Robust Mobility Management Scheme in Tactical Communication Networks

In a tactical communication network (TCN), it is important during military operations to provide timely and accurate information transmission. Accordingly, mobility management plays a key role in supporting the mobility and connectivity of mobile nodes (MNs). In battlefield environments, the interme...

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Main Authors: Seung Hyun Cha, Minsu Shin, Jae-Hyun Ham, Min Young Chung
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2018-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8306881/
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spelling doaj-1ef3a340b17f43e68babc2a843d763c82021-03-29T20:48:08ZengIEEEIEEE Access2169-35362018-01-016154681547910.1109/ACCESS.2018.28121788306881Robust Mobility Management Scheme in Tactical Communication NetworksSeung Hyun Cha0Minsu Shin1Jae-Hyun Ham2Min Young Chung3https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9063-8045College of Information and Communication Engineering, Sungkyunkwan University, Suwon, South KoreaCollege of Information and Communication Engineering, Sungkyunkwan University, Suwon, South Korea2nd R&D Institute, Agency for Defense Development, Daejeon, South KoreaCollege of Information and Communication Engineering, Sungkyunkwan University, Suwon, South KoreaIn a tactical communication network (TCN), it is important during military operations to provide timely and accurate information transmission. Accordingly, mobility management plays a key role in supporting the mobility and connectivity of mobile nodes (MNs). In battlefield environments, the intermediate nodes(INs), such as a backbone node or an access node, can due to enemy attack be partially or completely damaged. In order to solve these issues, different distributed mobility management (DMM) schemes have been introduced. However, the existing DMM schemes do not offer any efficient solution to maintain the ongoing communication sessions of MNs associated with a destroyed IN. Therefore, in this paper, we propose a robust mobility management scheme for TCNs. The proposed scheme not only enables the disconnected MNs to attach to a new IN, but by creating IP tunnels, also maintains their ongoing communication sessions. In order to evaluate the performance of our proposed scheme, we develop a physical test-bed environment. With the help of mathematical and experimental results, we show that the proposed scheme outperforms the legacy schemes in terms of service availability, network throughput, and first packet arrival time.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8306881/Tactical communication networksanchor point destructiondistributed mobility managementIPv6 mobilityexperimental evaluation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Seung Hyun Cha
Minsu Shin
Jae-Hyun Ham
Min Young Chung
spellingShingle Seung Hyun Cha
Minsu Shin
Jae-Hyun Ham
Min Young Chung
Robust Mobility Management Scheme in Tactical Communication Networks
IEEE Access
Tactical communication networks
anchor point destruction
distributed mobility management
IPv6 mobility
experimental evaluation
author_facet Seung Hyun Cha
Minsu Shin
Jae-Hyun Ham
Min Young Chung
author_sort Seung Hyun Cha
title Robust Mobility Management Scheme in Tactical Communication Networks
title_short Robust Mobility Management Scheme in Tactical Communication Networks
title_full Robust Mobility Management Scheme in Tactical Communication Networks
title_fullStr Robust Mobility Management Scheme in Tactical Communication Networks
title_full_unstemmed Robust Mobility Management Scheme in Tactical Communication Networks
title_sort robust mobility management scheme in tactical communication networks
publisher IEEE
series IEEE Access
issn 2169-3536
publishDate 2018-01-01
description In a tactical communication network (TCN), it is important during military operations to provide timely and accurate information transmission. Accordingly, mobility management plays a key role in supporting the mobility and connectivity of mobile nodes (MNs). In battlefield environments, the intermediate nodes(INs), such as a backbone node or an access node, can due to enemy attack be partially or completely damaged. In order to solve these issues, different distributed mobility management (DMM) schemes have been introduced. However, the existing DMM schemes do not offer any efficient solution to maintain the ongoing communication sessions of MNs associated with a destroyed IN. Therefore, in this paper, we propose a robust mobility management scheme for TCNs. The proposed scheme not only enables the disconnected MNs to attach to a new IN, but by creating IP tunnels, also maintains their ongoing communication sessions. In order to evaluate the performance of our proposed scheme, we develop a physical test-bed environment. With the help of mathematical and experimental results, we show that the proposed scheme outperforms the legacy schemes in terms of service availability, network throughput, and first packet arrival time.
topic Tactical communication networks
anchor point destruction
distributed mobility management
IPv6 mobility
experimental evaluation
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8306881/
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AT minsushin robustmobilitymanagementschemeintacticalcommunicationnetworks
AT jaehyunham robustmobilitymanagementschemeintacticalcommunicationnetworks
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