English

Otiy: Loactors tracking nodes

Networking and Internet Architecture 2007-09-17 v1

Abstract

We propose Otiy, a node-centric location service that limits the impact of location updates generate by mobile nodes in IEEE802.11-based wireless mesh networks. Existing location services use node identifiers to determine the locator (aka anchor) that is responsible for keeping track of a node's location. Such a strategy can be inefficient because: (i) identifiers give no clue on the node's mobility and (ii) locators can be far from the source/destination shortest path, which increases both location delays and bandwidth consumption. To solve these issues, Otiy introduces a new strategy that identifies nodes to play the role of locators based on the likelihood of a destination to be close to these nodes- i.e., locators are identified depending on the mobility pattern of nodes. Otiy relies on the cyclic mobility patterns of nodes and creates a slotted agenda composed of a set of predicted locations, defined according to the past and present patterns of mobility. Correspondent nodes fetch this agenda only once and use it as a reference for identifying which locators are responsible for the node at different points in time. Over a period of about one year, the weekly proportion of nodes having at least 50% of exact location predictions is in average about 75%. This proportion increases by 10% when nodes also consider their closeness to the locator from only what they know about the network.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0709.2252,
  title  = {Otiy: Loactors tracking nodes},
  author = {Mathias Boc and Anne Fladenmuller and Marcelo dias de Amorim},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0709.2252},
  year   = {2007}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-21T09:17:32.535Z