Fisheye State Routing in Mobile Ad Hoc Networks. Pei, G., Gerla, M., & Chen, T. 2000.
Fisheye State Routing in Mobile Ad Hoc Networks [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
In this paper, we present a novel routing protocol for wireless ad hoc networks – Fisheye State Routing (FSR). FSR introduces the notion of multi-level fisheye scope to reduce routing update overhead in large networks. Nodes exchange link state entries with their neighbors with a frequency which depends on distance to destination. From link state entries, nodes construct the topology map of the entire network and compute optimal routes. Simulation experiments show that FSR is simple, efficient and scalable routing solution in a mobile, ad hoc environment. 1 Introduction As the wireless and embedded computing technologies continue to advance, increasing numbers of small size and high performance computing and communication devices will be capable of tetherless communications and ad hoc wireless networking. An ad hoc wireless network is a selforganizing and self-configuring network with the capability of rapid deployment in response to application needs.
@conference {Pei00fisheyestate,
	title = {Fisheye State Routing in Mobile Ad Hoc Networks},
	booktitle = {In ICDCS Workshop on Wireless Networks and Mobile Computing},
	year = {2000},
	pages = {71{\textendash}78},
	abstract = {In this paper, we present a novel routing protocol for wireless ad hoc networks -- Fisheye State Routing (FSR). FSR introduces the notion of multi-level fisheye scope to reduce routing update overhead in large networks. Nodes exchange link state entries with their neighbors with a frequency which depends on distance to destination. From link state entries, nodes construct the topology map of the entire network and compute optimal routes. Simulation experiments show that FSR is simple, efficient and scalable routing solution in a mobile, ad hoc environment. 1 Introduction As the wireless and embedded computing technologies continue to advance, increasing numbers of small size and high performance computing and communication devices will be capable of tetherless communications and ad hoc wireless networking. An ad hoc wireless network is a selforganizing and self-configuring network with the capability of rapid deployment in response to application needs.},
	keywords = {mobile Ad-hoc networks},
	url = {http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.43.6730},
	author = {Guangyu Pei and Mario Gerla and Tsu-Wei Chen}
}

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