"WCNC 2005"
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WCNC 2005 |
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New Orleans, LA, USA |
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Outline
Problem definition and
context
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Problem: Achieve the synchronization of
a set of geographically separated clocks located in every node of a wireless
Ad Hoc network (single-hop or multi-hop) in a distributed manner. |
Objective and design
goals
The IEEE 802.11 TSF
(IBSS)
CSMNS- (Clock-Sampling
Mutual Network Synchronization)
Slide 7
CSMNS- (Clock-Sampling
Mutual Network Synchronization)
Results
Results (simulations)
Numerical Results
(Single-hop)
Numerical Results
(Multi-hop)
Conclusion and remaining
work
Slide 14
"EXTRA SLIDES FOLLOW"
The extended TSF (1)
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One arguable improvement to the IEEE
802.11 TSF performance is as follows: |
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Suspend the back-off timer of any
pending non-beacon transmission. |
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Calculate a random delay uniformly
distributed in the range between zero and . |
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Wait for the random delay before
transmitting the beacon. |
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Cancel the remaining random delay and
the pending beacon transmission if a beacon arrives before the random delay
timer has expired and that the received beacon shows a larger time-stamp than
its own. |
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Send a beacon if the random delay has
expired and no beacon have arrived during the delay period with a larger
time-stamp. |
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Upon reception of a beacon, a node will
adjust the received timestamp to take into account its PHY layer delay. The
receiving node will set its clock to the value of the adjusted timestamp if
it is later than its own. Therefore, all nodes will try to gradually
synchronize to the fastest clock. |
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The extended TSF (2)
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Our numerical and analytical results
show that the extended TSF improvement is marginal relative to CSMNS,
additional to the extra cost of more overhead. |
A simple numerical
example