Pro-Active Route Maintenance in DSR
Carleton University, Ontario, Canada. August 2001.

Existing on-demand ad hoc network routing protocols continue using a route until a link breaks. During the route reconstruction, packets can be dropped, which will cause significant throughput degradation. In this thesis, we add a link breakage prediction algorithm to one on-demand routing protocol: the Dynamic Source Routing (DSR) protocol. The mobile node that implements the prediction algorithm uses signal power strength from the received packets to predict the link breakage time, and sends a warning to the source node of the packet if the link is soon-to-be-broken. The source node can perform a pro-active route rebuild to avoid disconnection. Experiments demonstrate that adding link breakage prediction to DSR, even considering the increased number of control messages (at most 33.5%), can significantly reduce the total number of dropped data packets (at least 20%) due to link breakage by reducing the number of broken links. We believe that TCP can potentially benefit well from the pro-active route maintenance to increase throughput, which is affected by broken links. We also propose a modification plan for AODV and make recommendations about further improvement on DSR based on the link breakage prediction.