR>
	<TITLE>Orthogonal Rendezvous Routing Protocol for Wireless Mesh Networks</TITLE>
	<SECONDARY_TITLE>In Proceedings of IEEE International Conference on Network Protocols (ICNP)</SECONDARY_TITLE>
	<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Santa Barbara, CA</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
	<DATE>11/12/2006</DATE>
	<KEYWORDS>
		<KEYWORD>Wireless</KEYWORD>
		<KEYWORD>Mesh</KEYWORD>
		<KEYWORD>Networks,</KEYWORD>
		<KEYWORD>Directional</KEYWORD>
		<KEYWORD>Routing,</KEYWORD>
		<KEYWORD>Free</KEYWORD>
		<KEYWORD>Space</KEYWORD>
		<KEYWORD>Optics</KEYWORD>
	</KEYWORDS>
	<ABSTRACT>Routing in multi-hop wireless networks involves
the indirection from a persistent name (or ID) to a locator.
Concepts such as coordinate space embedding help reduce the
number and dynamism complexity of bindings and state needed
for this indirection. Routing protocols which do not use such
concepts often tend to flood packets during route discovery
or dissemination, and hence have limited scalability. In this
paper, we introduce Orthogonal Rendezvous Routing Protocol
(ORRP) for meshed wireless networks. ORRP is a lightweight,
but scalable routing protocol utilizing directional communications
(such as directional antennas or free-space-optical transceivers)
to relax information requirements such as coordinate space
embedding and node localization. The ORRP source and ORRP
destination send route discovery and route dissemination packets
respectively in locally-chosen orthogonal directions. Connectivity
happens when these paths intersect (i.e. rendezvous). We show
that ORRP achieves connectivity with high probability even in
sparse networks with voids. ORRP scales well without imposing
GHT-like graph structures (eg: trees, rings, torus etc). The total
state information required is O(N^3/2) for N-node networks, and
the state is uniformly distributed. ORRP does not resort to
flooding either in route discovery or dissemination. The price paid
by ORRP is suboptimality in terms of path stretch compared to
the shortest path; however we characterize the average penalty
and find that it is not severe.</ABSTRACT>
	<URL>http://www.ecse.rpi.edu/Homepages/shivkuma/research/papers/ICNP2006.pdf</URL>
</RECORD>
</RECORDS></XML>