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MOBICOM
1999
ACM

Reversing the Collision-Avoidance Handshake in Wireless Networks

13 years 9 months ago
Reversing the Collision-Avoidance Handshake in Wireless Networks
Many medium-access control (MAC) protocols for wireless networks proposed or implemented to date are based on collisionavoidance handshakes between sender and receiver. In the vast majority of these protocols, including the IEEE 802.11 standard, the handshake is sender initiated, in that the sender asks the receiver for permission to transmit using a short control packet, and transmits only after the receiver sends a short clear-to-send notification. We analyze the effect of reversing the collision-avoidance handshake, making it receiver initiated and compare the performance of a number of these receiver-initiated protocols with the performance of protocols based on sender-initiated collision avoidance. The receiver-initiated protocols we present make use of carrier sensing, and are therefore applicable to either baseband or slow frequencyhopping radios in which an entire packet can be sent within the same frequency hop (which is the case of FHSS commercial radios that support IEEE 8...
J. J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves, Asimakis Tzamaloukas
Added 03 Aug 2010
Updated 03 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 1999
Where MOBICOM
Authors J. J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves, Asimakis Tzamaloukas
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