| Literature DB >> 27314361 |
Xiaofeng Lu1, Pietro Lio2, Pan Hui3.
Abstract
Cellular network data traffic can be offload onto opportunistic networks. This paper proposes a Distance-based Opportunistic Publish/Subscribe (DOPS) content dissemination model, which is composed of three layers: application layer, decision-making layer and network layer. When a user wants new content, he/she subscribes on a subscribing server. Users having the contents decide whether to deliver the contents to the subscriber based on the distance information. If in the meantime a content owner has traveled further in the immediate past time than the distance between the owner and the subscriber, the content owner will send the content to the subscriber through opportunistic routing. Simulations provide an evaluation of the data traffic offloading efficiency of DOPS.Entities:
Keywords: Mobile data offloading; content dissemination model; delay tolerant; opportunistic communications
Year: 2016 PMID: 27314361 PMCID: PMC4934304 DOI: 10.3390/s16060878
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1The structure of DOPS.
Figure 2Illustrate of and , , .
Figure 3An example of subscribing content and opportunistic publishing content in DOPS.
Figure 4When a relay receives its subscribed content, the relay removes itself from the subscription table.
The parameters in the simulation.
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Number of nodes | 180 |
| TTL | 60 min |
| Wi-Fi transmission range | 100 m |
| Size of the content | 2 M~5 M |
| Simulation time | 1 day |
| Transmission speed | 10 Mbps |
| Simulation area | 15.3 km2 |
| Nodes travel speed | 7 to 10 m/s |
| Node‘s buffer | 100 M |
| Opportunistic routing | Maxprop |
Figure 5Contact time distribution.
Figure 6Traffic offloading ratios under different subscriber ratios.
Figure 7Offloading efficiency with the time before deadline.